Weighted Stipend Data by University

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HappyQuark
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Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by HappyQuark » Sun Mar 18, 2012 10:56 pm

Hola forum, long time no see

Gradschool hasn't been kind to my free time but I started working on a little side project, for reasons that will become very apparent by looking at U Hawaii's stipend data, and thought the info would be useful to the rest of the forum. At the very least, its info that is frequently overlooked but I would have liked to have access to it when applying to schools

So here's what I did: Using gradschoolshopper I collected the average stipend data for RA and TA which the university gives to the AIP per their academic year. Then, I used the ACCRA Cost of Living Index from C2ER (Council for Community and Economic Research) to weight these stipends based on location. The CLI is generated such that a value of 100 is considered the national average so the first thing I did was weight every stipend by the National Average. I've got a link to the spreadsheet I'm using at the bottom and you can find the weighted values by national average in the column titled "Weighted Stipend by National Average TA/RA". So, the proper way to read the values from this column is, for example

- Duke University claims an average stipend for their TA as $27,730
- Duke University is in Durham, North Carolina which has a CLI of 90.60
- Therefore, their stipend value in an Average US city (with CLI of 100) would be the equivalent of receiving a $30,607 stipend.

Alternatively,
- Boston University claims an average stipend for their TA as $19,300
- Boston University is in Boston, Massachusetts which has a CLI of 137.20
- Therefore, their stipend value in an Average US city (with CLI of 100) would be the equivalent of receiving a $14,067 stipend.

So the values in the "Weighted Stipend by National Average" normalize all the stipends and make it easier to compare the values objectively. Since Honolulu has the highest CLI number, I also found all of the stipend values as weighted according to Honolulu's CLI, so for example, Rice University and their Average stipend of $26,600 will spend in Houston like $38,761 will spend in Honolulu.

I also, just for shits and giggles, pulled the federal poverty line and compared all of the stipend values via a percent difference to calculate a "Proximity to Poverty Line" value. Since the Federal poverty line is the same for all the 48 contiguous US states, except for Hawaii and Alaska, the ordering from best to worst plays out differently that it does based on CLI. I would argue that the CLI relationship is probably a better metric of financial support than the PLP.

In terms of using this data, I would strongly recommend that if/when you get an offer from a number of schools, take their stipend offers and compare them AFTER factoring in the cost of living for the region. I speak from experience when I say that no matter how good the faculty is, or how interesting and strong their research is, you will struggle to be productive and a dedicated hard worker if you are constantly dealing with money problems.

Stipend_Data.xls
Stipend_Data.numbers

[Click the Image for full size PDF]
Image

microacg
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by microacg » Sun Mar 18, 2012 11:30 pm

This looks cool.

You have SUNY Buffalo twice in the spreadsheet.

Not sure if CUNY doesn't provide the data, but you don't have the CUNY graduate center (some of the CUNY schools associated with that will have a very high standard of living though)

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HappyQuark
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by HappyQuark » Mon Mar 19, 2012 12:50 am

microacg wrote:This looks cool.

You have SUNY Buffalo twice in the spreadsheet.

Not sure if CUNY doesn't provide the data, but you don't have the CUNY graduate center (some of the CUNY schools associated with that will have a very high standard of living though)
Unfortunately, a number of schools don't provide their data to the AIP so if it isn't on the list, Gradschoolshopper didn't have it. I managed to find data for about 5 schools that didn't give their data to the AIP by visiting their webpages. If you happen to have the data for CUNY graduate center I can add it in.

ali8
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by ali8 » Mon Mar 19, 2012 9:15 am

Thanks for that, I can see how much effort is needed to compile such a table.

I can see that almost all of the universities are around the 20,000.
[17,000-23,000].

Brooks
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by Brooks » Mon Mar 19, 2012 10:50 am

A very nice table indeed! I'd done some comparisons between the universities I'm choosing between, but hadn't taken it this far.

It would appear that there is some inconsistency in how schools report data. The numbers in AIP match the guaranteed funding I was offered, but for two of the three I checked, it is for the academic year while the third is for 11 months. Since the two schools said that summer funding was usually/always available and provided another 30%-40% it can make a big difference. Of course, this was easy for me to change in your lovely table, but I just wanted to mention that for others who use this when choosing where to apply. It is certainly a good place to start, but make sure you do a bit of research to see if you can find the terms the schools you're interested in offer.

mininano
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by mininano » Mon Mar 19, 2012 11:55 am

The two examples you used to illustrate this idea are very misleading. The Duke number you claim is clearly for 12 months (as from here: http://www.phy.duke.edu/graduate/admiss ... ancial.php) whereas the Boston University figure is for 9 months. I know from my offer there that BU guarantees to all TAs/RAs another ~9700 in summer funding, for an actual 12 month total of 29k. Without verifying what time periods these stipends are for, this chart may not be very accurate.

