aera dissertation fellowship

  • Professional Development Courses
  • Undergraduate Student Education Research Training
  • Minority Dissertation Fellowship Program
  • AERA Fellowship Program on the Study of Deeper Learning
  • Funded Dissertation Grants
  • Funded Research Grants
  • External Fellowship and Funding Opportunities
  • AERA Online Job Board
  • Virtual Research Learning Center
  • Voices from the Field

aera dissertation fellowship

Share 

Home

Research Funding

Subscribe to the funding alert newsletter.

The Duke Funding Alert newsletter, published every Monday, provides information on all new and updated grants and fellowships added to the database during the prior week. This listserv is restricted to members of the Duke community.

Request Subscription

AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

The American Educational Research Association (AERA) Council in 1991 established the AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research to enhance the racial and ethnic diversity of faculty, scholars, and researchers who study topics in education research. This fellowship is targeted for members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education (e.g., African Americans, Alaskan Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanics or Latinos, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islanders).

The Fellowship Program aims to provide support for doctoral dissertation research, to advance education research by outstanding minority graduate students, and to enhance these students’ competitiveness for academic appointments at major research universities. It supports fellows conducting education research and provides mentoring, capacity building activities, and guidance toward the completion of their doctoral studies. 

The Program Fellows have produced rigorous research that is published in peer reviewed journals, books, and edited volumes. Many of the recent Program Fellows are in postdoctoral positions and assistant professor positions at Research I institutions including Georgia State University, Harvard University, University of Georgia, the University of Southern California, and Southern Methodist University. Other fellows have careers in applied research and policy positions at various organizations.

Deadline: Nov. 1, 2023

Agency Website

Areas of interest.

The AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship Program in Education Research seeks proposals from advanced graduate students who are from racial and ethnic groups that are underrepresented in higher education. The Fellowship Program encourages studies that examine a wide range of education research topics such as students’ school experiences, STEM education and learning, ethnic studies/curriculum; tracking; measurement of achievement and opportunity gaps; English language learners; or bullying and restorative justice. These studies may focus on students, teachers, schools, and/or educational contexts across multiple educational stages including early childhood education and development, k-12 education, postsecondary education, and the workforce. Studies should use rigorous scientific research methods within quantitative, qualitative, archival, and/or mixed method techniques. Studies that examine issues of specific racial and ethnic groups, social classes, genders, or persons with disabilities are encouraged and supported by the Fellowship Program.

Eligibility Requirements

The AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research is open to U.S. citizens and permanent residents who are members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education (e.g., African Americans, Alaskan Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanics or Latinos, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islanders). Applicants can come from graduate programs and departments in education research, the humanities, or social or behavioral science disciplinary or interdisciplinary fields, such as economics, history, political science, psychology, public policy, or sociology. Eligible graduate students will be at the writing stage of their dissertation by the beginning of the fellowship. 

Fellows are required to provide proof of advancement to candidacy at the beginning of the award period. Applicants must work full-time on their dissertations and course requirements. 

Amount Description

Award Component 1, $25,000 Stipend . AERA awards each Fellow up to a $25,000 stipend to study education, teaching, learning, or other education research topic. The fellowship funds can be used for tuition and/or institution fees, books, living expenses, equipment, travel, supplies, software, and other expenses that are directly related to conducting this research. Fellows must include travel and lodging expenses to the Annual Meeting in their budget. AERA encourages cost sharing from universities in the form of tuition assistance, office space, university fees, and other expenses. Institutions cannot charge overhead or indirect costs to administer the fellowship funds.

Award Component 2, Present Research at Invited AERA Poster Session . Fellows present their research in an invited poster session during the 2025  AERA Annual Meeting. This poster session is a hallmark of the AERA professional development program and features promising research from graduate students who are supported by AERA funded programs. This is an excellent opportunity to showcase the developing research from the next generation of scholars and for the Fellows to receive feedback from senior scholars, education school deans, foundation officers, and others across the education research community.

