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National Scholarship Programs and Related Resources
These scholarships offer tremendous
possibilities for students with strong academic records
and leadership interests. UI students have proved successful
in competing for many of these awards. Faculty representatives
encourage you to visit the website of the particular scholarship
program to explore the conditions of eligibility and application
process--this process may include downloading an application
form and information about the scholarship. You should also
plan, well in advance, to consult with the scholarship representative for
guidance and advice, including faculty/staff advisors in
respective fields/departments/programs, such as the UI's
International
Programs Office/Study Abroad. Informational
meetings about these scholarships are also held on campus
each semester: Information Meeting scheduled for Thursday August 30, 2007, 3:30-4:30 pm, Crest Room, Idaho Commons, with Dr. Stephan Flores
Questions and comments related to information
on this website may also be directed to Stephan Flores,
University Honors Program, Idaho Commons Room 315 (885-6147,
sflores@uidaho.edu).
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Coro Fellows--a nine-month
intensive experience-based post-graduate training program
in public affairs. Open to students of all majors who
are interested in public policy. Apply as a senior--early
January deadline.
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Freeman-Asia
-- this award program is to increase the number of American
undergraduate students (those who have at least one term
of enrollment remaining following their return from study
abroad, for either a summer program, semester/quarter,
or academic year) who study in East and Southeast Asia,
by providing them with information and need-basedfinancial
assistance. Applicants must have applied or have been accepted
to a country-based study abroad program from among the
following countries and regions: Cambodia, China, Hong
Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Laos, Macao, Malaysia,
Mongolia, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam.
( Multi-country programs are only eligible if the applicant
will spend at least 8 weeks in one of the countries and
will have intensive language study during that period.
) Applicants must have applied or have been accepted to
a study abroad program that awards academic credits through
the home campus or other U.S. accredited college or university.
Programs must be a minimum of 8 weeks for a summer term,
10 weeks for a quarter term, and 12 weeks for a semester
term. Applicants must have little or no previous experience
in the country in which they plan to study. Applicants
must not have spent more than 4 weeks in the proposed
country of study within the last 5 years. Applications
open/start in September (with mid-October deadline) for the spring and also the next academic year award cycle.
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Fulbright Scholarships
(UI Fulbright Program representative: Mary Ellen Brewick
Study Abroad Advisor, LLC#3, Ground Floor, mebrewick@uidaho.edu,
885-7870 or abroad@uidaho.edu) The U.S. Student Fulbright
Program gives recent B.S./B.A. graduates (by May 2009),
law students, master's and doctoral candidates, as well
as young professionals and artists, the opportunity
to study, conduct research or teach in their choice
of 140 countries around the world. Applicants
design their own programs and submit
applications online in coordination with
the university's International Programs Office (IPO). IPO assists
applicants and arranges on-campus interviews, and forwards
the completed application packages (including two page
research proposal, one-page vitae, transcripts, three
letters of recommendation, and a language evaluation
if required) to IIE/New York by the October deadline
(on campus deadline is September
19, 2008, including on campus interview). Fulbright awards provide roundtrip transportation,
language or orientation classes (where appropriate),
a living maintenance stipend, book and research allowances,
tuition (in some cases), and health/accident insurance
for students to teach, study, or conduct research abroad.
Program booklets and applications are available
in the International Programs Office.
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The
Gates Cambridge Scholarships (UI representative: Dr. Stephan Flores, University
Honors Program, 315 Idaho Commons, 885-6147, sflores@uidaho.edu)--cover
the full cost of studying at the University of Cambridge
(including other discretionary allowances), and depending
on the course of study, are renewable for one to three
years. The Gates Cambridge Trust seeks American students
who, through study at Cambridge, are likely to make
a significant contribution to their discipline by research,
by teaching, or by using their learning creatively in
their chosen professions. The Trust expects that ultimately
Gates Cambridge Scholars will deploy their education
for the benefit of others, finding solutions for problems
facing societies of the world, particularly global problems
related to health, equity, technology, and learning.