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grae313
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by grae313 » Mon Mar 19, 2012 12:21 pm

Absolutely, it appears that some of the schools list their 12 month stipend while others list the 9 month. Cornell, for example, lists the 9 months salary but after you factor in a summer TA or RA you're looking at just around 30k for 12 months.

Not to take away from the work it took to compile this data (thank you!) and how useful it is, and the main point is a very good one. The numbers here aren't self-consistent, however.

pqortic
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by pqortic » Mon Mar 19, 2012 10:11 pm

there might be a way to average the data per month too. but I know unless you have some fellowships or are attending a top-5 program the ratio of payment to costs for graduate students is very much the same everywhere and the differences are not noticeable.

asdfuogh
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by asdfuogh » Tue Mar 20, 2012 3:34 am

Hmm, well, if you're taking more accurate numbers, I think the average for UC Irvine is at least 21.5k per 9 months (and they give 5k for summer if you're TAing or taking classes I think). For research, it's 21.5k + 9.6k (research assistants get paid more during the summer as an irvine policy or maybe UC policy), or something like that (the first number might be more or less). These were the numbers they gave us during the visiting day.

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HappyQuark
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by HappyQuark » Tue Mar 20, 2012 6:26 am

grae313 wrote:Absolutely, it appears that some of the schools list their 12 month stipend while others list the 9 month. Cornell, for example, lists the 9 months salary but after you factor in a summer TA or RA you're looking at just around 30k for 12 months.

Not to take away from the work it took to compile this data (thank you!) and how useful it is, and the main point is a very good one. The numbers here aren't self-consistent, however.
As far as I am aware, School's were suppose to report their 9-month TA and RA stipend to the AIP and because I was concerned about this issue, I double checked as many of the values on Gradschoolshopper as I could with departmental webpages (at least of those who quote values on their school page) and AIP results are consistent with 9-month values. For example,

AIP for Vanderbilt: http://www.gradschoolshopper.com/gradsc ... 4#tuitions
Vanderbilt Webpage: http://www.vanderbilt.edu/physics/grad/grad-aid.php

Where you will note that they say that their 9-month stipend is also supplemented with Summer research stipends. In fact, so far as I can tell, most schools follow this system of quoting a 9-month stipend and then providing some sort of optional summer pay as well.

Although, since many schools don't publish their stipend data (or at least I couldn't find them) there likely are a few schools that gave 12-month values or included supplemental income into their figures. I've contacted the AIP to try to get their take on this question but they have yet to respond. Regardless, the only really piece of the data I provided that should be of any interest to the forum members here is the COLI information so they have a more objective way of comparing stipend values. I.E you get 5 offers and presumably you will know what the school is offering in the way of finances, at which point you can use the COLI data to compare.

The rest of the data is only really significant to University of Hawaii students since, as you can see, we are paid ridiculously lower than every other major University in the US and we needed some numbers to demonstrate this to our department heads. In fact, the majority (if not all) first year students had to take out student loans just to have enough money for food/groceries. I suspect we are unique among all graduate programs in this respect. GO Hawaii!!!

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grae313
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by grae313 » Tue Mar 20, 2012 10:20 am

pqortic wrote:there might be a way to average the data per month too. but I know unless you have some fellowships or are attending a top-5 program the ratio of payment to costs for graduate students is very much the same everywhere and the differences are not noticeable.
Hahaha this is so not true. That's exactly what this chart is showing. I buy whatever I want... I bought a frickin' house. Other people have to pinch pennies. You're constantly stating things like they are fact that are just wrong.

blighter
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by blighter » Tue Mar 20, 2012 12:03 pm

You bought a frickin' house? I don't even

pqortic
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by pqortic » Tue Mar 20, 2012 1:13 pm

grae313 wrote:
pqortic wrote:there might be a way to average the data per month too. but I know unless you have some fellowships or are attending a top-5 program the ratio of payment to costs for graduate students is very much the same everywhere and the differences are not noticeable.
Hahaha this is so not true. That's exactly what this chart is showing. I buy whatever I want... I bought a frickin' house. Other people have to pinch pennies. You're constantly stating things like they are fact that are just wrong.