Award Component 3, AERA Minority Fellows Mentoring and Career Development Workshop . During the 2025 AERA Annual Meeting, Fellows participate in a mentoring and career development workshop with current and former members of the AERA Minority Selection Committee and other senior scholars. The workshop focuses on topics such as making the transition from graduate school to a postdoctoral program, faculty position, or a career in applied research.

Funding Type

Eligibility, external deadline.

American Educational Research Association (AERA) Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

  • Chicago Harris School of Public Policy
  • Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice
  • Social Sciences
  • Fall Quarter (September-December)
  • Dissertation Write-Up
  • Diversity and Inclusion Graduate Award
  • All but Dissertation (ABD) by Start of Fellowship
  • Permanent resident
  • U.S. Citizenship required

The AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship Program in Education Research seeks proposals from advanced graduate students who are from racial and ethnic groups that are underrepresented in higher education. The Fellowship Program encourages studies that examine a wide range of education research topics such as students’ school experiences, STEM education and learning, ethnic studies/curriculum; tracking; measurement of achievement and opportunity gaps; English language learners; or bullying and restorative justice. These studies may focus on students, teachers, schools, and/or educational contexts across multiple educational stages including early childhood education and development, k-12 education, postsecondary education, and the workforce. Studies should use rigorous scientific research methods within quantitative, qualitative, archival, and/or mixed method techniques. Studies that examine issues of specific racial and ethnic groups, social classes, genders, or persons with disabilities are encouraged and supported by the Fellowship Program.

Eligibility

The AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research is open to U.S. citizens and permanent residents who are members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education (e.g., African Americans, Alaskan Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanics or Latinos, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islanders).

Applicants can come from graduate programs and departments in education research, the humanities, or social or behavioral science disciplinary or interdisciplinary fields, such as economics, history, political science, psychology, public policy, or sociology. Eligible graduate students will be at the writing stage of their dissertation by the beginning of the fellowship.

Fellows are required to provide proof of advancement to candidacy at the beginning of the award period. Applicants must work full-time on their dissertations and course requirements.

AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research Award

Award Component 1, $25,000 Stipend . AERA awards each Fellow up to a $25,000 stipend to study education, teaching, learning, or other education research topic. The fellowship funds can be used for tuition and/or institution fees, books, living expenses, equipment, travel, supplies, software, and other expenses that are directly related to conducting this research. Fellows must include travel and lodging expenses to the Annual Meeting in their budget. AERA encourages cost sharing from universities in the form of tuition assistance, office space, university fees, and other expenses. Institutions cannot charge overhead or indirect costs to administer the fellowship funds.

Award Component 2, Present Research at Invited AERA Poster Session . Fellows present their research in an invited poster session during the AERA Annual Meeting. This poster session is a hallmark of the AERA professional development program and features promising research from graduate students who are supported by AERA funded programs. This is an excellent opportunity to showcase the developing research from the next generation of scholars and for the Fellows to receive feedback from senior scholars, education school deans, foundation officers, and others across the education research community.

Award Component 3, AERA Minority Fellows Mentoring and Career Development Workshop . During the AERA Annual Meeting, Fellows participate in a mentoring and career development workshop with current and former members of the AERA Minority Selection Committee and other senior scholars. The workshop focuses on topics such as making the transition from graduate school to a postdoctoral program, faculty position, or a career in applied research.

Deadline: December 1

Fellowship Website:

Fellowship Contact:

Your information has been submitted. Thanks!

AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

Tag: Dissertation Fellowship | members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education | U.S. Citizen or Permanent U.S. Resident

In 1991, the Council of the American Educational Research Association (AERA) established the AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research to provide support for doctoral dissertation research.

The purposes of the program are to advance education research by outstanding minority graduate students and to improve the quality and diversity of university faculties. This program offers doctoral fellowships to enhance the competitiveness of outstanding minority scholars for academic appointments at major research universities.

It supports fellows conducting education research and provides mentoring and guidance toward the completion of their doctoral studies. AERA will award up to three doctoral fellowships every year.

Review and Apply here

News from the school.