Though intended primarily for courses of postgraduate
study at the University of Cambridge (one year, or research
leading to the Ph.D.), support may be available for
study for a second Bachelor's Degree as an Affiliated
Student. Applicants who are not successful are eligible
to be considered for modest part-cost awards. Prospective
applicants are strongly encouraged to confer with the
UI representative during the preceding spring semester.
Application deadline: mid-October (including two reference letters--see
online application forms).
Gilman
International Scholarship Programs--Undergraduate
StudentsStudy Abroad
The Gilman Scholarship Program offers 820 scholarships (maximum
award per student for any one academic term is $5,000
per year; however, those studying languages that fulfill the Critical Need criteria, such as Arabic (all dialects), Chinese (all dialects), Turkic (Azerbaijani, Kazakh, Kyrgz, Turkish, Turkmen, Uzbek), Persian (Farsi, Dari, Kurdish, Pashto, Tajiki), Indic (Hindi, Urdu, Nepali, Sinhala, Bengali, Punjabi, Marathi, Gujarati, Sindhi), Korean, and Russian, receive an additional $3,000) to US citizen undergraduates who want to study
abroad and are receiving a federal Pell Grant. The program
aims to encourage students to choose nontraditional study
abroad destinations, especially those outside of Western
Europe and Australia. The Gilman scholarship aims to support
students who have been traditionally underrepresented
in study abroad, including but not limited to, students
with high financial need, community college students,
students studying the sciences and engineering, students
with diverse ethnic backgrounds, students with disabilities,
and students of nontraditional age. Award recipients are
chosen by a competitive selection process and must use
the award to defray eligible study abroad costs. Awards
are made up to $5,000 for U.S. citizen undergraduates
to study abroad and vary depending on the length. The
applicant must be a citizen of the United States. (Permanent
Residents of the United States are not eligible.) Deadline for fall semester study is in early April; for spring semester study the deadline is in early October. The
applicant may not study in a country which is currently
under a Travel Warning issued by the United States Department
of State or Cuba: http://travel.state.gov/warnings_list.html
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Goldwater Scholarship
(UI representative: Mark Warner, mwarner@uidaho.edu)--for
current sophomores and juniors who intend to pursue
careers and advanced degrees in mathematics, natural
sciences, and engineering. This national scholarship
pays up to $7,500 per year for the final one or two
years of a winner's undergraduate career. Deadline for
completed on campus applications is just before mid-November--see
Information
for UI applicants, and brief profiles of the most recent
UI Goldwater recipients:Michael
Holcomb (Biology and Chemistry) and Benjamin
Pollard (Physics), and UHP students Ted
Yamamoto and Bryan Haney.
Hertz
Foundation--a tax exempt, not-for profit organization
which provides fellowships tenable at over 40 of the nation's
finest universities for graduate work leading to award
of the Ph.D. degree in applications of the physical sciences.
Evidence of exceptional creativity, broad understanding
of physical principles, and outstanding potential for
innovative research is expected. Eligible applicants for
Hertz Fellowships must be students of the applied physical
sciences who are citizens or permanent residents of the
United States of America, and who are willing to morally
commit to make their skills available to the United States
in time of national emergency.
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The
Jack Kent Cooke Graduate Scholarship
Program (UI representative: Dr. Stephan Flores,
University Honors Program, 315 Idaho Commons, 885-6147,
sflores@uidaho.edu) Local deadline for receipt of completed applications
is 27 February 2008--please review eligibility and extensive
application materials on the national website (application typically available in early November on JKC website). Applications
submitted to Dr. Flores by the February 27 deadline should
preferably be complete, and at minimum should include
an original plus two copies of the Nominee Information
and Application Form, offical transcript(s) for all
undergraduate coursework (including fall semester 2007 if applicable),
two letters of recommendation addressed to the Jack
Kent Cooke Foundation, each in a sealed envelope with
the recommender's signature written across the seal,
addressed to Dr. Stephan Flores, Jack Kent Cooke Faculty
Representative, also, if available, a copy of an acceptance letter
from graduate school, including details of financial
award, if any, resume/curriculum vita, also optional
portfolio for applicants in the arts.