so you are saying that in one place they pay the graduate students to buy houses while in other places they only pay them to rent. what kinda stupid logic is this? it's like some schools just want to give away their money for no reason or like a graduate student can buy a house and save money and another graduate student with the same skills graduate with almost empty hands.

bfollinprm
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by bfollinprm » Tue Mar 20, 2012 1:38 pm

For the record, I've enough money to buy a house here in Davis too (whose 9 month TA is listed above), though that's on a fellowship (and my adviser is pretty generous with summer stipends). Costs of living in different areas of the country vary extraordinarily. By the way, awesome graphic, happyquark, and good to hear from you again.

pqortic
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by pqortic » Tue Mar 20, 2012 1:52 pm

bfollinprm wrote:For the record, I've enough money to buy a house here in Davis too, though that's on a fellowship (and my adviser is pretty generous with summer stipends). Costs of living in different areas of the country vary extraordinarily. By the way, awesome graphic, happyquark, and good to hear from you again.
before taking side and pointing exception here and there, read the post and consider the situation for all. besides, my response is sarcastic.

astroprof
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by astroprof » Tue Mar 20, 2012 2:00 pm

While the data compiled by HappyQuark should not be the
primary criterion upon which you select a graduate school,
he raises an important point that it is not the absolute
dollar amount of the offer, but rather whether the stipend
will be sufficient to live on in the area that is the important
criterion. In addition to the formal metrics, it is very
important to ask current graduate students about their
experiences - both whether they can afford to live on just
their stipends AND how they live (shared housing, single
apartments, or able to buy their own home).

In regards to the specific data compiled: most departments
will report the stipend for the academic year, as requested
by AIP. However, many of us feel that this is an unfortunate
metric, as the academic year stipend is set by University
Administrators, and may not appear competitive within the
field. To compensate, our offers often include additional
fellowships (a few thousand as a "signing bonus" for example)
and a higher summer RA stipend (which is set by the department,
not the school). Thus, the annual salary may be significantly
higher than reported in gradschoolshopper. Also, the AIP
data is the average stipend - some schools have a well defined
salary scale for RA appointments while others are at the
whim of the PI (I've heard of annual salary differences of
up to $7K in one department, which means that the student
in the next office might be making 1.5 times your RA salary).

Nonetheless, it is also important to remember that no one
should expect to be rich as a graduate student (fame and
fortune may come later, though, if you pick the right
research project!). Your stipend should be sufficient such
that you are not required to take out additional student
loans if you live a modest lifestyle (no first class tickets
to the Alps for a ski vacation, etc). Beyond that, it is
the other attributes of a school that should be given the
most weight while making your decision as to which school
is the right one for you.

blighter
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by blighter » Tue Mar 20, 2012 2:13 pm

bfollinprm wrote:For the record, I've enough money to buy a house here in Davis too (whose 9 month TA is listed above), though that's on a fellowship (and my adviser is pretty generous with summer stipends). Costs of living in different areas of the country vary extraordinarily. By the way, awesome graphic, happyquark, and good to hear from you again.
You mean to say you have enough money to pay the mortgage if you were to buy a house or am I missing something here?

TakeruK
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by TakeruK » Tue Mar 20, 2012 2:38 pm

blighter wrote: You mean to say you have enough money to pay the mortgage if you were to buy a house or am I missing something here?
I thought this was what "buying a house" means, even for "real people" (i.e. not graduate students)! I can't imagine very many people just buying an entire house outright!

asdfuogh
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by asdfuogh » Tue Mar 20, 2012 2:54 pm

You are forgetting trust fund babies who can just buy houses straight up!

@grae, do you live in the house you buy? Do you also rent part of it out to help pay for mortgage or something? HOW do you manage it (what exactly is your stipend total?!?!)?

bfollinprm
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by bfollinprm » Tue Mar 20, 2012 3:16 pm

I don't know why this is so crazy to everyone:

The cost of a house in the US (on average) is $170,000. Current 30 year mortgage rates are less than 4%. Assuming a 3.8% effective rate, we have the total cost over 30 years being
170,000*exp(30r) = 530,000 That makes a yearly cost of 17800, or a monthly mortgage payment of $1500. That's for the average house, and some places (like here in the Sacramento suburbs) the cost is substantially lower--$120,000 (~$1050/month) isn't out of the ordinary for a 2-3 bedroom home. No doubt one would share that with a friend or significant other (most homeowners aren't single); and thus my hypothetical mortgage is significantly less than the rent for a single room in LA, San Fran, San Diego, NYC, or Boston. The main barrier to home ownership is closing costs on the mortgage, which can run $10,000 or so in taxes and fees, and whatever down payment the issuing bank requires of you (which depends on your credit, and can be as much as 10-20% of the value of the house). Sometimes you can get special loans to cover even those costs, or if you've been out of college for a while (like me) your savings (or a loan from your parents, etc) might be able to absorb the upfront cost.

