News

A New Call to Service with International Depth

Are you looking to understand the complex balance of international relations in today’s global landscape? Maybe you want to learn how to use the best tools to navigate social problems or political conflicts, solve them, and even teach others about them one day. At the top-ranked Syracuse University Maxwell School, there is a degree that combines all of these areas in a unique interdisciplinary approach, honing in on international studies, the foundations of society, war and security. All of this can be accomplished on your own schedule. 

The Master of Social Science (M.S.Sc.) program often attracts business leaders, diplomats, teachers, and military personnel alike because of its connection to top faculty and immersion in several academic disciplines from a global perspective. Syracuse University chose the M.S.Sc. as a highlighted degree for veterans because we believe these focus areas match up with the interests of many returning veterans who feel a continued call to serve in civilian life.

This is a distance-learning program with only two visits to New York. It can be completed in any length of time between 18 months and 7 years from anywhere in the world. This flexibility often makes a big difference for veterans returning home to care for families and careers, those currently serving in the military, or military family members. This is why Syracuse University has chosen it as a highlighted degree for veterans, military connected students, and military families.

 

Flexible Distance Learning with Residency

The Master of Social Science program at the Maxwell School offers this format, the same type of hybrid instruction found in the online MBA@Syracuse. minnowbrookTwo two-week residencies on campus at Syracuse University add critical value to the distance learning curriculum. Students tend to be mid-career professionals who join the program from around the world. This diversity adds great value to the virtual classroom and in person.

The first residency in July always includes a weekend seminar in Syracuse University’s beautiful Minnowbrook Conference Center in the Adirondacks. The second residency can be broken up into two one-week parts if needed. This creates a perfect balance for a student unable to relocate for school but still looking for valuable, concentrated networking and face-time with both faculty and accomplished alumni.

 

Curriculum

curriculumWhat does a Master of Social Science degree entail? That is up to you. The curriculum is designed to draw lessons from across time periods and cultures around the world. Students choose three focus areas out of: Europe, U.S. History, Developing Nations, International Relations, and War and Society. For the final project or thesis, M.S.Sc. students will choose a topic in just one focus area to dig deeper and specialize in. This is an intellectual, research-intensive program that will prepare future college professors and international nonprofit managers alike.

The program is 30 credits in total, and up to 6 credits can be transferred from another institution. Faculty members for this program are all senior professors in Political Science, History, Anthropology, and other disciplines at the top-ranked Maxwell School.

Learn more about the faculty

Download course descriptions

 

Applying

An application to the Master of Social Science program requires a Bachelors degree, resume, personal statement, recommendations, and test scores. Be sure to list military experience in your application. Students wishing to begin in the fall need to apply by February 1st and those wishing to begin in the spring must apply by August 15th the prior year.

Learn more about admissions

March 26th: Veterans Navigating Career Workshop

Take part in a dedicated career workshop for veterans focussed on resumes, LinkedIn, and networking. Photographers will be available for professional photos, too. Sign up for one of two sessions on March 26th.

Veterans Navigating Career

J. Michael Haynie Appointed to Newly Created VA Advisory Committee

IVMF-Haynie-620_72We are proud to announce that Dr. Mike Haynie, founder and Executive Director of the Institute for Veterans and Military Families and Vice Chancellor of Veterans and Military Affairs at Syracuse University, was appointed to the newly created MyVA‬ Advisory Committee today.

VA Secretary Robert McDonald launched the MyVA initiative in September 2014, as part of the department’s effort to better align the VA with the needs of the nation’s veterans, and to empower VA employees to improve the veteran experience. The MyVA Advisory Committee will provide advice to the secretary and VA leadership related to the department’s efforts to rebuild trust with veterans and other stakeholders, improve service delivery and set the course for longer-term excellence and reform.

McDonald appointed Haynie to serve as the vice chairman of the MyVA Advisory Committee. Major General (ret.) Jose Robles, president and chief executive officer of United States Automobile Association, will serve as chairman. Other committee members include former U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona; Dr. Toby Cosgrove, CEO of the Cleveland Clinic; Teresa Carlson, vice president for Worldwide Public Sector at Amazon; Nancy Killefer, vice chair of the Defense Business Board and Christopher Howard, president of Hampden-Sydney College.

Haynie serves as the vice chancellor for veterans and military affairs at Syracuse University, the executive director of the University’s Institute for Veterans and Military Families (IVMF) and the Barnes Professor of Entrepreneurship at the University’s Martin J. Whitman School of Management.

Syracuse University’s Whitman School of Management Ranked #2 Best Business School for Vets

B9316532260Z.1_20150309110925_000_G2QA3U1RK.1-0Military Times released their ranking of top 75 Best for Veterans Business Schools. Syracuse University’s Whitman School of Management is ranked #2 Best Business School for Veterans, highlighting Syracuse University’s enduring commitment to veterans, military connected students, and military family members.

More schools than ever responded to this year’s Military Times survey. Competition was stiff to make the list.