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Jacob Javits Fellowships
(UI representative: Dr. Dale Graden, History, Admin
305A, 885-8956, graden@uidaho.edu) Supports up to four
years of graduate study in the arts, humanities, social
sciences, or interdisciplinary fields for study leading
to the Ph.D or MFA degree. Applicants (U.S. citizens,
permanent residents, or citizen of one fo the Freely
Associated States) with outstanding academic records
should apply as seniors (or recent graduates). Applications
include Personal Statement (two pages), three letters
of recommendation, other optional materials (manuscripts,
creative work), GRE scores, and submission of FAFSA.
Applications may be obtained from the Federal Aid office
at 1-800-433-3243. National deadline for completed applications
in mid-October.
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James Madison Memorial Fellowships
(UI representative: Dr. Donald Crowley, Political Science,
Administration Bldg. 205, 885-7290, crowley@uidaho.edu)--opportunities
for current UI seniors or recent graduates (U.S. citizen
or national status) who plan to attend graduate school
and who are also committed to teaching American history
or politics, particularly the U.S. Constitution, in
grades 7-12; also opportunities for those already teaching
at these grade levels who intend to pursue a master's
degree. Fellowships carry a maximum stipend of $24,000
(for up to two-years), which is used to cover the costs
of tuition, fees, books, and room and board. Fellows
must enroll in programs leading to master's degrees
in American history, political science, or education.
Participation includes a four-week institute at Georgetown
University, normally during the summer after the commencement
of study. Because the foundation is required to try
to award at least one fellowship to a legal resident
of each state, Idaho residents may have a considerable
chance of receiving an award. Applications can be requested
at this phone number: 1-800-525-6928. National deadline
for completed applications 1 March.
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Information for UI Rhodes and
Marshall Applicants --These prestigious scholarships
provide generous support for two years of undergraduate
or graduate study in Britain. All students with strong
undergraduate records who meet the basic eligibility
requirements are encouraged to apply. Interested students
are encouraged to consult with Dr. Flores early in their
junior year, or as soon as possible for this year's
competition. National deadlines for completed applications
are in early October; however, the campus level nomination
and selection/interview process begins the preceding
spring semester (contact Dr. Flores early spring semester), with final on campus September
15 deadline for completed application and campus
level letters of recommendation (institutional nominees' applications have an Oct. 1st postmark deadline).
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Marshall Scholarships Site
(UI representative: Dr. Flores, sflores@uidaho.edu)
Marshall Scholarships finance young Americans (U.S.
citizens) of high ability to study for a degree in the
United Kingdom. Up to forty Scholars are selected each
year to study either at graduate or occasionally undergraduate
level at an UK institution in any field of study. The
scheme allows the Scholars, who are the potential leaders,
opinion-formers and decision-makers in their own country,
to gain an understanding and appreciation of British
values and the British way of life. It also establishes
long-lasting ties between the peoples of Britain and
the United States. Each scholarship is held for two
years. Contact Dr. Flores in junior year, with spring semester draft of application desired; final UI campus deadline for completed
application: September 15 (regional online deadline for final completion of all materials is October 4, 2007).
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Mitchell Scholarships
Scholars will be U.S. citizens (18-30 yrs. old) eligible
to attend institutions of higher learning in Ireland,
including the seven universities in the Republic of
Ireland and the two universities in Northern Ireland,
for one academic year of graduate study. There are no
restrictions as to academic field of study although
the proposed course of study must be available at the
university elected by the applicant and the applicant's
undergraduate program must provide sufficient basis
for study in the proposed field. It is envisaged that
the Mitchell Scholars will use the stipend not only
to explore the island of Ireland but also to develop
an understanding of the relationship between Ireland
and Britain as well as Ireland's relationship with Europe.
The application process is primarily online. The online application and personal
essay (1000 words) and activities/achievement statement
must be submitted by early October. Supporting Documents: Each applicant must
submit by mail the following supporting documents: ONE photocopy
of the applicant's birth certificate, passport or documented
evidence of U.S. citizenship; TEN passport-size photos
of un-mounted head and shoulders photograph of the applicant
with the applicant's signature on the back of each photo;
and TEN copies of the applicant's college transcript.