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grae313
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by grae313 » Tue Mar 20, 2012 4:16 pm

I didn't buy the house outright, I have a 15-year mortgage and will either rent the house out when I leave or sell it. I live there and rent out the remaining two bedrooms for income. It is not at all unusual for grad students to buy a house here, and most do it with a spouse or significant other (it's really a two-income endeavor).

UC Berkeley and Cornell offered me the same stipend (~30k per year), but taking into account the cost of living, Berkeley would have to offer over $50k per year to provide the same quality of living / disposable income that I get in Ithaca on $30k (pre tax). I don't really buy "whatever I want," of course, that was hyperbole. What I meant to say is that I do not have to be careful with my money. I can go out when I want, eat out when I want, travel for the most part when I want... yet myself and many of my friends were still saving money at a rate of $10k per year. I personally decided to put those savings into a house. That said, once I have a nice television, game console, and kickass gaming PC, I don't really care for buying things besides food, alcohol, and a plane ticket back home to see my parents every now and then.

Meanwhile, the offers at places like U Washington and UCSB are much lower compared to the cost of living. Grad students have to look for the cheapest housing and be careful how often they eat out. They will not be saving money.

Cornell is a private institution with a fair amount of money in a location where it is not expensive to live. Is it so outrageous to believe that I might get paid more there, especially in terms of cost of living, than at a public school in a very expensive city?

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grae313
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by grae313 » Tue Mar 20, 2012 4:18 pm

bfollinprm wrote:I don't know why this is so crazy to everyone:

The cost of a house in the US (on average) is $170,000. Current 30 year mortgage rates are less than 4%. Assuming a 3.8% effective rate, we have the total cost over 30 years being
170,000*exp(30r) = 530,000 That makes a yearly cost of 17800, or a monthly mortgage payment of $1500. That's for the average house, and some places (like here in the Sacramento suburbs) the cost is substantially lower--$120,000 (~$1050/month) isn't out of the ordinary for a 2-3 bedroom home. No doubt one would share that with a friend or significant other (most homeowners aren't single); and thus my hypothetical mortgage is significantly less than the rent for a single room in LA, San Fran, San Diego, NYC, or Boston. The main barrier to home ownership is closing costs on the mortgage, which can run $10,000 or so in taxes and fees, and whatever down payment the issuing bank requires of you (which depends on your credit, and can be as much as 10-20% of the value of the house). Sometimes you can get special loans to cover even those costs, or if you've been out of college for a while (like me) your savings (or a loan from your parents, etc) might be able to absorb the upfront cost.
Don't forget taxes... I pay 5 or 6k per year in property/city/school taxes :'(

CarlBrannen
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by CarlBrannen » Tue Mar 20, 2012 6:22 pm

bfollinprm wrote:The cost of a house in the US (on average) is $170,000. Current 30 year mortgage rates are less than 4%. Assuming a 3.8% effective rate, we have the total cost over 30 years being 170,000*exp(30r) = 530,000 That makes a yearly cost of 17800, or a monthly mortgage payment of $1500.
LOL! Actually, the mortgage on a $170,000 house at 3.8% will be $792.13 per month, about half the $1500 you're estimating, according to a mortgage calculator:
http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/mor ... lator.aspx

I'm going to guess you've never been shopping for a house and probably don't know much about interest rates.

You assumed that the buyer would pay nothing for 30 years, and then suddenly pay the mortgage off as a lump sum, using money that had been collected over the 30 years (but which didn't collect interest). This is an assumption of "heads you win, tails I lose" from the point of view of the home buyer.

bfollinprm
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by bfollinprm » Tue Mar 20, 2012 7:34 pm

You're right I did... :oops: Don't judge me, I'm studying for finals and my brain is shot.

