PhDGuide update Sep2012
Transcription
PhDGuide update Sep2012
1. APPLYING AT A GRADUATE SCHOOL……………..…2 1.1 HUMANITIES………………………………………..…2 Information for PhD students at the University of Bayreuth 1.1.1 BIGSAS – Bayreuth International Graduate School of African Studies………………………………………………..…2 1.1.2 Kulturbegegnungen – Cultural Encounters – Rencontres Culturelles…………………………………………3 1.1.3 Graduate School: Central Europe and the EnglishSpeaking World 1300–2000................................................ 4 1.1.4 Media Culture and Media Economy ......................... 4 1.1.5. Intellectual Property and the Public Domain ......... 5 1.2 NATURAL SCIENCES ............................................ 6 1.2.1 TERRECO (Complex Terrain and Ecologcial Heterogeneity) ...................................................................... 7 1.2.2 International Graduate School “Structure, Reactivity and Properties of Oxide Materials”................................... 7 1.2.3 BIGSS: "Lead Structures of Cell Function"............ .8 1.2.4 Macromolecular Science........................................... 9 1.2.5 BayNat: Bayreuth Graduate School for Mathematics and Natural Sciences.......................................................... 10 2. APPLYING FOR ADVERTISED POSITIONS............... 11 3. INDIVIDUAL PhD-PROJECTS..................................... 12 4. FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES ..................................... ..13 5. ADMISSION AND ENROLMENT AT UBT ................... 14 5.1 Formal admission to the University of Bayreuth ............... 14 5.2 Enrolment at the University of Bayreuth ........................... 16 5.3 After completion of your PhD.…...………………………….19 6. VISA PROCEDURE ..................................................... 20 6. 1 § 16: Student Visa ............................................................ 20 6. 2 § 18: Work Visa ................................................................ 21 6. 3 § 20: Researcher Visa ……………………………………...21 7. LIVING IN BAYREUTH ................................................ 22 1 1. APPLYING AT A GRADUATE SCHOOL There are several ways to study as a PhD student resp. doctoral fellow and to obtain a degree from the University of Bayreuth. Bayreuth University has a variety of specialized and Graduate Schools and Graduate Programs. The regular time to degree is 3 years, resp. 6 semesters. Most PhD projects are being extended to 8 semesters. 1.1 HUMANITIES 1.1.1 BIGSAS – Bayreuth International Graduate School of African Studies The aims of BIGSAS are to bring together outstanding young African and non-African scholars to work jointly in the field of African Studies, and to offer a centre of creative and innovative PhD training and research in Germany in African Studies. Four research areas allow for challenging theoretical studies sensitive to emerging basic problems; they also take into account practical questions and problems concerning the African continent. Thus the BIGSAS research areas encompass basic, strategic and applied research. 1.1.2 Kulturbegegnungen – Cultural Encounters – Rencontres Culturelles The overall heading of Cultural Encounters serves to unite a range of research foci, which in turn provide the framework for diverse individual historical, systematic and interdisciplinary studies. Globalization has dramatically increased the need for reflection on all intercultural issues. Research in language, literary and media studies over the last two decades has significantly shifted towards the study of cultural identity, cultural stereotyping and intercultural communication, migration, alterity (‘otherness'), syncretism and hybridity. Language, literary and media studies are among the disciplines at the vanguard of such research since cultural encounters occur within the context of communicative processes which operate through language and the media. http://www.promotion-kb.uni-bayreuth.de/en/index.html The instruction language is English. There is the possibility for excellent applicants from lusophone or francophone countries to attend English classes. www.bigsas.uni-bayreuth.de/en/index.html 2 3 1.1.3 Graduate School: Central Europe and the EnglishSpeaking World 1300–2000 The Graduate School „Central Europe and the English speaking world 1300-2000“ offers an integrative Master and PhD program. With regards to content, both programs are closely intervowen. The combination of MA degree and PhD amounts to a duration of five years. Applicants can join at the PhD level. The instruction language is German. www.geschichte.unibayreuth.de/de/studium/graduateschool/ 1.1.5. „Intellectual Property and the Public Domain“ The research program aims at analyzing the tension between intellectual property rights such as patents, trade marks and copyright on the one hand and the public interest in the freedom to use inventions, distinguishing signs and literary, musical and artistic works, i.e. the public domain, on the other hand. 1.1.4 Media Culture and Media Economy Dissertations in the PhD program Media Culture and Media Economy focus on at least two out of five fields (Media Culture, Media History, Media Law, Media Management, Media Informatics). Besides writing their dissertations, PhD students attend interdisciplinary research colloquiums. They