Dear Behavioural Science cluster,
IAS asked us to circulate the e-mail below. Happy to comply. It also reveals the
successful clusters, even though Iain (I guess inadvertently) only revealed 3 out of 4. So
the fourth cluster is still a bit of a mystery…
Best,
Till
Begin forwarded message:
From: Institute for Advanced Studies <ias@stir.ac.uk<mailto:ias@stir.ac.uk>>
Subject: IAS Studentships Update
Date: 8. June 2023 at 15:59:27 GMT+1
Cluster leads, please can you cascade to members of your clusters
Colleagues
I would like to update you all on the outcome of the inaugural IAS Studentships
competition. We have been communicating with cluster leads and students over the last week
as we thought it appropriate to inform them of the outcomes of the process first. We know
there is widespread appetite for more information about how the process unfolded and the
choices we made as part of a more general update for everyone who has participated, and we
appreciate your patience in waiting for this.
The competition has been an outstanding success. We received over 600 valid Expressions of
Interest for the 39 potential clusters that colleagues put forward for the competition.
The quality of the student applications we generated was genuinely outstanding. It is
clear that there is huge demand to come to Stirling for study at doctoral level amongst
the very best students. This is testament to the quality of the cluster propositions that
colleagues generated, and I would once again like to offer my thanks to everyone that was
involved in creating a proposal.
The IAS Executive met at the end of May to review all of the valid EoIs and determine our
preferred studentship award winners. Our panel considered all aspects of the cluster
proposal, student quality and alignment between cluster/student proposal aims and
objectives in coming to its decisions. The standard of shortlisted students in terms of
existing qualifications and experience was extremely high indeed, and completely
outstripped our expectations such that we could have awarded the 16 studentships available
several times over.
In coming to our final decisions, we reached consensus that four of the proposed clusters
had a particularly outstanding combination of research potential and student quality that
marked them out as the very best of an extremely strong field. These were Accessible
Environments; Animal Welfare in a Changing World; Nature Emergency: Interdisciplinary
Responses by Active Citizens; Democracy, Human Rights and Communication/Advocacy in the
Digital Age. Special congratulations to colleagues who put forward these cluster
proposals; we look forward to working with you to make them a success for the students and
the University.
IAS will be conducting a review of how this year's process worked over the summer with
a view to putting forward options for how subsequent rounds of the studentship competition
will be run. We will contact all clusters about this in due course, but cluster leads are
of course able to contact me in the interim if you’d like to discuss any aspect of the
process.
Once again, can I thank you all for the energy and enthusiasm that has been generated by
the first round of studentships and that we hope to build upon in future.
Very best wishes
Iain.
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