| Value and duration of award | Deadline for universities to submit nominations to the granting agencies | Apply |
|---|---|---|
| $50,000 per year for up to three years | November 6, 2009 | Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships Application Application Process and Instructions |
Value and Duration
Deadlines
Eligibility
Selecting the Appropriate Granting Agency
Review Process
Selection Criteria
Supplementary Funding
More Information
Canada is building world-class research capacity by recruiting top-tier doctoral students, both nationally and internationally, who will positively contribute to our economic, social and research-based growth for a prosperous future. To promote this world-class excellence, the Government of Canada has created the Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships (Vanier CGS) program. Once in full operation, this program will support 500 international and Canadian doctoral students with highly prestigious scholarships.
The Vanier CGS program reaffirms Canada as a global centre of excellence in research and education. The program supports Canada’s science and technology policy direction, which capitalizes on people, strengthens knowledge and encourages entrepreneurial advantages to build a competitive Canada.
The scholarships are administered by Canada's three federal granting agencies: the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).
The Vanier CGS program aims to attract and retain world-class doctoral students by supporting students who demonstrate both leadership skills and a high standard of scholarly achievement in graduate studies in social sciences and humanities, natural sciences and engineering, and health. Canadian and international students are eligible to be nominated for a Vanier CGS.
Students wishing to apply for a Vanier CGS must do so through the Canadian university to which they are applying for doctoral studies. Based on their allocations, universities will forward a limited number of nominations to the appropriate federal research granting agency— CIHR, NSERC, or SSHRC.
For details on how to apply, please see Application Process and Instructions.
A Vanier CGS is valued at $50,000 per year for up to three years.
When can the award be taken up?
Award recipients must take their award up in the first semester (May or September) following the announcement of results if they:
Award recipients can take their award up in May, September or January following the announcement of results if they:
Application deadline
Without exception, all nominations from Canadian universities must be submitted via ResearchNet and received by the federal research granting agencies by November 6, 2009. Late or incomplete nominations will not be considered.
Notification of decision
The federal granting agencies will notify, by mail, universities and their nominated students of the competition results in March 2010. The agencies will not provide results by telephone or email. Nominated students may also obtain their result from the faculty of graduate studies at their nominating university.
The names of Vanier CGS recipients and other basic award information will be published on the Vanier website. For more on the posting of and access to information, please refer to the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act.
To be considered for a Vanier CGS, you must:
Notes:
All studies counted toward the doctoral degree will be considered in the evaluation of eligibility. The granting agencies will count two months of part-time study as one month of full-time study.
If the candidate is registered in a master’s degree program and subsequently transfers to a doctoral degree program, the months in the doctoral program will be calculated starting from the first academic session in which the candidate was officially registered in their doctoral program.
Without exception, Vanier CGS awards are tenable only at the eligible Canadian university that submitted the nomination.
To hold the award, the candidate must:
Part-time studies and Canadian federal government employees
A Vanier CGS may be held by students who are registered part-time because of a disability. For this purpose, disability is defined as “a functional limitation resulting from a physical, sensory, or mental impairment, which, for an indefinite period, affects the ability of the student to perform the activities necessary to participate fully in his or her learning.” For eligible part-time students, Vanier CGS award funding will be equivalent to a full-time award spread over a longer period of time.
Canadian federal government employees are eligible to hold a scholarship only if on an unpaid leave of absence (no salary or special allowances permitted).
The universities’ three-year allocations have been calculated based on 600 total nominations per research granting agency (CIHR, NSERC and SSHRC).
The distribution of allocations among eligible universities is based on the following method: for Canadian universities that have a doctoral-level program in the subject areas supported by one or more of the granting agencies, the calculation is based on the sum of the three-year rolling funding average used for the last Canada Research Chairs calculations (fiscal years 2003‑04, 2004‑05 and 2005‑06), and the payments made under the respective granting agencies for the Canada Graduate Scholarships doctoral awards for the three most recent fiscal years (2005‑06, 2006‑07 and 2007‑08).
Universities have the flexibility to submit as many applications as they wish in any given year, within their maximum three-year allocation per granting agency. Universities cannot exceed their three-year allocations or transfer allocations between agencies.
The proposed research project and doctoral program of study must be eligible within the mandate of the agency to which the nomination will be submitted. If in doubt, universities should consult with the agencies in advance of submitting the nomination. This also applies to nominations involving interdisciplinary fields of research, or disciplines that span the mandates of two or more of the federal research granting agencies. This consultation is to ensure that the research project and doctoral program are within the mandate of the agency to which the nomination will be submitted.
Note that there can be no transfer of Vanier nominations between agencies after the nomination deadline. If after the deadline date a nomination is judged to be ineligible (e.g., if the research project or program of study is outside of the mandate of the granting agency to which it was submitted), it will be withdrawn from the competition. Nominations that are withdrawn still count towards the university’s nomination allocation.
University review
The scholarship liaison officer at each eligible Canadian university is responsible for co-ordinating the university review of their selected candidates and forwarding nominations for Vanier CGSs to the appropriate federal research granting agencies in accordance with the university’s allocation.
Once submitted to the appropriate agency, Vanier scholarship nominations are evaluated by a peer review selection committee at the agency, and, if recommended by the committee, are then reviewed by the Vanier Selection Board as outlined below.
Vanier Peer Review Committees
All nominations will undergo a peer review evaluation by one of three agency-specific interdisciplinary Vanier Peer Review committees. Each interdisciplinary selection committee will recommend to the Vanier Selection Board the top 70 most meritorious candidates (for a total of 210 candidates between all three granting agencies) based on the nominees’ academic and research potential, as well as their leadership skills.
Vanier Selection Board
The Vanier Selection Board will make final recommendations for Vanier CGSs based on the board’s assessment of the leadership abilities of the candidates put forward by the three granting agencies' peer review committees. The Selection Board also oversees the program’s process and results to ensure that the program achieves its objectives.
Each year, the Selection Board will select 166 to 167 awardees (for a total of 500 active awards after the initial three years) from the total of 210 nominated candidates submitted by the three federal granting agencies.
Nominees will be evaluated and selected based on the following three criteria, which will be weighted equally by the peer review committees. However, the final selection board recommendation on awardees will be based solely on the leadership component (referee letters, university nomination letter and applicant’s self-assessment of leadership potential and ability) of the applications.
Peer review selection criteria:
Leadership will be assessed against the following personal and social skills:
Goal achievement:
Self-management:
Integrity:
Other characteristics:
Social skills:
Vanier CGS recipients who are citizens or permanent residents of Canada may also be eligible for supplementary funding. Please visit the following websites to view available opportunities:
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
For more information regarding applying to the Vanier CGS program, please contact the appropriate funding agency:
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Tel.: 1-888-603-4178 (General Inquiries)
Email: vanier@cihr-irsc.gc.ca
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
Tel.: 613-996-6104
Email: vanier@nserc-crsng.gc.ca
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
Tel.: 613-943-7777
Email: fellowships@sshrc-crsh.gc.ca