I'm currently in my fifth year of architecture, and I want to go for a masters after graduation. I'm currently at a 3.7 GPA, and I've worked with a couple of firms, but they're all community-based practices and not big corporate firms. The projects I've mostly focused on school are related to the vernacular, because I was considering doing a masters in historic preservation if not architecture. Outside of school I'm currently working in research and taking a year of an external design studio to learn traditional design and structural techniques.
The problem is that I absolutely not afford to pay graduate school fees. I was pretty optimistic about financial aid but after reading most threads I'm starting to worry if I'll get accepted anywhere at all.
After doing substantial research about the programs I want to go into, I've shortlisted the following universities (in no particular order):
Politecnico di Milano, TU Berlin, UPenn (for the preservation program), UPC Barcelona, Sci Arc, Aalto and I'll apply to GSD for the hell of it.
I know these options seem radically different but they all have a program I'm interested in and would really love to go to. Should I apply to these schools? I want to know if there's a shot (and not pay so many application fees if there isn't). Any help would be appreciated.
please remember that there is no architecture degree worth 100k in student debt... none. Only apply/accept places that you can reasonably afford and stop telling yourself that an expensive degree in architecture is an investment. It is not. never was. never will be.
I suppose you're right. I really dont want a lot of debt
Aug 27, 22 3:19 pm ·
·
joseffischer
how much debt is an architecture degree worth non? I hear you say 100k is too much too often. 30k?
Sep 6, 22 9:08 am ·
·
Non Sequitur
USD10k per year is a tolerable amount.
Sep 6, 22 9:31 am ·
·
waterbottle
Is there a cap on the amount you recieve?
Sep 6, 22 10:17 am ·
·
Non Sequitur
The cap is whatever the university offers you. The point here is do not take on excessive debt chasing a architecture degree. You cannot reasonably pay back 100k loans while working junior/intern jobs in this field.
The European ones don't usually have financial aid for foreign students but tend to have cheaper tuition. They will also tend to have way worse student to faculty ratios and not be the same kind of experience. The US ones have money for some students including international students. They will offer this to the best applications first and then run out of money before everyone gets some. If your portfolio is mature and you have enthusiastic recommendations, you have a chance to get at least some money. Good luck.
I would not get a preservation masters. These programs can be limiting if you want to be licensed or eventually work in new construction. Get an MArch with a preservation certificate. You’ll have an MArch which makes licensure easier but with some preservation background. Preservation degrees are very expensive (see Columbia and Penn - two of the best pres programs out there) and the jobs those degrees lead to are often low-paying especially in the beginning.
What are the chances for international students to get financial aid in these schools?
I'm currently in my fifth year of architecture, and I want to go for a masters after graduation. I'm currently at a 3.7 GPA, and I've worked with a couple of firms, but they're all community-based practices and not big corporate firms. The projects I've mostly focused on school are related to the vernacular, because I was considering doing a masters in historic preservation if not architecture. Outside of school I'm currently working in research and taking a year of an external design studio to learn traditional design and structural techniques.
The problem is that I absolutely not afford to pay graduate school fees. I was pretty optimistic about financial aid but after reading most threads I'm starting to worry if I'll get accepted anywhere at all.
After doing substantial research about the programs I want to go into, I've shortlisted the following universities (in no particular order):
Politecnico di Milano, TU Berlin, UPenn (for the preservation program), UPC Barcelona, Sci Arc, Aalto and I'll apply to GSD for the hell of it.
I know these options seem radically different but they all have a program I'm interested in and would really love to go to. Should I apply to these schools? I want to know if there's a shot (and not pay so many application fees if there isn't). Any help would be appreciated.
please remember that there is no architecture degree worth 100k in student debt... none. Only apply/accept places that you can reasonably afford and stop telling yourself that an expensive degree in architecture is an investment. It is not. never was. never will be.
I suppose you're right. I really dont want a lot of debt
how much debt is an architecture degree worth non? I hear you say 100k is too much too often. 30k?
USD10k per year is a tolerable amount.
Is there a cap on the amount you recieve?
The cap is whatever the university offers you. The point here is do not take on excessive debt chasing a architecture degree. You cannot reasonably pay back 100k loans while working junior/intern jobs in this field.
The European ones don't usually have financial aid for foreign students but tend to have cheaper tuition. They will also tend to have way worse student to faculty ratios and not be the same kind of experience. The US ones have money for some students including international students. They will offer this to the best applications first and then run out of money before everyone gets some. If your portfolio is mature and you have enthusiastic recommendations, you have a chance to get at least some money. Good luck.
Thank you!
I would not get a preservation masters. These programs can be limiting if you want to be licensed or eventually work in new construction. Get an MArch with a preservation certificate. You’ll have an MArch which makes licensure easier but with some preservation background. Preservation degrees are very expensive (see Columbia and Penn - two of the best pres programs out there) and the jobs those degrees lead to are often low-paying especially in the beginning.
Thank you!
There are many programs in the EU which are free if you know local language. It's a good option as well
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