M.A. Graduate Assistantships
MA and MS Program Costs as of 2025
Tuition fees
- NC Resident tuition is about $2,400/semester
- Non-NC Resident tuition is about $9,900/semester
- University fees are about $1,725/semester
Teaching Assistantships (TA)
- $8,625/semester stipend ($17,250 per academic year)
- The NC Resident part of your tuition is paid
- Competitively awarded based on availability, and your background preparation
Research Assistantships (RA)
- $9,000/semester stipend ($18,250 per academic year)
- The NC Resident part of your tuition is paid
- Funding is most often from a faculty mentor’s research grant
Self-funding: Working an off-campus job or similar
- Tuition is not paid
M.A. Graduate Assistantships and Financial Support
The UNC Charlotte Department of Geography M.A. Program currently offers three principal types of financial support for full-time graduate students: teaching assistantships, research assistantships, and internships. The Department of Geography at UNC Charlotte makes a formal distinction between assistantships and internships, and some of the differences in these two options are outlined below.
Assistantships
Graduate assistantships are arranged for either one entire semester or for an entire academic year (two semesters or nine months). They are normally scheduled for 18-20 weeks per semester and the student works 20 hours per week. Assistantships are funded at a rate of $8625 per semester —$17,250 per academic year. Students with graduate assistantships will receive MTART (Master’s Teaching Assistant Residents Tuition) which will cover the NC Residents tuition part of their tuition. Out-of-state and international students will be responsible for the remaining amount of their tuition. The Department makes every effort to provide funding to every full time student in the program. Priority is given first to covering teaching laboratory sections in introductory courses in Geography (Earth Science-Geography), and GIS. Assignments are made on the basis of skill sets that match the content of these labs and the number of sections that require Teaching Assistants. In that context, teaching assistantship responsibilities include the teaching mission of the University and its faculty.
Graduate School Grants ($3,000 for year one) are available if funding is available and are open to all Master’s students
Awarding Assistantships
Students who have applied for assistantships will be informed as soon as possible regarding the status of their application. Appointments may be for one semester or a full academic year. Typically funding is limited to four semesters. For students opting to complete non-funded research projects, financial support is normally limited to a total of four semesters; students opting to complete a paid internship will normally be limited to three semesters of funding on assistantships. An undergraduate GPA of at least a 3.0 is required for eligibility, or must have completed at least six hours of graduate work with a GPA of 3.0 or better. Assistantships may be rescinded at any time if: (1) the individual is making unsatisfactory progress toward the completion of the degree requirements, or (2) the performance of assistantship duties is unsatisfactory.
The department has a number of financial assistance options available. These include assistantships in other academic units and off-campus work situations which often are made available to the department after the new fiscal year. For this reason, we are often unable to finalize our funding offers until mid to late summer. Additional funding opportunities occur through departmental grants and contracts with local agencies.
Internships
The M.A. in Geography at UNC Charlotte emphasizes the application of skills, methods and theory to problem solving. Given this focus, the Internship often is a critical, capstone element of many students’ programs. Normally with an internship, the capstone research project is completed in the context of the internship. That is, students are still required to complete a capstone research project but the research topic is determined by the internship employer. As such, the nature of internship tasks normally involves the student in a higher level of independent problem solving than the normal assistantship might. Internships are somewhat like consulting contracts. In that sense, internships are more like a part-time job for the student. Since we try to find work settings that fit the student’s academic interest, internships offer valuable training opportunities and work experience. The nature of the work depends entirely on the needs of the client as those needs mesh with the training and background of the student. UNC Charlotte faculty are seldom involved in directing the student working in an internship. The student, in effect, works for the client. Accordingly, internships that result in capstone research products are centered on research questions that are framed by the client. In practice, these private sector-sponsored research experiences occur most frequently within the Location Analysis concentration.
An internship project normally involves a student in the execution of a substantive research task for a private or public sector client. While a research project always involves some oversight and direction from UNC Charlotte faculty and the client, the student is the primary investigator and has the major responsibility for executing a specific “real world” research task or research question.
Internships may involve work executed within the client’s work setting requiring the intern to report for work at a pre-established schedule or they may be less structured and more task-oriented. The type of work setting will depend entirely on client preference and the nature of the internship problem or task.
Internships normally last three to five months. In the Internship, the student can work more than 20 hours per week. The student normally is paid somewhere between $1,200 and $2,000 per month depending on the nature of the task undertaken and the estimated time involved. Normally we try to give our off-campus students the same days off as those working on campus receive. Regardless of the breaks, the student is still responsible for completing the 20 hours per week for the length of the semester.
The availability of internships depends heavily on demands that arise from off-campus sources. Given the applied thrust of the department, we encourage graduate students to engage in internships, either funded or unfunded. However, for a variety of reasons, it may not always be possible or advisable to arrange an internship. In such cases, the more traditional thesis style capstone research option is used to complete program requirements.
Applying for Funding
Prospective graduate students who are interested in applying for the program may apply here. Graduate students who are seeking external funding can find information here. New applications have priority deadlines on Oct 15 (Spring) and Feb 15 (Fall). Only those students admitted to full standing are eligible for funding. Students who receive funding must carry a course load of at least nine hours to receive a MTART. Students also have the option to carry a course load of 6 hours, however they will not receive a MTART.
Because of the availability of non-traditional funding such as off campus assistantships, grants and contract work, UNC Charlotte normally is able to offer funding fairly late in the summer. It is possible that funding opportunities might be available as late as June or July for those entering in the fall semester and December for the spring semester. Thus even those applicants filing late might still be eligible for funding. Applicants are encouraged to contact the Geography M.A. Graduate Program Director to explore funding opportunities.