You're absolutely right, my numbers seemed a bit high--I actually did do a little mortgage shopping recently, and I recalled lower numbers than the ones I was calculating. I guess Amortization calculators really do have a point. Regardless, the numbers I worked out are (probably) roughly correct anyway, since I (1) neglected taxes, and (2) the usual HOA fees.

pqortic
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by pqortic » Tue Mar 20, 2012 7:45 pm

but in general, this buying real state should not be factored in choosing graduate schools at all. remember at your phd, you will still be a student and will have a student life although you may be able to save money by the time you graduate. not everyone would have a 15 year mortgage and not everyone would agree mortgaging a house like that is a wise thing to do given the student income.

I think grae is just trying to impress others by making stuff up about her income and life style. as astroprof said you should not expect to be a "rich" graduate student.

giga17
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by giga17 » Tue Mar 20, 2012 10:53 pm

pqortic wrote: I think grae is just trying to impress others by making stuff up about her income and life style. as astroprof said you should not expect to be a "rich" graduate student.
Basically you're saying flat out grae is a liar because she is "making stuff up"? I totally agree one does not become a graduate student to be rich, in fact it is the wrong career path to seek if one is looking to make money. But having lived in the Ithaca area, I know that the stipend of ~32K/annum that Cornell offers is way more than enough for people to live a very, very comfortable lifestyle. Rent can be very cheap (600 for a decent place is quite common, and if one is willing to share, it can drop to even 400), and the cost of living is really quite low. This situation is probably not the norm, but I think the way you're showing throwing aspersions to her character is totally uncalled for. You should have verified with other Cornell graduate students what grae is claiming, before throwing down the gaunlet of what you think should be the "right" (i.e. typical) lifestyle for a graduate student.

But anyway, great work HappyQuark! Really fabulous data collecting and compilation there. I would suggest that you put the spreadsheet up on Google documents or something, so that people on this forum can make changes to the stipend amounts if they see a mistake. In fact, I would suggest splitting the stipend column into normal semesters stipend, and a summer stipend, so that the picture is clearer.

bfollinprm
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by bfollinprm » Tue Mar 20, 2012 11:02 pm

pqortic wrote:but in general, this buying real state should not be factored in choosing graduate schools at all. remember at your phd, you will still be a student and will have a student life although you may be able to save money by the time you graduate. not everyone would have a 15 year mortgage and not everyone would agree mortgaging a house like that is a wise thing to do given the student income.

I think grae is just trying to impress others by making stuff up about her income and life style. as astroprof said you should not expect to be a "rich" graduate student.
Sorry you're so poor.

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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by midwestphysics » Tue Mar 20, 2012 11:15 pm

pqortic wrote: I think grae is just trying to impress others by making stuff up about her income and life style. as astroprof said you should not expect to be a "rich" graduate student.
Since when is owning a home "rich"? Of course each financial situation is different, your lifestyle, what you're getting, coming in with, taxes, fees, etc. That being said I wouldn't say she's trying to impress others, though it seems in this day and age being both financial savvy and responsible at the same time is actually impressive, as depressing as that reality is to live with. All she's pointing out is that you can put together a comfortable, not rich, but comfortable living on that income if you analyze each package for what it's really worth. Yeah, not everyone will mortgage a house, they may not want to, the area may not be affordable for that, so on a so forth. However, it's only unwise if your income alone is incapable of handling the mortgage. If you're not an idiot and you do your homework on it you won't put yourself in a stupid situation. Your income will dictate what you have work with, whether you're a student or a fast food worker or an Executive. Whatever your source of income you always price a range of affordability and try and find a house to fit that range. You should definitely factor in what the financial package can allow you to do in a given area. It will let you know what kind of lifestyle you can and can't live, that includes owning a home if it's something that is important to you. It's not all about the school itself, if I can go to Cornell and own my own home, or go to Berkeley and live is a crappy apartment or in graduate dorms. Yeah, that boosts Cornell is my book, as it should in anyone's.

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grae313
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by grae313 » Tue Mar 20, 2012 11:53 pm

giga17 wrote:
pqortic wrote: I think grae is just trying to impress others by making stuff up about her income and life style. as astroprof said you should not expect to be a "rich" graduate student.
Basically you're saying flat out grae is a liar because she is "making stuff up"? I totally agree one does not become a graduate student to be rich, in fact it is the wrong career path to seek if one is looking to make money. But having lived in the Ithaca area, I know that the stipend of ~32K/annum that Cornell offers is way more than enough for people to live a very, very comfortable lifestyle. Rent can be very cheap (600 for a decent place is quite common, and if one is willing to share, it can drop to even 400), and the cost of living is really quite low. This situation is probably not the norm, but I think the way you're showing throwing aspersions to her character is totally uncalled for. You should have verified with other Cornell graduate students what grae is claiming, before throwing down the gaunlet of what you think should be the "right" (i.e. typical) lifestyle for a graduate student.