The ORIGINAL must be certified by the Registrar or other
responsible college official. The other NINE copies
may be photocopies. If an applicant has attended more
than one college or university, all transcripts must
be submitted. Online Recommendations: The applicant
is required to use the online recommendation functionality
contained within the online application. The applicant
must register names of at least five but no more than
eight persons who have agreed to electronically submit
the online recommendations. No fewer than four recommenders
should be persons under whom the applicant has done
academic work at a college or university. For applicants
who have not been full-time students in the current
or past academic year, however, only three academic
recommenders are required. Institutional Endorsement:
The applicant must be endorsed by an institution only
if the applicant is currently a full-time student. The
applicant must be endorsed by an institution where he
or she will have completed two years of full-time study
before the October 1 deadline. The applicant must register
an Institutional Endorsement contact utilizing the online
recommendation functionality contained within the online
application. It is preferred that applicants in their
first year of graduate study would have the endorsement
of their undergraduate institution, while those in their
second or third year would be endorsed by their graduate
institution. The Institutional Endorsement is provided
by the university president, dean or other administrative
official responsible for graduate fellowships.
Applicants who are no longer full-time students may
submit an Institutional Endorsement, but it is not required.
Finalists' interviews typically take place in November
in Washington, D.C. (12 scholars are selected). UI campus
deadline for internal application and
request for institutional endorsement: September 15 (to meet national October 5, 2007 online deadline).
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National Institutes for Health
Undergraduate Scholarships --for sophomores
and juniors (U.S. citizens) planning graduate study
in mathematics, engineering, and the sciences leading
to careers in biomedical research. Award includes up
to $20,000 per year, with ten weeks of paid summer research/lab
experience, with requirement to fulfill one year of
full-time employment after graduation at NIH in Bethesda,
Maryland.
NIH
Undergraduate Scholarships for Individuals from Disadvantaged
Backgrounds--this program awards 15 generous,
service-connected scholarships to support the next generation
of biomedical, behavioral, and social science related
helath researchers with up to $20,000 a year, paid research
training at the National Institutes for Health during
summer and after graduation, and intensive mentoring.
Eligibility criteria include U.S. citizen or qualifed
non-citizen, disadvantaged background (exceptional financial
need), 3.5 GPA or top 5 per cent of class rank. Apply
online beginning in September--complete applications due
before end of February.
National
Science Foundation Research Experiences for Undergraduates
(REUs)
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Charles
B. Rangel Fellowships--award to seniors (U.S.
citizens) for two years of graduate or professional schooling
in international affairs, plus enrichment study at Howard
University in Washington, D.C., internships in Congress
and overseas, and eventual appointment to the U.S. Foreign
Service; the award may be used at most accredited graduate
or professional schools (subject to approval by the Bunche
Center) toward a degree in international affairs or a
related subject. Selection is based on outstanding leadership
skills, academic achievement, and financial need. Ten
fellowships of up to $28,000 awarded annually towards
tuition, room, board, books and mandatory fees for completion
of a two-year masters degree. At the conclusion
of two years of study, the Rangel Fellow is expected to
obtain a degree in international affairs or a related
subject (such as public administration, public policy,
business administration, foreign languages, economics,
political science, communications) at a graduate or professional
school approved by the Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs
Center. Awardees are expected to maintain a cumulative
GPA of 3.2 throughout their period of study. Application
deadline is late February.
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Rhodes
Scholarships Trust Page (UI representative:
Stephan Flores, sflores@uidaho.edu) Rhodes Scholars
are U.S. citizens elected for one to two years of study
at the University of Oxford, with the possibility of
renewal for a third year. All educational costs, such
as matriculation, tuition, laboratory and certain other
fees, are paid on the Scholar's behalf by the Rhodes
Trustees. Each Scholar receives in addition a maintenance
allowance adequate to meet necessary expenses for term-time
and vacations. The Rhodes Trustees cover the necessary
costs of travel to and from Oxford, and upon application,
may approve additional grants for research purposes
or study-related travel. Note that applicants must be
at least 18 but not yet 24 years of age by October 1,
2007, and have assurance of completion of a bachelor's
degree before October 1, 2008. UI campus deadline:
September 15; National postmark deadline October 1,
2007.