Bethany Kotlar, PhD '24, studies how children fare when they're born to incarcerated mothers

Bethany Kotlar, PhD '24, studies how children fare when they're born to incarcerated mothers

Soccer, truffles, and exclamation points: Dean Baccarelli shares his story

Soccer, truffles, and exclamation points: Dean Baccarelli shares his story

Health care transformation in Africa highlighted at conference

Health care transformation in Africa highlighted at conference

COVID, four years in

COVID, four years in

SEHD Impact

AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

Sponsor name: american educational research association, deadline date: 16-nov-2020, program objectives.

The American Educational Research Association (AERA) Council established the AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research to enhance the racial and ethnic diversity of faculty, scholars, and researchers who study topics in education research. This fellowship is targeted for members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education (e.g., African Americans, Alaskan Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanics or Latinos, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islanders).

The Fellowship Program aims to provide support for doctoral dissertation research, to advance education research by outstanding minority graduate students, and to enhance these students competitiveness for academic appointments at major research universities. It supports fellows conducting education research and provides mentoring, capacity building activities, and guidance toward the completion of their doctoral studies.

The Program Fellows have produced rigorous research that is published in peer reviewed journals, books, and edited volumes. Many of the recent Program Fellows are in postdoctoral positions and assistant professor positions at Research I institutions including Georgia State University, Harvard University, University of Georgia, the University of Southern California, and Southern Methodist University. Other fellows have careers in applied research and policy positions at various organizations.

The AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship Program in Education Research seeks proposals from advanced graduate students who are from racial and ethnic groups that are underrepresented in higher education. The Fellowship Program encourages studies that examine a wide range of education research topics such as students’ school experiences, STEM education and learning, ethnic studies/curriculum; tracking; measurement of achievement and opportunity gaps; English language learners; or bullying and restorative justice. These studies may focus on students, teachers, schools, and/or educational contexts across multiple educational stages including early childhood education and development, k-12 education, postsecondary education, and the workforce. Studies should use rigorous scientific research methods within quantitative, qualitative, archival, and/or mixed method techniques. Studies that examine issues of specific racial and ethnic groups, social classes, genders, or persons with disabilities are encouraged and supported by the Fellowship Program.

Eligibility Requirements

The AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research is open to U.S. citizens and permanent residents who are members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education (e.g., African Americans, Alaskan Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanics or Latinos, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islanders). Applicants can come from graduate programs and departments in education research, the humanities, or social or behavioral science disciplinary or interdisciplinary fields, such as economics, history, political science, psychology, public policy, or sociology. Eligible graduate students will be at the writing stage of their dissertation by the beginning of the fellowship. Fellows are required to provide proof of advancement to candidacy at the beginning of the award period. Applicants must work full-time on their dissertations and course requirements.

Funding Guidelines

Each fellowship award is for 1 year, beginning July 1, 2021 or later, and is nonrenewable. This fellowship program is intended as a write-up fellowship.

  • Award Component 1, $25,000 Stipend. AERA awards each Fellow up to a $25,000 stipend to study education, teaching, learning, or other education research topic. The fellowship funds can be used for tuition and/or institution fees, books, living expenses, equipment, travel, supplies, software, and other expenses that are directly related to conducting this research. Fellows must include travel and lodging expenses to the Annual Meeting in their budget. AERA encourages cost sharing from universities in the form of tuition assistance, office space, university fees, and other expenses. Institutions cannot charge overhead or indirect costs to administer the fellowship funds.
  • Award Component 2, Present Research at Invited AERA Poster Session. Fellows present their research in an invited poster session during the 2022 AERA Annual Meeting. This poster session is a hallmark of the AERA professional development program and features promising research from graduate students who are supported by AERA funded programs. This is an excellent opportunity to showcase the developing research from the next generation of scholars and for the Fellows to receive feedback from senior scholars, education school deans, foundation officers, and others across the education research community.
  • Award Component 3, AERA Minority Fellows Mentoring and Career Development Workshop. During the 2022 AERA Annual Meeting, Fellows participate in a mentoring and career development workshop with current and former members of the AERA Minority Selection Committee and other senior scholars. The workshop focuses on topics such as making the transition from graduate school to a postdoctoral program, faculty position, or a career in applied research. (msw)