But anyway, great work HappyQuark! Really fabulous data collecting and compilation there. I would suggest that you put the spreadsheet up on Google documents or something, so that people on this forum can make changes to the stipend amounts if they see a mistake. In fact, I would suggest splitting the stipend column into normal semesters stipend, and a summer stipend, so that the picture is clearer.
Thank you.

It never occurred to me that I might come off as bragging, but now that it's been said I see how it could definitely look like that. I wasn't trying to brag, I was trying to state facts. When I give advice here, if I'm conjecturing based on what seems should be the right answer, I say so. If I'm not sure, I say so. If I'm stating my opinion, I do try and point that out if it's not obvious. However, whenever I can, I rely on facts, experience, and personal first-hand knowledge. What do I know better than my own situation? I use specific examples because I think saying "I bought a house" says a lot more than "I'm paid well."

I also don't think it's anything to brag over. No one goes to physics grad school for money. I didn't choose Cornell because of the money. And I also wasn't telling anyone they should buy a house. My own decision was a personal one that I made with due thought and counsel from people older and wiser than myself. I made it because I was able to be extremely confident that it was a good decision for me. I was just trying to illustrate that at some schools, your stipend will afford you an excess of disposable income, whereas in others you will have to budget carefully just to get by. That's just a fact, and to state that for the most part every school will provide you with the same income to expense ratio is incredible. I also did not assign any judgement to that fact; I never made any statements as to the importance of one's stipend in graduate school. Of course no one goes to graduate school to get rich.

Ithaca is a tiny town in the middle of nowhere, and Cornell is a private University with a big endowment. They pay their professors and students extremely well in order to recruit them to such a freezing cold, isolated place, and because they can afford to. Yes, it's not average. But look at the numbers happyquark gave us. It's not even an outlier. You'll notice most of the schools at the top are in places where it's very cheap to live, and a fair number are also private. Meanwhile, a solid third of the list are below $15k effective dollars per 9-month term (places like UC Berkeley, UC Santa Barbara, and U Washington). That's around $10,000 or %40 less than Cornell per 9-month term. That's huge. However, I'd never argue that this should be the most important factor in where you go to school.

Finally, we are students, yes, but after the first two years graduate school is more like having a job as a researcher. We're talking about adults in their mid to late 20's, and into the early 30s even for older students and post docs. Of all the graduate students I know and meet at conferences and all the graduate students I visited, met, and stayed with during open houses, I would not say that on average they lived a student life. We have a job and we work. We earn a salary, we pay taxes, go grocery shopping, rent an apartment, etc. Many of my peers are married and some even have families. Over half own a car. I'd describe it as a hybrid somewhere between a student and a full adult, myself.

sarthorks
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by sarthorks » Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:11 am

Amazing work HappyQuark!

I was just wondering how the ACCRA Cost of Living Index (COL) works. According to the COL index at http://www.bestplaces.net/col/, the cost of living at Princeton is 182 (100 is the national average), but this is mainly because the Housing col is 354 (national avg = 100) - other factors are mainly only a little over 100. Correct me if I am wrong, but I would assume that grad housing in Princeton wouldn't be 250% more expensive than the national average of grad housing rates. So if one is not interested in buying a house, the col at Princeton must be considerably less than 182.

Edit: I just saw in the spreadsheet that Princeton col is taken as 132. HappyQuark, have you already corrected for the skewed housing costs?

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Dorian_Mode
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by Dorian_Mode » Wed Mar 21, 2012 6:24 am

Clearly I should have stayed at Rice for grad school. That would also save me the $700 I'm spending to go home over break.

TakeruK
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by TakeruK » Wed Mar 21, 2012 10:41 am

Grae, I didn't think that you were bragging. When I visited Ithaca and Tucson, I met plenty of graduate students who owned their own homes (most of them with two incomes, but some students were paying a mortgage by themselves). A look at the recent profile threads with financial information will also show that many places are offering graduate students $30K+ per year. One prospective student I met said that Harvard offered a 31K/year stipend plus an 18,000 signing bonus! That signing bonus is equal to the entire ANNUAL TA/RA stipend offered by many places, as shown in the table above!