The
Leonard M. Rieser Fellowship in Science, Technology, and
Global Security --The fellowship will annually
provide one-time awards of $2,500-$5,000 to between three
and five undergraduate students seeking to explore the
connections between science, technology, global security,
and public policy (science students are especially encouraged
to apply). It will be presented to students whose academic
interests, extracurricular activities, and career aspirations
demonstrate a significant interest in the role of scientists
in formulating public policy and in addressing global
security policy challenges. Any undergraduate student
studying at a U.S. college or university is eligible to
apply. The fellowship may be used over the course of one
year (12 months) to support academic research or professional
development, in the United States or abroad. The fellowship
may be used for the following purposes: to provide a stipend
for an otherwise unpaid full-time internship; to underwrite
the cost of travel or transportation to support academic
research; to provide for housing or a per diem for research
conducted out of town; for participation in or travel
to professional conferences where the fellow presents
academic research; to underwrite the production costs
of a special project, ranging from laboratory work to
the making of a documentary film.
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Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarships
(Representative, Dr. John R. Sturgul, McClure 405B,
885-7935, sturgul@uidaho.edu) The purpose of the Rotary
Foundation's Ambassadorial Scholarships Program is to
further international understanding and friendly relations
among people of different countries. Ambassadorial Scholarships
are awarded for study or training in another country
where Rotary clubs are located (over 122 countries).
Applicants must have completed at least two years of
university work (juniors, seniors, recent graduates).
Applicants list 5 universities (no two of which are
in the same country) and must have a familiarity with
the language(s) of the countries selected. Rotary International
reserves the right to make the final selection of the
country. The most common of the several types of scholarships
offered provides funding for one academic year of study
(nine months) in another country. This award is intended
to help cover round-trip transportation, tuition, fees,
room and board expenses, and some educational supplies
up to US $25,000 or its equivalent. The selection of
the scholars is in May. Scholarships begin a year from
the *following* September. Thus, scholars selected in
May 2008 will commence in Sept. 2010. In addition, there
is a Cultural Scholarship for either three or six months
and this does not carry a language requirement. The
stipend for this scholarship is up to $12,000. There
is also a Rotary World Peace scholarship that supports
a scholar for a two-year master's degree at one of the
seven Rotary Centers for International Studies worldwide.
The amount of funding has not been determined yet, but
shall include support for tuition, registration and
other required university fees, room and board for 21
months, transportation and contingency expenses and
other funding. Applications for the Ambassadorial and
Cultural scholarships are due to the local Moscow Rotary
Club by 1 April; the due date for the Peace Centers
scholarship is before August 1. Local applicants should
read the latest Rotary
Information Announcement.
Soros
Fellowships for New Americans --Thirty grants
awarded each year for up to two years of graduate study
in the United States. New American is an individual who
(1) is a resident alien; i.e., holds a Green Card or,
(2) has been naturalized as a U.S. citizen or (3) is the
child of two parents who are both naturalized citizens.
The applicant must either have a bachelor's degree or
be in her/his final year of undergraduate study.To be
eligible you must not be older than thirty years of age
as of NOVEMBER 1, 2006. Each year the Fellow receives
a maintenance grant of $20,000 (paid in two installments)
and a tuition grant of one-half the tuition cost of the
U.S. graduate program attended by the Fellow (up to a
maximum of $16,000 per academic year). A Fellow may pursue
a graduate degree in any professional field (e.g., engineering,
medicine, law, social work, etc.) or scholarly discipline
in the Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, and Sciences.
The Fine and Performing Arts are included. Applicants
are required: 1) to complete online an application form;
2) to submit two essays on specified topics; 3) to submit
a 1-2 page resume; 4) to assure the submission of three
recommendation letters, of which at least one is from
a faculty member familiar with the applicant's current
or most recent academic work and at least one is from
someone who is familiar with her/his performance in a
work-setting, whether paid or volunteer; 5) to submit
an institutional status form from the institution attended
indicating when and whether the present degree program
will be completed (this may be completed by a registrar,
a dean or director of the program, or other authority);
candidates who have a bachelor's degree and have not yet
enrolled in a graduate program need not provide this form;
6) to assure the submission of a transcript from the applicant's
undergraduate institution, and if her/his graduate training
is already in progress, from the graduate institution
as well; candidates may submit a photocopy of the transcript;
7) to submit documentary evidence that the applicant meets,
as of NOVEMBER 1, 2006, the definition of New American
as detailed in the answer to the second question; and
8) to have taken and submitted to the Fellowship Program
by the first week of December, 2006, scores from any graduate
aptitude test (e.g., GMAT, MCAT, GRE, LSAT) required by
programs to which the applicant has applied; candidates
may submit a photocopy of the score report; this requirement
does not pertain to students in programs where portfolios
or auditions determine admissions.