Sponsor Contact Information

1430 K Street, NW Suite 1200 Washington, US-DC 20005 United States Phone: 202-238-3200 Fax: 202-238-3250 E-Mail: [email protected] Program URL:  http://www.aera.net/Professional-Opportunities-Funding/AERA-Funding-Opportunities/Minority-Dissertation-Fellowship-Program

Barnard College Columbia University

AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship

Fellowship facts at a glance, related fellowships, aera dissertation grants, amelia earhart fellowship, american association of university women (aauw) fellowships.

Skip to Content

Other ways to search:

  • Events Calendar
  • The Center for African and African American Studies Dissertation Completion Fellowship

The Center for African & African American Studies (CAAAS) Dissertation Completion Fellowship provides one semester of full funding during either the Fall or Spring semester. Support will consist of a stipend equal to a 50% GPTI appointment paid out in monthly increments. Up to five dissertation hours of tuition, mandatory fees, and coverage under the student gold health plan are also included. All CU Boulder doctoral students with demonstrable research and creative work in African studies, African American studies, and/or African diaspora studies are eligible to apply.

Meet Our Current CAAAS Dissertation Completion Fellow

Call for Applications: Opens February 15, 2024, and Closes April 1, 2024.

Deadline: April 1, 2024. Late or incomplete applications will not be considered.

Award: A stipend equal to a 50% GPTI appointment paid out in monthly increments. Up to five dissertation hours of tuition, mandatory fees, and coverage under the student gold health plan are also included.

Eligibility

Doctoral students from any campus-wide department or college who have advanced to candidacy (D status) and whose work demonstrably and significantly contributes to African studies, African American studies, and/or the African diaspora studies. Any eligible student may submit an application with the exception of recipients of other major fellowships in the current or next academic year.

Selection Criteria

The selection committee will base their decisions on the following criteria:

1. The quality of the applicant's research project.

2. The quality of the applicant’s CV (presentations, publications, awards, creative work, etc.).

3. Probability of completing the dissertation within the award period (the higher, the better).

4. Other teaching-free fellowships the applicant has already received (the fewer, the better).

Application Procedures

Applicants must submit #s 1-7 in a single .pdf by the deadline April 1, 2024 to the CAAAS Director, Reiland Rabaka, at [email protected] . Item #8 should be submitted directly by its author. Make “CAAAS Dissertation Completion Fellowship Application” the email subject line when submitting application materials. Late or incomplete applications will not be considered.

1. Cover Letter (Please indicate which degree program you are currently in, note where you are in your program requirements, and why this fellowship would be timely.)

3. A copy of CU Boulder transcript (official or unofficial)

4. Proof of admission to Ph.D. candidacy (e.g., letter of admission to candidacy)

5. A synopsis of the dissertation (750 words maximum)

6. A timeline of the dissertation completion (one page)

7. A list of other research grants (internal or external) to which the applicant has applied and all other forms of financial support you have received since you have become ABD— specifically any internal and external fellowships you received or will be expected to receive to aid you in your dissertation research and writing.

8. Letter of support including an evaluation statement of the dissertation and the likelihood it will be completed within the fellowship period. This should be written by a dissertation advisor or another key member of the dissertation committee and be submitted directly by its author to [email protected] . (750 words maximum)

Expectations

1. Recipients will be asked to submit a letter notifying the CAAAS upon completion of their dissertation. In addition, by May 1, please email [email protected] a 300-600 word summary (double spaced, 12-point font) of how the fellowship year aided in furthering your dissertation research.

2. Acknowledgment of the Center for African & African American Studies (CAAAS) is required on all promotional/published materials for projects funded by the CAAAS. Use this language for credit: “This project was supported, in part, by a grant from the Center for African & African American Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder.”

