4

This question includes REU (research experience for undegraduates) grant, travel grants, or prizes awarded. I've seen a friend's CV and he seemed to do this. I was wondering if this is to be expected or if one should refrain from posting the amount awarded.

Perhaps it is worth mentioning that participation in an REU (and the support received) does not really belong in a "grants, honors, and awards" section, or at least that is my impression.

There is a similar question on this website, but I'm asking specifically about applying for graduate school and what is culturally accepted among the mathematics community in the United States

Andres Mejia
  • 174
  • 7
  • I'm not in math, so just a comment. But yes, I usually see dollar values (I have them on my CV, and no, I would be surprised to see an REU in such a section, but I also never had one so idk. Maybe better to have two questions – Azor Ahai -him- Aug 28 '18 at 22:46
  • @AzorAhai I'm in math, and I don't usually see dollar amounts on students' CVs. – Kimball Aug 29 '18 at 06:15
  • 1
    This seems like the kind of thing which would vary between geographical cultures as well as subject cultures, so it might be worth editing the question to state the geographical culture of interest. – Peter Taylor Aug 29 '18 at 14:32
  • @PeterTaylor agreed. Edited the last sentence – Andres Mejia Aug 29 '18 at 14:43

1 Answers1

4

It is entirely your choice -- doesn't hurt, but not necessary either.

Readers of grad school applications generally have a decent idea of how much REU or travel grants (a couple of thousand dollars) and how much departmental awards are worth (a few hundred dollars, typically). So not stating a number is not a big deal. Stating a number also doesn't hurt: if it's within the range a reader would expect, then there is no harm done, space is cheap; if the dollar amount is surprisingly large -- say, a $5,000 award for your work, then that's useful knowledge and should have been on your CV indeed.

Wolfgang Bangerth
  • 94,697
  • 7
  • 201
  • 338