Digital Inquiry Fellowship

Fellowship Details

Duration: Beginning of fall semester 2026 through end of March 2027
Award: stipend of $2,500
Applications open: March 23, 2026
Applications close: June 1, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Eligibility: Current ISU grad students who will remain enrolled through Spring 2027
Choose between: a Project Fellowship or Exploratory Fellowship

Questions? Contact Erin Ridnour, Digital Scholarship Librarian.


Call for Applications

The University Library’s Digital Scholarship and Initiatives Department (DSI) invites applications for the Digital Inquiry Fellowship, a new opportunity for graduate students.

These fellowships offer paid, mentored opportunities for graduate students to explore and apply digital methods to their research or teaching. Depending on their interests, fellows may work with methods such as text analysis or text encoding, data visualization, spatial analysis and mapping (GIS), digital archives or exhibits, web-based scholarly projects, data modeling and metadata design, computational analysis of cultural or scientific data, or the use of emerging tools such as AI-assisted research workflows. Fellows will work with Digital Scholarship Librarians to either build a project or explore a methodology (see Fellowship Options).

Fellowships will run from the beginning of Fall semester 2026 to the end of March 2027. Fellows will receive a stipend of $2,500.

Students should apply if they are interested in expanding their research toolkit, gaining hands-on experience with in-demand digital skills, and making meaningful progress on a project or area of inquiry. Fellows will produce outcomes that they can publish, and will have opporutnities present their outcomes at the library’s annual Digital Scholarship Symposium and participate in other library workshops and events.

Fellowship Options

Applicants should choose from one of the fellowship options below. Not sure which option is right for you? Applicants are encouraged to schedule a consultation with a Digital Scholarship Librarian for assistance in developing their proposals. Librarians can help refine project or methodological ideas and advise on scope and feasibility.

Project Fellowship

Who should apply

Graduate students with a defined research or teaching project that would benefit from digital methods.

What you'll do

Work toward a clearly scoped digital outcome using approaches such as text analysis, GIS, data visualization, digital exhibits, computational analysis, or web-based scholarly publishing in collaboration with Digital Scholarship Librarians.

Possible outcomes

  • Public-facing digital project
  • Documented workflows or code
  • Scholarly publication
  • Presentation at the Digital Scholarship Symposium
Exploratory Fellowship

Who should apply

Graduate students interested in developing applied expertise in a digital scholarship method.

What you'll do

Build methodological skills through applied exercises and iterative experimentation while working with Digital Scholarship Librarians.

Possible outcomes

  • Prototypes or proofs-of-concept
  • Reusable workflows or templates
  • Methodological documentation or reflection
  • Presentation at the Digital Scholarship Symposium

How to Apply

Applicants must submit:

  1. Fellowship proposal (500 words or less): The proposal should specify the fellowship option (Project or Exploratory) and address the relevant focus:
    • Project Fellowship: Description of the project scope, digital methods to be used, planned outcomes, and how the work fits into the applicant’s research or teaching
    • Exploratory Fellowship: Description of the digital method(s) to be explored, a plan for applied learning and experimentation, proposed outcomes, and how this work supports current or future scholarly goals
  2. Statement of Goals and Preparation (250-300 words): A short narrative describing:
    • The applicant’s academic program and stage
    • Prior experience with digital methods (if any)
    • What the applicant hopes to gain from the fellowship
  3. Curriculum Vitae (CV)
  4. Letter of Support: A letter of support from a faculty member familiar with the applicant’s academic work. Letters may be submitted through the application form or emailed directly from the faculty member to Erin Ridnour at emanders@iastate.edu.
  5. Availability and Timeline Acknowledgement: Applicants should confirm that they can:
    • Commit the expected ~5 hours per week
    • Participate in required fellowship activities as discussed with digital scholarship staff

Applications will be accepted starting March 23rd, and will remain open through June 1st.


Application Criteria

Eligibility

Expectations

Selection


Project Possibilities

Digital Scholarship and Initiatives can support a wide range of digital scholarship projects and methods. We are particularly well-positioned to support work in the following areas:

Digital Methods and Approaches

Land-Grant Mission and Library Collections

We especially welcome projects and explorations that align with the university’s land-grant mission, including:

Applicants interested in collection‑based work are encouraged to explore Special Collections & University Archives finding aids and related digital collections.

Questions? Contact Erin Ridnour.