present and discuss their research projects, get to know different research methods, learn how to apply for research funding, how to manage projects and how to prepare international conferences. The instruction language is German. This subject of research pertains to all types of intellectual property rights; it encompasses not only private law but also constitutional law, criminal law and international law, including their historical dimensions; it aims both at fundamental legal research and at specific issues of practical relevance, which need the overall perspective for convincing solutions; finally it is of great current relevance, particularly in the light of recent developments in the field of information technology. The instruction language is German. www.gkrw.uni-bayreuth.de/index.php?id=91 http://www.mekuwi.unibayreuth.de/en/application/index.html 4 5 1.2 NATURAL SCIENCES 1.2.1 TERRECO (Complex Terrain and Ecologcial Heterogeneity) The TERRECO-IRTG program examines the way to carry out land management in mountain regions, in order to ensure sustainable yield of ecosystem services. Ecosystem services are all of the products and gains that people obtain from natural ecosystems and natural resources in a region. The training program is planned to support three consecutive groups of 13 doctoral candidates over three year periods in the fields of meteorology, plant ecology, agroecology, zoology, soil ecology, soil physics, hydrology, and population and social geography. The speaker of the TERRECO program is Prof. Dr. John Tenhunen, head of the Department of Plant Ecology. www.bayceer.uni-bayreuth.de/terreco/ Salaried positions are open from 2012 again. Scholarship awardees can apply any time. The instruction language is English. 1.2.2 International Graduate School: “Structure, Reactivity and Properties of Oxide Materials” Oxides are the most important (inorganic) substances in nature and at the same time important materials with many industrial applications. They exist in a wide variety of chemical compositions, crystal structures, and synthesis paths. The study of oxides is providing both an intellectual challenge as well as being a practical necessity, and consequently provides an outstanding basis for the training of excellent researchers in the sciences. In this Graduate School we will focus training and research on the interaction of crystal structure, texture, reaction kinetics, and physical-chemical properties. For research methods we plan to combine unconventional synthesis methods with state-of-the-art analytical methods. We will synthesize materials under extreme conditions (pressure and temperature) as well as by chemie douce. We will combine experimental analytical methods (diffraction and spectroscopy) with simulations, ranging from the atomic to the macroscopic scale. The lab language is English. www.oxides.uni-bayreuth.de 6 7 1.2.3 BIGSS: "Lead Structures of Cell Function" 1.2.4 Macromolecular Science BIGSS will admit students with strong background in natural sciences and/ or engineering. Students with biological background will need to learn the requisite chemical skills and vice versa. The objective of this Elite Graduate School is to prepare investigators with diverse background for independent research careers in which the concepts and methods of biochemistry, chemistry, medicine, and physics are applied to biological problems. This objective will be met through individually designed programs involving courses in the biology, chemistry, medicine, structural biology and in related fields as well as rotation in different labs, proposal preparation, improving soft skills, independent research, and thesis writing. The lab language is English. www.chemie.uni-bayreuth.de/bigs/ Students who excel on both a personal as well as professional level are encouraged by the elite study program in the research fields of chemistry, biochemistry, polymer and colloid chemistry, physics, biophysics, biology and material sciences. Thus besides acquiring a broad and in-depth education in their own field of study, elite students participating in this program have the opportunity to acquire additional skills in neighboring research fields of Macromolecular Science. These additional top-class courses held in English as well as the offered day care service open up doors to a careerstart as an internationally oriented junior scientist in the research field at the highest level or to train for a management position at national or international companies. www.chemie.uni-bayreuth.de/macromolecules 8 9 1.2.5 Bayreuth Graduate School for Mathematics and Natural Sciences (BayNAT) 2. APPLYING FOR ADVERTISED POSITIONS The other direct option to study for your PhD at Bayreuth University is to apply for one of the positions officially advertised on our university´s homepage by our chairs. It is worth checking the websites of the chairs for further job offers. The Bayreuth Graduate School of Mathematical and Natural Sciences (BayNAT) was founded in 2009 as a joint venture between the Department I (Mathematics, Physics and Computer Science) and the Department II (Biology, Chemistry and Geosciences) at the University of Bayreuth and will be open to scientists who are members of any department at the University of Bayreuth. The Graduate School is