Catch22 by ESRC

M

I did a specialist 1-year MSc funded by part-time employment, a bank loan, and a modest bursary from a regional development (public) agency in England. Because my MSc was partly funded from a public source, ESRC will not allow me more than 3 years studentship funding, so I can't do a 1+3 with them. However, they require a full research masters to qualify for a +3 studentship, but I cannot fund this myself because I have the bank loan to pay off.

These inflexible ESRC rules have me in a Catch 22: I was so keen to study that I went for a specialist MSc with a small public bursary; therefore, now ESRC won't allow me to continue studying!

S

hey there,
i know, the ESRC are terrible in that way - and the written documentation is completely non-understandable, so i couldn't say "well you should have thought about that before doing the specialist masters" cause how should you have known?
sorry to hear about your troubles.
just one thought though: if they won't fund 4 years, but will fund 3, can't you go for a 1+3 thing and fund the final year by yourself? i know it's not ideal (especially since it might well turn into two final years) but it might be a way out of the catch22. some funding opportunities from other places are available for final year(s) funding.

M

Thanks for the support and suggestion, Shani . I will have to think about that one. If I could get a firm commitment of final year funding, then they might go for it, but they certainly seem very inflexible generally. I will also look for a different source of funding for a research masters, but I don't hold out much hope for this.

Otherwise, I have to try to prove that I hold equivalent qualifications to the research masters. Possibly I may do in terms of employment experience, well almost, but ESRC regulations say "qualifications", which implies "officially recognised and assessed academic qualifications", or does it?

Logic would suggest a body that funds such a complex subject area as the social sciences should have less simplistic policies than this. But isn't life so full of these contradictions!

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