Some of the findings from Military Times’s survey:

  • Among respondents this year, the focus on veterans typically starts at the top. Better than four in 10 have a service member, veteran or military spouse in a senior leadership position within the business school. Another four in 10 reported such a senior leader not at the business school but the larger university.
  • On average, service members and veterans accounted for a little less than 13 percent of the graduate student population at business schools.
  • A graduate degree is typically more expensive than a bachelor’s, and the MBA is no exception. More than 8 in 10 responding schools indicated that their costs exceeded the $250-per-semester-hour cap associated with military tuition assistance in the last school year.
  • Costs at a little more than half the schools outpaced veterans’ Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits. But about 7 in 10 such schools participated in the Yellow Ribbon program to help make up the difference, and most — but not all — of these schools made up the full difference for all eligible students, thus insuring they didn’t have to pay tuition out of pocket or through loans.
  • More than a third of schools either waive or discount application fees for veterans or service members.
  • Three-quarters of business schools told us that their larger university has a veteran or military group, but fewer than one in 10 has a separate such group unique to the business school.
  • Nearly six in 10 graduate business programs accept, in at least some cases, recommendations from the American Council on Education on awarding academic credit for military training. But limitations on the acceptance of such credit are common.
  • Nearly two-thirds of responding schools require incoming students to take either the Graduate Management Admission Test or the Graduate Record Examination as part of their applications. Only about 8 percent of schools typically waive that requirement for vets, although about a quarter of schools gave vets some sort of admissions preference.

 

VetSuccess at Syracuse University

What is VetSuccess?

VetSuccess Banner

“Encouraging, promoting, and supporting veterans to be successful in their educational and career endeavors.”

 

The United States Office of Veterans Affairs Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment (VR&E) division partners with certain schools to provide a dedicated staff member on campus to enhance the educational experience for student veterans. This program is known as VetSuccess on Campus (VSOC). Syracuse University is the only VSOC partner school in the state of New York, and because of this we are able to offer added value to our student veterans. These benefits include:

 

  • VSOC InfoExtra help navigating VA and health benefits
  • Career exploration, interesting and aptitude testing
  • Job placement assistance and coordination with Local Veterans’ Employment Representatives (LVER) and Disabled Veterans’ Outreach Program (DVOP)
  • Education and training opportunities for survivors and dependents
  • Adjustment counseling to resolve problems related to completing education or working
  • Referrals to health and community services

 

Do I Qualify?

All student veterans, active duty, and dependents attending Syracuse University qualify to meet with our VetSuccess on Campus counselor, Katherine Untiedt. Katherine is available for walk-in appointments Monday-Friday 9-­11 a.m. and 1‑3 p.m. at 700 University Avenue in room 326G.

Contact: 315-­443-­0177 | katherine.untiedt@va.gov

Download Flyer: Syracuse University VetSuccess on Campus

Student Veteran Career & Internship Fair

This two-day dedicated event for student veterans will take place in March and April. More details will be available soon.

 

Day 1 (March 26th): Career Services branding workshop. Work with someone on resumes, mock interviews, social network branding, networking advice and any other type of branding development you can think of. 

Day 2 (April 2nd): Representatives from companies will be coming to Syracuse to talk specifically with student veterans. The following companies have already said they will be attendance: Ernst & Young, JPMorgan, Macy’s, Google and GE. We are still adding to this list. Syracuse University’s own Institute for Veterans and Military families (IVMF) will also be there to discuss the many different programs they have to offer (most of them are free).  

 

Please let us know if there is a company that you are interested in and we will do our best to try to request their attendance. This is a great chance to start sprucing up those resumes, interview skills and make connections in your industry. 

Contact:

John Higgins (jchiggin@syr.edu)

President – Syracuse University Student Veterans Organization

February 27 & 28: 11th Annual SATSA Conference

On February 27-28, the Student Association on Terrorism and Security Analysis (SATSA) will hold their 11th annual SATSA Conference. They are inviting all veterans who would like to attend and connect with other students, veterans, and professionals in the national security field. Admission is free and open to the public and breakfast/lunch will be served. They are also looking for volunteer support leading up to the conference.

SATSA conference poster

 

 

Learn more: http://satsa.syr.edu/home/conference/schedule/

International Women’s Day Celebration to be held on February 26 & 27

International Women’s Day Celebration

February 26 & 27, 2015

Celebrating Women Who Serve in Combat and Post-Combat Zones

The 2015 International Women’s Day events are part of the Maxwell School 90th Anniversary Events and have been created through collaboration with the International Relations Program, the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism, the Syracuse VA Medical Center, and the Institute for Veterans and Military Families. For more information on International Women’s Day, please visit the United Nations’ International Women’s Day website and the International Women’s Day 2015 website.


Veterans Affairs and Women’s Health: Expanding Horizons
February 26th at 4:00 pm in 220 Eggers Hall

Dr. Mindy Grewal, Women’s health Medical Director at the Syracuse VA Medical Center, leads a discussion on how the VA Medical Center is expanding horizons to meet the needs of America’s female veterans.

Specific topics of discussion will include the Women’s Wellness Program, Working with Post 9/11 Women Veterans, and the sharing of Veterans’ Perspectives.

 

Preparing for Service
February 27th at 12:00 pm in 220 Eggers Hall

A panel of Maxwell alumni panel discuss their experiences in conflict and post-conflict environments.

Deborah Alexander, former U.S. State Department post-conflict advisor (’82 MSSc / ’95 PhD SSc)
Lamis Sleiman, Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist, Management Systems International (’10 MAIR)
Alexandria Wise, Associate Director, Shuraako (’02 BA)

 

Community and Military Engagement
February 27th at 4:00 pm in Maxwell Auditorium

Major General Linda Singh discusses the social economic impacts of military on our communities, the engagement opportunities between the military and the community, and how partnerships between the two build stronger communities.

Linda Singh is the Managing Director for Health and Public Service North America with Accenture. She also manages a second career as a major general in the Maryland National Guard and is now the Adjutant General for the Maryland Military Department.

Please join us for a reception following each event and meet our distinguished guests.

 

International Women's Day