headed by a Dean and by an Associate Dean. The individual PhD programs are presided over by an Executive Board each - generally comprising three members, whose chair is the main person of contact for the respective PhD program. http://www.unibayreuth.de/universitaet/stellenangebote/doktorandenstelle n/index.html Please also check these websites for further offers of PhD positions available in Germany and Europe: www.euraxess.de/portal/jobs.html http://zeit.academics.de/action/av/search/luf?cbId=1 http://www.baynat.uni-bayreuth.de/de/phds/index.php 10 11 3. INDIVIDUAL PhD-PROJECTS 4. FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES It is generally possible and common to organize your PhD project independently. The first step is to identify to write a research proposal. Please check this link for information on how to write a research proposal: If the chair you would like to join cannot provide you with a working contract or scholarship, there are several possibilities to apply for external funding. Please note, that Bayreuth University does not offer scholarships for prospective PhD students. Only enroled students can apply for grants. These are not full scholarships but only a limited financial support. http://ic.daad.de/kualalumpur/How_to_write_a_research_pr oposal.pdf Then you need to identify a suitable supervisor. This can be done by browsing the homepages of the different faculties of our university with the aim of finding the chair, whose research and work group can accommodate your research interest best. Many chairs provide information in English on their homepage. Please make sure that you find someone as close to your research background as possible. Avoid contacting anyone at random. Random emails will not be answered. Via email you can introduce yourself and your envisaged project to the professor. You should send a short email but attach your CV and a brief research proposal. Should you be successful and raise the professor´s interest, he/she will write a letter including a supervision agreement or host guarantee. He/She might even offer you a salaried position at his/her chair. If no salaried position is available, you can use the supervision agreement to research funding possibilities and/or scholarships. You will also need the supervision agreement to apply for admission at our university. 12 Please check the link-list on our International Office´s homepage: http://www.international-office.unibayreuth.de/en/05_Grants/index.html Please also check these external sources of funding and /or scholarships: The German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD): www.daad.de/deutschland/foerderung/stipendiendatenbank/ 00462.en.html The e-fellows-network: www.e-fellows.net/show/detail.php/325 The Gender Office of Bayreuth University offers grants for female PhDs and PostDocs, but only for the final stages of the PhD or habilitation project: http://www.frauenbeauftragte.unibayreuth.de/de/promoting_women/index.html 13 5. ADMISSION AND ENROLMENT AT UBT You will find detailed information on the online application process here: Not all PhD students need to be officially enrolled as students at our university. • Those PhDs who receive a work contract don´t need to enroll but they may, if they wish. • All members of graduate schools and programs are required to enroll. • Scholarship awardees might be enrolled. • Those PhDs who do research at Bayreuth University for a limited time only, should check with the admission staff in the International Office. Please note: The degree regulations of the subject or the school/program in which you are graduating gives you final information on whether you need to enroll to obtain your PhD-degree. 5.1 Formal admission to the University of Bayreuth You will be asked to go through an online application process on the International Office´s homepage. Here is the link to the relevant website: https://unibayreuth.moveonnet.eu/moveonline/incoming/welcome.php ?_language=en https://unibayreuth.moveonnet.eu/moveonline/incoming/procedure.ph p For a correct application, you will need certified copies of all your certificates. In particular, this should include a full transcript of your academic records as well as BA and MA diploma(s) and/or certificate(s). The certification might be done by your home university’s administration. Furthermore, please attach the supervision agreement from the hosting chair/professor. These certified documents and, if required by the chair, a proof of your language proficiency, have to be send via regular postal services to the International Office at Bayreuth University. Postal address: University of Bayreuth International Office Mr. Richard Kastner D-95440 Bayreuth Germany For further questions, you can use this email address: incoming@uni-bayreuth.de After the International Office receives your application, it will check if your academic qualification fulfills the requirements for admission at our university. If this is the case, you will receive an admission letter in German with detailed information about the enrolment procedure. The 14 15 International Office will then forward your documents to the student registration office (Studentenkanzlei), where enrolment takes place. 