NEH
SUMMER SEMINARS & INSTITUTES FOR SCHOOL TEACHERS
APPLICATION INFORMATION AND INSTRUCTIONS
Summer Seminars and Institutes for School Teachers are offered by the National
Endowment for the Humanities to provide teachers an opportunity for substantive
study of significant humanities ideas and texts. These study opportunities
are especially designed for this program and are not intended to duplicate
courses normally offered by graduate programs. On completion of a seminar
or institute, participants will receive a certificate indicating their participation.
Prior to completing an application, please review the enclosed letter/prospectus
from the project director (or letter/prospectus downloaded from the director’s
website, if available) and consider carefully what is expected in terms of
residence and attendance, reading and writing requirements, and general participation
in the work of the project.
A seminar for school teachers enables 15 participants to explore a topic or
set of readings with a scholar having special interest and expertise in the
field. The core material of the seminar need not relate directly to the school
curriculum; the principal goal of the seminar is to engage teachers in the
scholarly enterprise and to expand and deepen their understanding of the humanities
through reading, discussion, writing, and reflection. An institute for school
teachers, typically led by a team of core faculty and visiting scholars, is
designed to present the best available scholarship on important humanities
issues and works taught in the nation's schools. The 25 to 30 participating
teachers compare and synthesize the various perspectives offered by the faculty,
make connections between the institute content and classroom applications,
and often develop improved teaching materials for their classrooms. Please
note: The use of the words “seminar” or “institute”
in this document is precise and is intended to convey differences between
the two project types.
ELIGIBILITY
These projects are designed for full time teachers including home-schooling
parents, but other K-12 school personnel, such as librarians and administrators,
may also be eligible to apply, depending on the specific seminar or institute.
Substitute teachers or part-time personnel are not eligible. Applications
from teachers in public, private, and religiously affiliated schools receive
equal consideration.
Teachers at schools in the United States or its territorial possessions or
Americans teaching in foreign schools where at least 50 percent of the students
are American nationals are eligible for this program. Applicants must be United
States citizens, residents of U.S. jurisdictions, or foreign nationals who
have been residing in the United States or its territories for at least the
three years immediately preceding the application deadline. Foreign nationals
teaching abroad at non-U.S. chartered institutions are not eligible to apply.
Applicants must complete the NEH application cover sheet and provide all the
information requested below to be considered eligible. Individuals may not
apply to study with a director of a seminar or institute who is a current
colleague or a family member. Individuals must not apply to seminars directed
by scholars with whom they have previously studied. Institute selection committees
are advised that only under the most compelling and exceptional circumstances
may an individual participate in an institute with a director or a lead faculty
member who has previously guided that individual’s research or in whose
previous institute or seminar he or she has participated. An individual may
apply to only one project in any one year. Anyone found to have applied to
more than one project will be ineligible to participate in any seminar or
institute that year.
SELECTION CRITERIA
A selection committee reads and evaluates all properly completed applications
in order to select the most promising applicants and to identify a small number
of alternates. (Seminar selection committees consist of the seminar director,
a school teacher who is usually a participant in a previous NEH seminar, and
a colleague of the director. Institute selection committees consist of three
to five members, usually all drawn from the institute faculty and staff members.)
While recent participants are eligible to apply, project selection committees
are directed to give first consideration to applicants who have not participated
in an NEH-supported seminar or institute in the last three years (2006, 2007,
2008). Recent participation in NEH’s Landmarks of American History and
Culture Program does not negatively affect eligibility or competitiveness.
The most important consideration in the selection of participants is the likelihood
that an applicant will benefit professionally and personally. This is determined
by committee members from the conjunction of several factors, each of which
should be addressed in the application essay.
These factors include:
1. effectiveness and commitment as a teacher/educator;
2. intellectual interests, both generally and as they relate to the work of
the project;
3. special perspectives, skills, or experiences that would contribute to the
seminar or institute;
4. commitment to participate fully in the formal and informal collegial life
of the project; and
5. the likelihood that the experience will enhance the applicant's teaching.
When choices must be made among equally qualified candidates, several additional
factors are considered. Preference is given to applicants who have not previously
participated in an NEH seminar or institute, or who significantly contribute
to the diversity of the seminar or institute.