  • Faculty Opportunities
  • The Center for African & African American Studies Graduate Student Summer Fellowships
  • The Center for African & African American Studies Graduate Student Research & Creative Work Awards
  • The Center for African and African American Studies’ Alice Cleora Reeves Endowed Dissertation Award

Ankara

Kings of Russia

The Comprehensive Guide to Moscow Nightlife

  • Posted on April 14, 2018 July 26, 2018
  • by Kings of Russia
  • 8 minute read

aera dissertation fellowship

Moscow’s nightlife scene is thriving, and arguably one of the best the world has to offer – top-notch Russian women, coupled with a never-ending list of venues, Moscow has a little bit of something for everyone’s taste. Moscow nightlife is not for the faint of heart – and if you’re coming, you better be ready to go Friday and Saturday night into the early morning.

This comprehensive guide to Moscow nightlife will run you through the nuts and bolts of all you need to know about Moscow’s nightclubs and give you a solid blueprint to operate with during your time in Moscow.

What you need to know before hitting Moscow nightclubs

Prices in moscow nightlife.

Before you head out and start gaming all the sexy Moscow girls , we have to talk money first. Bring plenty because in Moscow you can never bring a big enough bankroll. Remember, you’re the man so making a fuzz of not paying a drink here or there will not go down well.

Luckily most Moscow clubs don’t do cover fees. Some electro clubs will charge 15-20$, depending on their lineup. There’s the odd club with a minimum spend of 20-30$, which you’ll drop on drinks easily. By and large, you can scope out the venues for free, which is a big plus.

Bottle service is a great deal in Moscow. At top-tier clubs, it starts at 1,000$. That’ll go a long way with premium vodka at 250$, especially if you have three or four guys chipping in. Not to mention that it’s a massive status boost for getting girls, especially at high-end clubs.

Without bottle service, you should estimate a budget of 100-150$ per night. That is if you drink a lot and hit the top clubs with the hottest girls. Scale down for less alcohol and more basic places.

Dress code & Face control

Door policy in Moscow is called “face control” and it’s always the guy behind the two gorillas that gives the green light if you’re in or out.

In Moscow nightlife there’s only one rule when it comes to dress codes:

You can never be underdressed.

People dress A LOT sharper than, say, in the US and that goes for both sexes. For high-end clubs, you definitely want to roll with a sharp blazer and a pocket square, not to mention dress shoes in tip-top condition. Those are the minimum requirements to level the playing field vis a vis with other sharply dressed guys that have a lot more money than you do. Unless you plan to hit explicit electro or underground clubs, which have their own dress code, you are always on the money with that style.

Getting in a Moscow club isn’t as hard as it seems: dress sharp, speak English at the door and look like you’re in the mood to spend all that money that you supposedly have (even if you don’t). That will open almost any door in Moscow’s nightlife for you.

Types of Moscow Nightclubs

In Moscow there are four types of clubs with the accompanying female clientele:

High-end clubs:

These are often crossovers between restaurants and clubs with lots of tables and very little space to dance. Heavy accent on bottle service most of the time but you can work the room from the bar as well. The hottest and most expensive girls in Moscow go there. Bring deep pockets and lots of self-confidence and you have a shot at swooping them.

Regular Mid-level clubs:

They probably resemble more what you’re used to in a nightclub: big dancefloors, stages and more space to roam around. Bottle service will make you stand out more but you can also do well without. You can find all types of girls but most will be in the 6-8 range. Your targets should always be the girls drinking and ideally in pairs. It’s impossible not to swoop if your game is at least half-decent.

Basic clubs/dive bars:

Usually spots with very cheap booze and lax face control. If you’re dressed too sharp and speak no Russian, you might attract the wrong type of attention so be vigilant. If you know the local scene you can swoop 6s and 7s almost at will. Usually students and girls from the suburbs.