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Harry
S. Truman Scholarships (UI representative: TBD; contact Dr. Stephan Flores)--awards up to $30,000
(up to $15,000 for first year of study, up to $15,000
for last year of study) for those who intend to pursue
graduate study in the U.S. leading to a career in government
or public service--includes a three year public service
requirement following completion of graduate degree.
The aim of this scholarship is to find and recognize
college juniors with exceptional leadership potential
who are committed to careers in government, the nonprofit
or advocacy sectors, education or elsewhere in the public
service; and to provide them with financial support
for graduate study, leadership training, and fellowship
with other students who are committed to making a difference
through public service. Careers in public service include
law programs and master's and doctorate programs in
public administration, public policy analysis, public
health, international relations, government, economics,
social services delivery, education and human resource
development, and conservation and environmental protection.
In 2006, one scholarship will be available to a qualified
resident nominee in each of the 50 states, the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and as a single entity, the
islands of Guam, Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and
the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. Requirements
include junior level standing (or third year, senior
standing), a United States citizen or a United States
national from American Samoa or the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, nomination and letter
by the UI and its faculty representative, three additional
letters of recommendation, a recent transcript, a 15
question application, and a policy proposal. Internal/campus
level applications are typically due in late November--contact Dr. Flores by 25 September or earlier to receive advice on the application process; nominees' completed
online applications due in early February, with online
applications beginning in early fall 2007 for prospective
nominees.
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Morris
K. Udall Scholarship in National Environmental Policy
(UI representative: Prof. Scott Wood, Geology, swood@uidaho.edu;
for initial information phone 885-6113, envs@uidaho.edu, or contact Jena Gram, jgram@uidaho.edu)--$5,000 (80 awards, plus 50 awards at $350) for
current sophomores and juniors who intend to pursue
careers related to environmental public policy, and
for Native American and Alaska Native undergraduates
who intend to pursue careers in health care and tribal
public policy. Initial deadline for completed application
(final application includes information form, 800 word
essay, three letters of recommendation, transcripts)
is usually in December; final deadline is 15 February.
An informational meeting for interested studentsis is
typically held in early December (see
also the Information
Sheet for UI Applicants).
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NSF Graduate Research Fellowships
The National Science Foundation (NSF)
aims to ensure the vitality of the human resource base
of science, mathematics, and engineering in the United
States and to reinforce its diversity by offering approximately
900-1000 graduate fellowships each year, including awards
for women in engineering and computer and information
science. Fellowships provide three years of substantial
support ($30,000 stipend for each 12-month tenure plus
a cost-of-eduation allowance of $10,500 per tenure year)
for graduate study leading to research-based master's
or doctoral degrees in the fields of science, mathematics,
and engineering supported by the NSF (including Life
Sciences, Physics, Astronomy; Engineering, Mathematical
Sciences, Geosciences; Social Sciences, Computer and
Information Science and Engineering, Psychology, Chemistry)
and are intended for students in the early stages of
their graduate study. The national deadline
for completed applications is early in November.