5.2 Enrolment at the University of Bayreuth Enrolment has to be done by you in person at the student registration office (Studentenkanzlei). The regular registration periods are August to October for the winter term, March to May for the summer term. PhDs who are not part of a graduate school or a PhD program might enroll at any time of the year. Place of enrolment: Studentenkanzlei Building: Central University Administration Room: 1.09 Opening hours: Monday – Friday 9 – 12 am Wednesday 9 am – 3.30 pm. a) Contribution to the Studentenwerk Oberfranken (SWO) The SWO offers services as counseling and tutoring and also runs most of the student dorm. All students have to pay a compulsory contribution to the SWO each semester. With this contribution you also acquire the right to use public transportation in Bayreuth and surrounding areas. The contribution amounts to about 80 Euro per semester and increases slightly every year. This fee has to be paid before enrolment. Here you find the information regarding the current SWOcontribution to be paid: http://www.unibayreuth.de/studieninteressierte/studentenkanzlei/einschrei bung/einschreibung-beitraege/index.html Please use the following bank details for your bank transfer: Documents needed for enrolment: a) Supervision agreement / resp. letter by the supervisor in which he/she offers you a salaried position b) Admission letter by the Student Registry Office c) Confirmation of a valid student health insurance d) Passport photographs according to biometrical standards e) Receipts for the following fee: The Campus Card which you receive upon enrolment can be charged with money in order to pay at the campus restaurant, the cafeteria, the library and at the sports facilities. 16 Bank: Staatsoberkasse Bayern (Landshut) Banking Code: 700 500 00 Account Number: 4101190315 IMPORTANT! Don´t forget your reference number! It is made up of „Application number,IM122,Surname,First name“ If you do not have an application number: “IM122,Surname,First name” 17 For transfers from abroad, you will need the following banking information: 5.3 Exmatriculation after completion of your PhD: Potential problems with your residence title BIC-number: BYLADEMM IBAN-number: DE36 7005 0000 4101 1903 15 a) Looking for a job after the completion of your PhD As soon as the purpose of your stay in Germany has been accomplished, you theoretically have to start preparing your departure from Germany. Nevertheless, the German residence law (Aufenthaltsgesetz) stipulates that you may extend your stay for another 18 months after accomplishment of your PhD in order to look for a job. b) Tuition fees PhD students are exempt from tuition fees for the duration of six semesters. If you need more than six semesters to finish your PhDproject the following regulations apply: a) Members of a graduate school or graduate program are exempt from tuition fees for the entire duration of their PhD-project (max. 8 semesters). b) PhD students who encounter financial problems during the 7th and 8th term of their PhD-project can apply for an exemption from tuition fees claiming undue hardship. This application implies that you have to prove your financial distress. Please consult the Welcome Centre for further information on the application procedure. c) As a PhD student you do not need to be enrolled as a student at the university. In case you cannot pay the tuition fees for the 7th and 8th semester you can deregister and still continue your PhD-project. Please contact the Welcome Centre if you intend to deregister as this option might conflict with your residence title. If you want to do so, it is necessary to apply for the extension of your residence title before you finish your degree course, e.g. before your final exams which lead to your exmatriculation. Please be aware that you need to have enough financial means for the time you intend to look for a job (approx. 700 € per month). b) Publication of your PhD-thesis After submitting and defending the doctoral thesis PHD students are required to publish Yet, residence permits for students (§ 16) expire with the completion of the PhDproject, e.g. the defense of the thesis. The defence automatically results in the exmatriculation. Nevertheless you will need some extra time to prepare the publication of your thesis. Therefore you have to apply for an extension of your residence permit before defending your thesis. You should apply for a “Fiktionsbescheinigung”. To receive this provisional residence title you have to make sure that you have enough financial means for the time needed for publication. In all this instances please ask for support from the Welcome Centre. 18 19 6. VISA PROCEDURE German immigration law (Aufenthaltsgesetz / AufenthaltsG) offers several access paths to enter and live in Germany as a PhD student. 6. 