Doctoral students in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies are eligible for Graduate Research Assistantships (GRAs) and Graduate Teaching Assistantships (GTAs). Almost all students admitted to the Ph.D. program receive some type of financial assistance. After admission to the doctoral programs, the Office of Academic Assistance will inform newly admitted students who are seeking an assistantship of the type of appointment, if any, which they have been awarded.
For first year students, students recieve a stipend plus a tuition waiver. Second-year students and beyond are also eligible for research and teaching assistantships, and the program has a history of continuing to fund students who are demonstrating progress in the program at a level of support equal to or greater than what they received in the first year.
Students hired as GRAs work with faculty members in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies on research projects in their area of interest. (Students in the joint Ph.D. in Public Policy may also work with faculty in the School of Public Policy at Georgia Tech.) The partnerships between the AYSPS, its research centers and a number of nonpartisan, nonprofit research organizations give students the opportunity to perform research which can have immediate application to problems of city, country, state and federal policy makers. A number of GRAs have also been involved in international policy projects, most recently on tax reform in Russia and environmental issues in South America.
A student hired as a GRA or GTA receives a waiver of tuition and matriculation fees. Only the mandatory university fees, including a registration fee, are assessed during any semester a student is hired as a graduate assistant, regardless of the number of hours in which the student enrolls during that semester.
The following criteria must be met by any graduate student who is appointed as a GRA or GTA in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies:
To be appointed as a GTA, a student must: (a) have a master's degree in a discipline related to the course to be taught; (b) have completed at least 30 semester hours of graduate coursework in a related discipline; or (c) have professional certification(s) deemed equivalent to a master's degree.