National
Security Education Program (see also www.iie.org/nsep)--David L. Boren
Undergraduate Scholarships
UI representative TBD (abroad@uidaho.edu)
The National Security Education Program was established
by the National Security Education Act of 1991, which
created the National Security Education Board, the National
Security Education Program, and resources to provide undergraduate
scholarships, graduate fellowships, and institutional
grants. It is guided by a mission that seeks to lead in
development of the national capacity to educate U.S. citizens,
understand foreign cultures,strengthen U.S. economic competitiveness
and enhance international cooperation and security. Four
principal objectives form NSEP's mission: to equip Americans
with an understanding of less commonly taught languages
and cultures and enable them to become integrally involved
in global issues; to build a critical base of future leaders,
both in the marketplace and in government service, who
have cultivated international relationships and worked
and studied alongside foreign experts; to develop a cadre
of professionals with more-than-traditional knowledge
of language and culture, who can use this ability to help
the United States make sound decisions and deal effectively
with global issues; to enhance institutional capacity
and increase the number of faculty who can educate U.S.
citizens toward achieving these goals. As a U.S. undergraduate
student, you are eligible to apply for an NSEP Boren scholarship
if you are: aU.S. citizen at the time of application;
a high school graduate, or have earned a GED, and are
matriculated as a freshman, sophomore, junior, or senior
in a U.S. post-secondary institution, including universities,
colleges, and community colleges accredited by an accrediting
body recognized by the U.S. Department of Education; Applying
to engage in a study abroad experience in a country outside
of Western Europe, Canada, Australia, or New Zealand that
meets home institution standards; Planning to use the
scholarship for study abroad and the study abroad program
ends before you graduate. Internal campus deadline during fall semester; national online deadline February 13, 2007.
Thomas
R. Pickering Foreign Affairs Fellowship --The
fellowship program is funded by the United States Department
of State and administered by the Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship Foundation (WWNFF). The Department of State
seeks a Foreign Service that represents America in world
affairs with citizens who reflect the diversity and excellence
of our society. The program seeks to recruit talented
students in academic programs relevant to international
affairs, political and economic analysis, administration,
management, and science policy. The goal is to attract
outstanding students from all ethnic, racial and social
backgrounds, who have an interest in pursuing a Foreign
Service career in the U.S. Department of State. The Program
develops a source of trained men and women from academic
disciplines representing the skill needs of the Department,
who are dedicated to representing America's interests
abroad. Eligibility: only United States citizens will
be considered; applicants must be in the sophomore year
of undergraduate study; applicants must have a cumulative
grade point average of 3.2; a cumulative grade point average
of 3.2 or higher must be maintained throughout participation
in the program. The fellowship award includes tuition,
room, board, and mandatory fees during the junior and
senior years of college and during the first year of graduate
study with reimbursement for books and one round-trip
travel. The Fellow must commit to pursuing a graduate
degree in international studies at one of the graduate
schools identified by the WWNFF. Participating graduate
schools provide financial support in the second year of
graduate study based on need. Fellows meet annually in
Washington, DC for a program orientation. Each successful
candidate is obligated to a minimum of four and one half
years service in an appointment as a Foreign Service Officer.
Candidates who do not successfully complete the Program
and Foreign Service entry requirements may be subject
to a reimbursement obligation to the Department of State.
The complete FAF application packet consists of an official
application form and all supporting documents (personal
statement, Employment Data Form; SAT Form; certification
of citizenship; two letters of recommendation; official
academic transcript and financial aid transcript). National
application deadline in mid-February.
U.S.
Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology
Directorate/Undergraduate Scholarships --The
DHS Scholarship and Fellowship Program is intended for
students (U.S. citizens) interested in pursuing the basic
science and technology innovations that can be applied
to the DHS mission .This education program is intended
to ensure a diverse and highly talented science and technology
community to achieve the DHS mission and objectives.
Areas of study that are eligible include: physical,
mathematical, computer and information, life, and social
sciences, psychology, selected humanities, and engineering.
The award includes a monthly $1,000 stipend for nine months,
plus full tuition and fees paid, to cover the junior and
senior years of undergraduate study. February deadline.
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The British Council:Studying in
Britain
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Oxford
University
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Cambridge University
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British Universities
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University of Idaho Office of
Student Financial Aid Scholarships Site
University
of Idaho Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures
Study Abroad Information
University
of Idaho International Programs Office/Study Abroad Resource
Information on Scholarships and Financial Aid
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National Collegiate Honors Council:
Websites for Major Scholarships
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Johnston Center for Undergraduate
Excellence--list of Distinguished Scholarship Opportunities
University
of Arkansas Office of Post-Graduate Fellowships
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