1 § 16: Student Visa The study visa (§16) is the recommended visa by most embassies for PhD students. However, with this visa you are allowed to work and receive a salary only for a maximum of 120 days, resp. 240 half-days per year. This does not permit PhD-students to work on the basis of a full contract (100%). With this visa you are only allowed to bring your family to Germany after you have settled here. The access for the family is then the § 30 AufenthaltsG = family reunion visa which has the restriction that a) Spouses have to prove their German proficiency or acquire it quickly after their arrival here. b) Spouse will not receive a work permit. Please beware that with the visa according to § 16 you cannot extend the amount of your work contract, e.g. accept a raise of workload and remuneration to a 75%- or a 100%position, which sometimes happens if professors are very satisfied with the work of their PhDs. Please beware that with a §16-student visa you can apply for a § 18 = work visa only after you have finished your PhD project and received the degree. Members of graduate schools and structured PhD-programs can only apply for a visa according to § 16. PhD students who have a scholarship, e.g. from the DAAD, should apply for this type of visa! 20 6. 2 § 18: Work Visa The work visa is suitable for PhD students who will receive a work contract with more that 50%-position and who do not intend to bring spouses and children along. 6. 3 § 20: Researcher Visa This visa type applies to PhD students who have at least a 50%- work contract and who intend to bring their spouse and maybe children along. Further conditions: 1) A salary of minimum 1,200 € net per month. 2) An intended stay of minimum 4 months. 3) Submission of a hosting agreement. Advantages: 1) You may bring your spouse and children along immediately. 2) Your spouse is exempt from German knowledge. 3) Your spouse can obtain a work permit. Our university is entitled to issue hosting agreements. Please contact our Welcome Centre for support. Email: Welcome-centre@uni-bayreuth.de Phone: +49-(0)921-55-5318 21 Bank account: For the transfer of your scholarship as well as for the direct debiting of the health insurance contribution or the rent, you will need to open a German bank account as soon as possible after your arrival. Almost all banks offer free current accounts (Girokonto) for students. 7. LIVING IN BAYREUTH Please check the following link for general information: http://www.international-office.unibayreuth.de/en/04_On_Site/index.html Accommodation: Rooms and shared apartments in student dormitories are let by the SWO. Please check their website: www.swo.uni-bayreuth.de. Costs are approximately as follows: • rent excluding electricity costs: 115 Euro per month • deposit: 210 Euro • electricity costs: 40 Euro Private accommodation is more expensive. In a flat-sharing community, you would have to budget 150 to 250 Euros. For an individual single-room apartment, you would have to calculate up to 400 – 500 Euros. Check this link for private accommodation: Health insurance: Students need a health insurance for the entire duration of their stay. This is a precondition for enrolment at the University of Bayreuth as well as for getting a residence permit by the Immigration Office. Please replace your travel health insurance, with which you arrive in Germany, immediately after your arrival in Bayreuth and take out a statutory student health insurance. This has to be done before the registration at both, the university and the Immigration Office. For scholarship holders, a private health insurance is allowed as an exception. Please note that once you take out a private health insurance, it is impossible to revert to statutory health insurance! We strongly recommend that if you choose a private health insurance, you should be careful regarding the contract periods. We strongly advise you to sign a contract for the entire duration of your stay instead of choosing one-year periods to be extended regularly. www.old.uni-bayreuth.de/unimarkt/home/home.php Please check this link to the DAAD for further information: http://www.daad.de/deutschland/deutschland/leben-indeutschland/06266.en.html 22 23 Food: Food is available at the university’s dining hall (Mensa) at costs from 2.50 to 4.50 Euro per meal. Opening hours: Monday – Thursday 11 am – 2 pm Friday 11 am –1.15 pm. The cafeteria adjacent to the Mensa offers breakfast, snacks and small meals on Monday – Friday 8 am – 8 pm Saturday 9 am – 2 pm and Thursday 4 – 8 pm. Cash payment is not possible at either the Mensa or the Cafeteria. You can charge your CampusCard (student ID card) with money at terminals in the Mensa in order to pay at both locations. Passport photographs: If you bring passport photos along, please make sure that they meet biometrical standards, e.g. the following requirements: • • • • size 35mm x 45 mm from point of the chin to hair line 32-36 mm background white or neutral like light grey frontal view Check this website for information regarding biometrical standards: http://www.bundesdruckerei.de/de/service/service_buerger/ buerger_persdok/persdok_epassMstr.html Rooms and shared apartments at the student dormitories have a kitchenette where you can prepare your own food. There are several shopping opportunities (supermarkets, bakeries, butcheries) near the dormitories. Journey and arrival: The airport closest to Bayreuth is Nuremberg (1 h from Bayreuth). Other possibilities are Munich (2,5 h from Bayreuth) or Frankfurt am Main (3,5 h from Bayreuth). For the plane ticket, please ask your local travel agency. For railway connections to Bayreuth, please also consult the website of the German railway company (Deutsche Bahn). You find the link to their homepage here: www.bahn.de Editor: Welcome Centre welcome-centre@uni-bayreuth.de Updated: September 2012 24 25