Electro/underground clubs:

Home of the hipsters and creatives. Parties there don’t mean meeting girls and getting drunk but doing pills and spacing out to the music. Lots of attractive hipster girls if that is your niche. That is its own scene with a different dress code as well.

aera dissertation fellowship

What time to go out in Moscow

Moscow nightlife starts late. Don’t show up at bars and preparty spots before 11pm because you’ll feel fairly alone. Peak time is between 1am and 3am. That is also the time of Moscow nightlife’s biggest nuisance: concerts by artists you won’t know and who only distract your girls from drinking and being gamed. From 4am to 6am the regular clubs are emptying out but plenty of people, women included, still hit up one of the many afterparty clubs. Those last till well past 10am.

As far as days go: Fridays and Saturdays are peak days. Thursday is an OK day, all other days are fairly weak and you have to know the right venues.

The Ultimate Moscow Nightclub List

Short disclaimer: I didn’t add basic and electro clubs since you’re coming for the girls, not for the music. This list will give you more options than you’ll be able to handle on a weekend.

Preparty – start here at 11PM

Classic restaurant club with lots of tables and a smallish bar and dancefloor. Come here between 11pm and 12am when the concert is over and they start with the actual party. Even early in the night tons of sexy women here, who lean slightly older (25 and up).

The second floor of the Ugolek restaurant is an extra bar with dim lights and house music tunes. Very small and cozy with a slight hipster vibe but generally draws plenty of attractive women too. A bit slower vibe than Valenok.

Very cool, spread-out venue that has a modern library theme. Not always full with people but when it is, it’s brimming with top-tier women. Slow vibe here and better for grabbing contacts and moving on.

aera dissertation fellowship

High-end: err on the side of being too early rather than too late because of face control.

Secret Room

Probably the top venue at the moment in Moscow . Very small but wildly popular club, which is crammed with tables but always packed. They do parties on Thursdays and Sundays as well. This club has a hip-hop/high-end theme, meaning most girls are gold diggers, IG models, and tattooed hip hop chicks. Very unfavorable logistics because there is almost no room no move inside the club but the party vibe makes it worth it. Strict face control.

Close to Secret Room and with a much more favorable and spacious three-part layout. This place attracts very hot women but also lots of ball busters and fakes that will leave you blue-balled. Come early because after 4am it starts getting empty fast. Electronic music.

A slightly kitsch restaurant club that plays Russian pop and is full of gold diggers, semi-pros, and men from the Caucasus republics. Thursday is the strongest night but that dynamic might be changing since Secret Room opened its doors. You can swoop here but it will be a struggle.

aera dissertation fellowship

Mid-level: your sweet spot in terms of ease and attractiveness of girls for an average budget.

Started going downwards in 2018 due to lax face control and this might get even worse with the World Cup. In terms of layout one of the best Moscow nightclubs because it’s very big and bottle service gives you a good edge here. Still attracts lots of cute girls with loose morals but plenty of provincial girls (and guys) as well. Swooping is fairly easy here.

I haven’t been at this place in over a year, ever since it started becoming ground zero for drunken teenagers. Similar clientele to Icon but less chic, younger and drunker. Decent mainstream music that attracts plenty of tourists. Girls are easy here as well.

Sort of a Coyote Ugly (the real one in Moscow sucks) with party music and lots of drunken people licking each others’ faces. Very entertaining with the right amount of alcohol and very easy to pull in there. Don’t think about staying sober in here, you’ll hate it.

Artel Bessonitsa/Shakti Terrace

Electronic music club that is sort of a high-end place with an underground clientele and located between the teenager clubs Icon and Gipsy. Very good music but a bit all over the place with their vibe and their branding. You can swoop almost any type of girl here from high-heeled beauty to coked-up hipsters, provided they’re not too sober.

aera dissertation fellowship

Afterparty: if by 5AM  you haven’t pulled, it’s time to move here.

Best afterparty spot in terms of trying to get girls. Pretty much no one is sober in there and savage gorilla game goes a long way. Lots of very hot and slutty-looking girls but it can be hard to tell apart who is looking for dick and who is just on drugs but not interested. If by 9-10am you haven’t pulled, it is probably better to surrender.

The hipster alternative for afterparties, where even more drugs are in play. Plenty of attractive girls there but you have to know how to work this type of club. A nicer atmosphere and better music but if you’re desperate to pull, you’ll probably go to Miks.

