The University of Cambridge is providing the Harding Distinguished Postgraduate Scholars Programme for the academic year 2020/21.
There are 25 awards are open to outstanding students of any nationality and in any discipline. It is designed for those candidates who are applying to pursue a full-time residential PhD course of study at the University of Cambridge.
Founded in 1209, the University of Cambridge is a confederation of Departments, Schools, Faculties and Colleges. It has over 100 academic departments organized into six schools.
Why at the University of Cambridge? In order to support your studies, you have access to wide-ranging learning resources and up-to-date facilities. Here students from all disciplines go into a very wide range of occupations.
University of Cambridge Information
Established in 1209, University of Cambridge is a non-profit public higher education institution located in the urban setting of the large town of Cambridge (population range of 50,000-249,999 inhabitants), East of England. Officially accredited and/or recognized by the Privy Council, University of Cambridge is a large (uniRank enrollment range: 15,000-19,999 students) coeducational higher education institution. University of Cambridge offers courses and programs leading to officially recognized higher education degrees such as bachelor degrees, master degrees, doctorate degrees in several areas of study. See the uniRank degree levels and areas of study matrix below for further details. This 810 years old higher-education institution has a selective admission policy based on entrance examinations and students' past academic record and grades. The admission rate range is 10-20% making this UK higher education organization a most selective institution. International applicants are eligible to apply for enrollment.
Offered Benefits
The university will provide covers costs for PhD students:
- the University Composition Fee at the appropriate rate for the duration of your course
- a maintenance allowance (living costs) of £18,000 per year for the three-year duration of your research, with the option to receive maintenance funding in the fourth year, should this be required
- a research allowance (for expenditure on research-related activities and consumables, for example, books, fieldwork and conference attendance) of up to £6,000 for the three-year duration of your research.