STIPEND, TENURE, AND CONDITIONS OF AWARD
Teachers selected to participate in six-week long projects will receive a
stipend of $4,400; those in five-week projects will receive $3,800; those
in four-week projects will receive $3,200; those in three-week projects will
receive $2,600; and those in two-week projects will receive $2,000. Stipends
are intended to help cover travel expenses to and from the project location,
books and other research expenses, and living expenses for the duration of
the period spent in residence. Stipends are taxable. Applicants to all projects,
especially those held abroad, should note that supplements will not be given
in cases where the stipend is insufficient to cover all expenses.
Seminar and institute participants are required to attend all meetings and
to engage fully in the work of the project. During the project's tenure, they
may not undertake teaching assignments or any other professional activities
unrelated to their participation in the project. Participants who, for any
reason, do not complete the full tenure of the project must refund a pro-rata
portion of the stipend.
At the end of the project's residential period, participants will be asked
to submit online evaluations in which they review their work during the summer
and assess its value to their personal and professional development. These
evaluations will become part of the project's grant file and may become part
of an application to repeat the seminar or institute.
APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS
These general application instructions from the NEH should be accompanied
by a “Dear Colleague Letter” from the project director that contains
detailed information about the topic under study; project requirements and
expectations of the participants; the academic and institutional setting;
and specific provisions for lodging, subsistence, and extracurricular activities.
If you do not have such a letter/prospectus, please request one from the director
of the project in which you are interested before you attempt to complete
and submit an application. In some cases, directors have websites for their
projects and the “Dear Colleague” letter may be downloaded from
their website. All application materials must be sent to the project director
at the address listed on the program poster. Application materials sent to
the Endowment will not be reviewed.
CHECKLIST OF APPLICATION MATERIALS
A completed application consists of three copies of the following collated
items:
- the completed application cover sheet,
- a résumé, and
- an application essay as outlined below.
In addition, it must include two letters of recommendation as
described below:
The application cover sheet
The application cover sheet must be filled out online at this address: <http://www.neh.gov/online/education/participants/>
Please fill it out online as directed by the prompts. When you are finished,
be sure to click on the “submit” button. Print out the cover sheet
and add it to your application package. Note that filling out a cover sheet
is not the same as applying, so there is no penalty for changing your mind
and filling out a cover sheet for more than one project. A full application
consists of the items listed above, as sent to the project director:
Résumé
Please include a résumé detailing your educational qualifications
and professional experience.
The Application Essay
The application essay should be no more than four double spaced pages. It
should address reasons for applying; the applicant's interest, both academic
and personal, in the subject to be studied; qualifications and experiences
that equip the applicant to do the work of the seminar or institute and to
make a contribution to a learning community; a statement of what the applicant
wants to accomplish by participating; and the relation of the project to the
applicant's professional responsibilities.
Reference Letters
The two referees should be familiar with the applicant's professional accomplishments
or promise, interests, and ability to contribute to and benefit from participation
in a community of intellectual inquiry. Letters from colleagues who know the
applicant's teaching and from those outside the applicant's institution who
know the applicant's intellectual strengths can be particularly useful. Referees
should, if possible, be familiar with the work of the National Endowment for
the Humanities and the seminars and institutes program. It is helpful for
referees to read the description of the project sent by the director and the
application essay. If an applicant has previously participated in an NEH summer
seminar or institute, a recommendation from the director or lead scholar of
that program would be useful. Please ask each of your referees to sign their
name across the seal on the back of the envelope containing their letter,
and enclose the letters with your application.
SUBMISSION OF APPLICATIONS AND NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE
Completed applications should be submitted to the project director and should
be postmarked no later than March 2, 2009.
Successful applicants will be notified of their selection on April 1, 2009,
and they will have until April 15 to accept or decline the offer. Applicants
who will not be home during the notification period should provide an address
and phone number where they can be reached. No information concerning the
status of an application will be available prior to the official notification
period.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY STATEMENT: Endowment programs
do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability,
or age. For further information, write to NEH Equal Opportunity Officer, 1100
Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20506. TDD: 202/606 8282 (this is
a special telephone device for the Deaf).