Weekday jokers: if you’re on the hunt for some sexy Russian girls during the week, here are two tips to make your life easier.

Chesterfield

Ladies night on Wednesdays means this place gets pretty packed with smashed teenagers and 6s and 7s. Don’t pull out the three-piece suit in here because it’s a “simpler” crowd. Definitely your best shot on Wednesdays.

If you haven’t pulled at Chesterfield, you can throw a Hail Mary and hit up Garage’s Black Music Wednesdays. Fills up really late but there are some cute Black Music groupies in here. Very small club. Thursday through Saturday they do afterparties and you have an excellent shot and swooping girls that are probably high.

Shishas Sferum

This is pretty much your only shot on Mondays and Tuesdays because they offer free or almost free drinks for women. A fairly low-class club where you should watch your drinks. As always the case in Moscow, there will be cute girls here on any day of the week but it’s nowhere near as good as on the weekend.

aera dissertation fellowship

In a nutshell, that is all you need to know about where to meet Moscow girls in nightlife. There are tons of options, and it all depends on what best fits your style, based on the type of girls that you’re looking for.

Related Topics

  • moscow girls
  • moscow nightlife

aera dissertation fellowship

The Top 3 Cities in Ukraine for First Timers

  • Posted on July 7, 2018 August 4, 2019

You May Also Like

best expat blogs for Moscow

  • Uncategorized

The Best Expat Blogs for Moscow

  • Posted on May 31, 2020 June 1, 2020

Moscow Russia

Finding a Russian Bride: How and Where to Meet Her

  • Posted on August 9, 2019 August 9, 2019

meeting women in Moscow

Meeting Women in Moscow: Dating Perspectives on the World’s Most Beautiful Women

  • Posted on August 5, 2019 August 9, 2019

Meeting Russian women

Meeting Russian Women: Top 5 Locations

  • Posted on August 3, 2019 June 1, 2020

Moscow vs St. Petersburg

Moscow vs St. Petersburg – Which One to Visit?

  • Posted on July 31, 2019 August 3, 2019

hot russian girls

Hot Russian Girls – Where to Find & Date Them

  • Posted on March 30, 2019 March 30, 2019

A Guide to Teaching English in Russia

  • Posted on August 11, 2018 October 9, 2019

aera dissertation fellowship

How to Attract Russian Girls

  • Posted on July 15, 2018 August 4, 2019

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Input your search keywords and press Enter.

IMAGES

  1. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship Opportunity

    aera dissertation fellowship

  2. Smith wins AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship

    aera dissertation fellowship

  3. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship Webinar

    aera dissertation fellowship

  4. Jonte Myers awarded AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education

    aera dissertation fellowship

  5. PhD candidate Jessica Alzen awarded inaugural AERA-MET Dissertation

    aera dissertation fellowship

  6. Josephine Pham Honored with AERA Outstanding Dissertation Award

    aera dissertation fellowship

VIDEO

  1. MotSig Motivation Monday: Navigating the Dissertation and Qualifying Exam Journey

  2. Informational Webinar on the AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship Program in Education Research

COMMENTS

  1. Minority Dissertation Fellowship Program in Education Research

    AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research Award. Award Component 1, $25,000 Stipend. AERA awards each Fellow up to a $25,000 stipend to study education, teaching, learning, or other education research topic. The fellowship funds can be used for tuition and/or institution fees, books, living expenses, equipment, travel ...

  2. American Educational Research Association (AERA)-NSF Dissertation Grant

    The AERA Grants Program provides advanced graduate students with research funding and professional development and training. The program supports highly competitive dissertation research using rigorous quantitative methods to examine large-scale, education-related data. .

  3. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

    AERA awards each Fellow up to a $25,000 stipend to study education, teaching, learning, or other education research topic. The fellowship funds can be used for tuition and/or institution fees, books, living expenses, equipment, travel, supplies, software, and other expenses that are directly related to conducting this research.