I don't think we have to be poor simply because we are graduate students. I think graduate students should expect a stipend that allows them to live comfortably and save up some money per year ($5k to $10k, depending on whether you have a partner with income or not). We shouldn't expect to be able to afford a lot of luxuries, but we deserve to have a stipend that not only allows us to not worry about money while we're in grad school, but also allows us to not worry about "missed opportunity" costs of being in school for 5+ more years, instead of saving up for a home and/or family like our peers who have careers now.

There are some people who love doing science so much that they are willing to be poor for it, or give up future financial security for it. If that is you, then I honestly do admire your dedication to science. But I don't think that should be the norm for graduate students. We deserve to be paid at a reasonable level to make up for the fact that even with a $30K stipend, we are still "losing" $15k+ per year or so on income (and free time!) we could have made if we had gotten "real jobs". Sure, we may end up with tenured positions and it could all be worth it -- but that's no guarantee. We are more likely to end up getting a job that pays only a little bit more than what we could have made with a BSc or MSc. Except now we're competing with people with 5+ years of experience and 5+ years of additional income (and raises they would get).

I'm not saying that grad school isn't worth it, but many people think "sweet, I get free tuition, plus they PAY me to do what I love?!" However, what's also happening is that you are paying ~$15k/year that you could have been making with the skills you already have out of your undergrad. If we ever land permanent positions that require a PhD, we would have missed out on this income for 5+ years, and then get paid about the same as a BSc grad for another 4-6 years of post-docs.

My wife (who may not be able to get much work in the US) and I made the decision to accept all the costs (financial, time, and distance from our families etc.) because we think graduate school education and experience will be a good investment for our future. I hope to be able to do something I love to support my family. So it's perfectly reasonable for graduate students to demand competitive/reasonable stipends for our skills to allow us to secure ourselves financially and be "real people" instead of living like an undergraduate student into our 30s. I hope the students in Hawaii will be able to achieve a reasonable stipend!

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Dorian_Mode
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by Dorian_Mode » Wed Mar 21, 2012 11:10 am

With the way the bureaucracy around here gets things done, I'm sure we'll see a stipend increase in 20 years or so.

pqortic
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by pqortic » Wed Mar 21, 2012 7:34 pm

grae313 wrote: Thank you.

It never occurred to me that I might come off as bragging, but now that it's been said I see how it could definitely look like that. I wasn't trying to brag, I was trying to state facts. When I give advice here, if I'm conjecturing based on what seems should be the right answer, I say so. If I'm not sure, I say so. If I'm stating my opinion, I do try and point that out if it's not obvious. However, whenever I can, I rely on facts, experience, and personal first-hand knowledge. What do I know better than my own situation? I use specific examples because I think saying "I bought a house" says a lot more than "I'm paid well."

I also don't think it's anything to brag over. No one goes to physics grad school for money. I didn't choose Cornell because of the money. And I also wasn't telling anyone they should buy a house. My own decision was a personal one that I made with due thought and counsel from people older and wiser than myself. I made it because I was able to be extremely confident that it was a good decision for me. I was just trying to illustrate that at some schools, your stipend will afford you an excess of disposable income, whereas in others you will have to budget carefully just to get by. That's just a fact, and to state that for the most part every school will provide you with the same income to expense ratio is incredible. I also did not assign any judgement to that fact; I never made any statements as to the importance of one's stipend in graduate school. Of course no one goes to graduate school to get rich.

Ithaca is a tiny town in the middle of nowhere, and Cornell is a private University with a big endowment. They pay their professors and students extremely well in order to recruit them to such a freezing cold, isolated place, and because they can afford to. Yes, it's not average. But look at the numbers happyquark gave us. It's not even an outlier. You'll notice most of the schools at the top are in places where it's very cheap to live, and a fair number are also private. Meanwhile, a solid third of the list are below $15k effective dollars per 9-month term (places like UC Berkeley, UC Santa Barbara, and U Washington). That's around $10,000 or %40 less than Cornell per 9-month term. That's huge. However, I'd never argue that this should be the most important factor in where you go to school.

