Skip to content
Harvard Magazine
Editor’s Highlights

Sign up to be notified of new issues.

See a sample newsletter

Harvard by the Numbers

Student Financial Assistance: FY 2005

 
Forward this page to a friend
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Harvard Magazine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the Harvard Magazine web site.

Financial support for degree-candidate students amounts to a half-billion-dollar-plus commitment by the University. These data, from fiscal year 2005, show that grants (institutional, federal, and other) totaled $275 million in that year, and were particularly important in the College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS). Loans, the principal funding source in the professional schools, totaled $210 million. And employment, chiefly teaching fellowships for GSAS students, exceeded $50 million.

Source: Harvard University Fact Book, 2005-2006
Forward this page to a friend
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Harvard Magazine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the Harvard Magazine web site.

Issues > March-April 2007 > John Harvard's Journal

March-April 2007

Harvard's 50-Year Plan

March-April 2007

"Crossing Boundaries"

March-April 2007

New Museum on Fast Track

March-April 2007

Toward Top-Tier Teaching

March-April 2007

The Presidency, Pending

March-April 2007

N. Gregory Mankiw

March-April 2007

For Science and Engineering, New Life

March-April 2007

Imagine That!

March-April 2007

Money Matters

March-April 2007

General Education, Finally Defined

March-April 2007

Brevia

March-April 2007

Yesterday's News

March-April 2007

Portfolio-Manager Paychecks

March-April 2007

The Rub on the Pub

March-April 2007

University People

March-April 2007

The War at Home

March-April 2007

Scholars Galore

March-April 2007

Last and Best

Add a new comment

Your email address is kept private and will not be shown publicly
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <ul> <ol> <li> <blockquote>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • SmartyPants will translate ASCII punctuation characters into “smart” typographic punctuation HTML entities.

More information about formatting options

Copyright ©1996–2008
Harvard Magazine Inc.
Contact the webmaster

adverisements