  4. American Educational Research Association (AERA) Minority Dissertation

    AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research Award. Award Component 1, $25,000 Stipend. AERA awards each Fellow up to a $25,000 stipend to study education, teaching, learning, or other education research topic. The fellowship funds can be used for tuition and/or institution fees, books, living expenses, equipment, travel ...

  5. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

    Tag: Dissertation Fellowship | members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education | U.S. Citizen or Permanent U.S. Resident In 1991, the Council of the American Educational Research Association (AERA) established the AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research to provide support for doctoral dissertation research.

  6. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

    The American Educational Research Association (AERA) announces its 2023-2024 AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research competition for graduate students. ... Diversity Officer at [email protected] or 202-238-3200 with any questions about this program. 0 Comments Leave a Reply. Archives. October 2022 March 2022 December 2021 ...

  7. American Educational Research Association (AERA) Dissertation Grant

    The grantees will present their research in an invited poster session along with other graduate students who received dissertation support from AERA and other prestigious fellowship programs. Finally, grantees will participate in a Capstone conference directly after the Annual Meeting that will address issues such as building a research agenda ...

  8. AERA Dissertation Grants

    With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the American Educational Research Association (AERA) Dissertation Grants support dissertation research using rigorous quantitative methods to examine large-scale, education-related data. The aim of the program is to advance fundamental knowledge of relevance to STEM education policy ...

  9. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

    Each fellowship award is for 1 year, beginning July 1, 2021 or later, and is nonrenewable. This fellowship program is intended as a write-up fellowship. Award Component 1, $25,000 Stipend. AERA awards each Fellow up to a $25,000 stipend to study education, teaching, learning, or other education research topic.

  10. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research

    The Council of the American Educational Research Association (AERA) established the fellowship program to provide support for doctoral dissertation research, to advance education research by outstanding minority graduate students, and to improve the quality and diversity of university faculties. This fellowship targets members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher ...

  11. AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship

    AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship. This fellowship is designed to provide support for a doctoral dissertation in education research. The purposes of the program are to advance education research by outstanding minority graduate students and to improve the quality and diversity of university faculties.

  12. News : Smith wins AERA Minority Dissertation Fellowship

    Zyrashae Smith, a doctoral student at Johns Hopkins School of Education, has been selected by the American Education Research Association's (AERA) for its Minority Dissertation Fellowship in Education Research. Fellows receive a one-year, non-renewable stipend of $25,000, an invitation to present their work at the 2023 AERA Annual Meeting, and other professional development, mentoring and…

  13. AERA Minority Fellowship in Education Research

    AERA Minority Fellowship in Education Research This $19,000 fellowship for the dissertation write-up stage supports members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in higher education (e.g., African Americans, Alaskan Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanics or Latinos, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islanders).

  14. The Center for African and African American Studies Dissertation

    The Center for African & African American Studies (CAAAS) Dissertation Completion Fellowship provides one semester of full funding during either the Fall or Spring semester. Support will consist of a stipend equal to a 50% GPTI appointment paid out in monthly increments. Up to five dissertation hours of tuition, mandatory fees, and coverage ...

  15. PDF E x te r n a l Fe l l ows h i ps

    Ja n u a r y AmericanPsychologicalAssociation(APA)MinorityFellowshipProgram(MFP) ResearchTrainingFellowshiphttps://www.apa.org/pi/mfp/psychology/imfp

  16. Moscow to Revolutionize School Education with Online School ...

    Moscow school children are about to face the new era of education. The city authorities have successfully conducted a one-year Moscow Online School pilot project — innovative educational cloud ...

  17. 301 Moved Permanently

    301 Moved Permanently. nginx

  18. The Comprehensive Guide to Moscow Nightlife

    Moscow nightlife starts late. Don't show up at bars and preparty spots before 11pm because you'll feel fairly alone. Peak time is between 1am and 3am. That is also the time of Moscow nightlife's biggest nuisance: concerts by artists you won't know and who only distract your girls from drinking and being gamed.

  19. Moscow City Towers

    Moscow City Towers, Moscow, Russia. 15 likes · 1 talking about this · 569 were here. Real Estate