Finally, we are students, yes, but after the first two years graduate school is more like having a job as a researcher. We're talking about adults in their mid to late 20's, and into the early 30s even for older students and post docs. Of all the graduate students I know and meet at conferences and all the graduate students I visited, met, and stayed with during open houses, I would not say that on average they lived a student life. We have a job and we work. We earn a salary, we pay taxes, go grocery shopping, rent an apartment, etc. Many of my peers are married and some even have families. Over half own a car. I'd describe it as a hybrid somewhere between a student and a full adult, myself.
This is just so wrong. let’s assume a phd graduate from a school at the middle of nowhere where is surrounded by lots of cheap houses is trying to get a job/postdoc in california. that's what one would want to do with their phd degree, right. by the time their job application gets to any of the companies in california, graduates from berkeley and many other schools there have already had several meals and coffees with the CEOs and have developed a network of people for their future career. although they might not have a house to mortgage but competing with them in getting a job would be very hard. in fact, it sounds totally insane to me to trade a good career prospect for a couple of thousand extra dollars which you can earn in short time after graduation. again, remember at your phd, you are a student and you are getting a degree which will change your life. The highest graduate payment in cornell is not even close to someone's income in a company who has a BS degree. if you are getting paid enough even if you can't buy everything that you want but yet can have a happy life then I wouldn't factor in the ability to buy a house in making a decision. having said that, of course if out of two schools in the same area with same condition, I would definitely pick the one with higher payments.

when I speak to my friends here in Maryland who are in their fourth and fifth year, they tell me that they are already offered a job/postdoc and they are encouraged by the companies to finish sooner and start their job. places like NASA, NOAA and NIST that everybody would love to work at. and of course none of us would consider buying a house with the type of income that we have. but yes, we go grocery shopping, many of us own a car and believe it or not we buy alcohol too.

I reiterate this, most of the graduate assistantships (TA, first, second year RA) in most schools are determined by the school administrators. they would take costs of living, tax and misc. expenses in generating a number for income. they try to make it consistent within the campus and comparable with other institutes so students go there. you would normally get raised after you switch to RA and when you defend a proposal. they offer fellowship to people that they really like to keep and not everybody. and of course in some shitty places they pay you nothing and expect not much from you.

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grae313
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by grae313 » Wed Mar 21, 2012 8:37 pm

pqortic wrote:This is just so wrong. let’s assume a phd graduate from a school at the middle of nowhere where is surrounded by lots of cheap houses is trying to get a job/postdoc in california. that's what one would want to do with their phd degree, right. by the time their job application gets to any of the companies in california, graduates from berkeley and many other schools there have already had several meals and coffees with the CEOs and have developed a network of people for their future career. although they might not have a house to mortgage but competing with them in getting a job would be very hard. in fact, it sounds totally insane to me to trade a good career prospect for a couple of thousand extra dollars which you can earn in short time after graduation. again, remember at your phd, you are a student and you are getting a degree which will change your life. The highest graduate payment in cornell is not even close to someone's income in a company who has a BS degree. if you are getting paid enough even if you can't buy everything that you want but yet can have a happy life then I wouldn't factor in the ability to buy a house in making a decision. having said that, of course if out of two schools in the same area with same condition, I would definitely pick the one with higher payments.
You're seriously going to suggest that getting a PhD from Cornell sacrifices your career prospects? Yeah, you're right dude. There's no way I'll ever be able to network during my degree or find a job afterward. But it's OK because, like I said before, I totally picked Cornell because of the money and not the amazing research opportunities, world class facilities, industry connections (people from around the world (even California!) send people to the CNF to do work), and super friendly people. I totally traded my career for a house and it's worth it!!!!11!
pqortic wrote:when I speak to my friends here in Maryland who are in their fourth and fifth year, they tell me that they are already offered a job/postdoc and they are encouraged by the companies to finish sooner and start their job. places like NASA, NOAA and NIST that everybody would love to work at.
OMG you guys get post docs at NASA and NIST? I'm so jealous!!11!

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midwestphysics
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by midwestphysics » Wed Mar 21, 2012 10:47 pm

Alright, enough of this crap, back to the point. Good job HappyQuark, this is definitely something important to consider for every grad prospect. I'm curious, behind your motivations to do this, if you knew before what you know now would you still have picked Hawaii?

Bozostein
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by Bozostein » Thu Mar 22, 2012 3:37 am

well, cuny (where i'm going) which is not on this list will give me 25k. I'm pretty sure that will enable me to rent absolutely nothing in manhattan. : (

If anyone is else is going to cuny shoot me a pm... i could really use a roomate!

microacg
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Re: Weighted Stipend Data by University

Post by microacg » Thu Mar 22, 2012 6:10 am

Bozostein wrote:well, cuny (where i'm going) which is not on this list will give me 25k. I'm pretty sure that will enable me to rent absolutely nothing in manhattan. : (

If anyone is else is going to cuny shoot me a pm... i could really use a roomate!
I'd think you'd be better of renting in Queens or the Bronx and then taking the subway in.



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