International students will have even more reason to choose the University of Sydney for their postgraduate research degrees, with the announcement of 40 new fully-funded PhD scholarships available from 2017.
鈥淲e want to attract the best students from anywhere in the world and these new scholarships 鈥 growing to an investment of $10 million per year 鈥 will help us do that,鈥 said聽, the University鈥檚 Director of Graduate Research.
鈥淭he University was founded on a principle of meritocratic admission and we are pleased to build on this foundation with these new PhD scholarships,鈥 said Associate Professor Coleman.
鈥淕raduate students are future researchers and high level thinkers who will help solve the problems facing the world, as well as making new knowledge available to everyone. These new scholarships will help more of the cleverest people do their PhD studies with us.鈥
The new scholarships will be available to all international postgraduate research students in any discipline, and students will be considered for the scholarships when they tick the scholarship option on their application to study. Scholarship winners will be selected on the basis of academic performance in qualifying degrees and any prior research experience. 聽聽
Like all University of Sydney centrally awarded postgraduate research scholarships, these new scholarships will be available all year with no application closing dates. The best students will get a scholarship offer in less than two months from submitting their application to study.
The new scholarships follow the same allocation as the federal government鈥檚 Research Training Program scholarships, which are for both domestic and international postgraduate research students. The University鈥檚 new international student scholarships include:
鈥淭he value of a PhD is in the capacity of the doctoral graduate to identify and think through difficult problems. By increasing the number of funded PhD scholarships for students to work with our world-leading researchers, the University of Sydney is investing significantly in a better future,鈥 said Associate Professor Coleman.