miércoles, mayo 10, 2006

Scholarship talk

If you're chosen as a scholar by the Spanish government, they initially give you a scholarship contract for your first year in school and then, depending on your program, you will need to renew this contract every year until your graduation. The maximum number of years you are allowed to renew the contract for a masters course is two, and for a doctorate, three.

The thing is, the Spanish government has this bad habit of not granting the contract for the succeeding years of your program. This means that they will stop financing your studies at some point. To further put this in layman's terms - this means that one day in your otherwise quiet life in the boondocks of some third world country, the Spanish will invite you to come and study in their country. So, accepting the invitation, you pack your third-world belongings and book the next flight to Spain thinking yourself the fortunate ambassador of your country. One of the chosen "few." However, after some twelve months of slaving over graduate-level coursework, you find a letter at your doorstep saying: "Sorry, we have decided we will not finance your studies anymore." And that's it. You now pack your first-world souvenirs and take them with you back to the boondocks, together with some course credits that are probably good for nothing. No masters degree, no PhD. Goodbye and to hell with you.

The thing is, there's not even a good justification for the non-renewal of your scholarship. Judging by the kind of inconsequential documents required of all applicants, I think they have to be god in order to carry out a fair selection process. In other words, if they have some 1,000 applications at hand and they need to reject 300 in order to suit a given budget, how do they choose the unlucky 300 on the basis of inconsequential information (e.g. applicant's personal details, coursework description, academic institution, etc.)? Their only choice, it seems, is to do a lottery. Throw all the application papers up in the air and renew the contract of all those which manage to land inside the box; those who fall out of it will then receive rejection letters.

Fortunately, when I applied for renewal last year, I was one of those whose papers landed inside the box. So my contract is guaranteed until graduation. But this year, I heard from a mailing list that the infamous rejection letters have been sent out and so far the known casualties number about 50. Most likely, these people will have to leave Spain without a graduate degree; that, after leaving their jobs and families back home just to come all the way here. I don't understand why the Spanish government has to take in more scholars than they can possibly finance to graduation. Isn't it absurd? To me, it doesn't make any sense, but to them it somehow does.

2 comentarios:

*kel dijo...

cool blog u have here. i like your writing u´ve got some humor there! k

Lenny dijo...

Once again governments are proved to be unlogical ... I guess they're the same everywhere!!!

Lenny