Other Scholarship &

Fellowship Links

 

National Competitions

Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship Program
Temple Representative: International Programs
This program offers a competition for awards for study abroad, for US citizen students who are receiving federal Pell Grant funding at a 2-year or 4-year college or university. This congressionally funded program is offered through the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State and is administered by the Institute of International Education. Selected by competition, recipients are awarded up to $5000 to defray the costs associated with studying abroad.

Rhodes Scholarships
Temple Deadline: September 1, 2007
National Deadline: October 1, 2007

Temple Representative: Ruth Ost
The Rhodes Scholarships, the oldest international fellowships, brings outstanding students from many countries around the world to the University of Oxford. American Rhodes Scholars are selected through a decentralized process by which regional selection committees choose 32 Scholars each year from among those nominated by selection committees in each of the fifty states. Rhodes Scholars are elected for 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.

Marshall Scholarships
Temple Deadline: September 1, 2007
National Deadline: October 4, 2007

Temple Representative: Ruth Ost
Marshall Scholarships finance young Americans of high ability to study for a degree in the United Kingdom in a system of higher education recognized for its excellence. Marshall Scholarships are mainly funded by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and commemorate the humane ideals of the Marshall Plan conceived by General George C Marshall. To qualify, candidates should: be citizens of the United States of America (at the time they apply for a scholarship); hold a first degree from an accredited four-year college or university in the United States (by the time they take up their scholarship); have obtained a grade point average of no less than 3.7 (or A-) (Exceptions will be considered only on the specific recommendation of the sponsoring college.); have graduated from their undergraduate college or university after April 2002.

George J. Mitchell Scholarships
Temple Deadline: September 1, 2007
National Deadline: October 5, 2007

Temple Representative: Ruth Ost
The US-Ireland Alliance sponsors a competitive, national scholarship for graduate study by American citizens between the ages of 18 and 30 at institutions of higher learning on the island of Ireland. Named to honor the former U.S. Senator's pivotal contribution to the Northern Ireland peace process, the George J. Mitchell Scholarships are intended to familiarize and connect the next generation of American leadership with the island of Ireland. These Scholarships support one year of graduate study in any discipline offered at an institution of higher learning in Ireland or Northern Ireland. The Mitchell Scholarship provides tuition, housing, a living expenses stipend, and international travel. Normally, 12 Scholarships are awarded each year. Mitchell Scholars must exhibit superior levels of academic achievement, leadership and community service.

Fulbright Grants
Temple Representative: Denise Connerty (International Programs)
The U.S. Student Fulbright Program is designed to give recent B.S./B.A. graduates, master’s and doctoral candidates, and young professionals and artists opportunities for personal development and international experience. Most grantees plan their own programs. Projects may include university coursework, independent library or field research, classes in a music conservatory or art school, special projects in the social or life sciences, or a combination.

USA TODAY's All-USA College Academic Team
Temple Deadline: Sooner the better
National Deadline: September - November 2007

Temple Representative: Ruth Ost

Questions? allstars@usatoday.com
This program honors 60 undergraduates as representatives of all outstanding students at the nation's colleges and universities. The 20 members of the First Team will have their photographs published and accomplishments noted in a two-page color spread in USA TODAY in February and receive a $2,500 cash award. Forty more students will be named to the Second and Third Teams. The criteria are designed to find students who excel not only in scholarship but also in leadership roles on and off campus. The element given the most weight by the judges is the nominee's outstanding original academic or intellectual product. The judges will be influenced by the student's ability to describe that outstanding endeavor in his/her own words. They will not read an author's work, see an artist's painting or hear a composer's music, but rely solely on the student's ability to describe the effort in writing, supplemented by recommendations from the nominating professor and two other persons of the nominee's choice. Any full-time undergraduate of at least sophomore standing at a four-year institution in the United States or its territories is eligible. U.S. citizenship is not required. A full-time undergraduate is one carrying at least 12 credits in pursuit of an undergraduate degree or one who anticipates earning an undergraduate degree at the end of the current semester. Students in five-year programs who have not received a baccalaureate are eligible. Students who already have a baccalaureate and are pursuing another are not. Students graduating in December are eligible.

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Junior Fellows Program

Seniors and grads one year out apply
Temple Deadline: November 30, 2007
National Deadline: January 15, 2008

Temple Representative: Ruth Ost
Each year the Endowment offers 8-10 one-year fellowships to uniquely qualified graduating seniors and individuals who have graduated during the past academic year. They are selected from a pool of nominees from close to 300 colleges. Carnegie Junior Fellows work as research assistants to the Endowment's senior associates. We are unable to consider anyone who has started graduate studies. The Endowment's nomination deadline is January 15 of each year. Positions are paid, full-time positions for one year. Junior fellows are currently paid a gross salary of $2,500 per month. A full benefits package is also provided.

Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Graduate Scholarship Program

Seniors or recent grads only
Temple Deadline: February 1, 2007
National Deadline: March 15, 2008

Temple Representative: Aquiles Iglesias, Dean of the Graduate School

See Ruth Ost for details and more information.
The Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Graduate Scholarship Program will award approximately 35 scholarships to college seniors or recent graduates to attend graduate programs in fall 2004. The scholarship awards will provide funding for tuition, room and board, books, and other required fees for the length of the graduate degree program, up to six years. The amount and duration of awards will vary by student, based on the cost of attendance and length of the program as well as other scholarships or grants received. The maximum award per student is $50,000 per year.

Vira Heinz Award

Summer between junior and senior year
Temple Representative: International Programs
The Vira Heinz Endowment awards three $5,000 scholarships to Temple female students planning to spend a summer studying abroad. Applicants must be in their sophomore or junior year during the summer they are planning to study abroad.

St. Andrew’s Society Scholarship
Temple Representative: Mike Devers (International Programs)
The St. Andrew's Society of Philadelphia awards five $17,000 scholarships annually to sophomore students from local universities to spend their junior year studying at one of four Scottish universities. Applicants should be in their sophomore year, be from the Delaware Valley, and possess a 3.0 cumulative grade point average. Students from most disciplines may apply; the credits earned during the junior year in Scotland will apply to the Temple University degree. A Temple faculty committee interviews candidates. One Temple student is then nominated to compete with approximately 15 students nominated from other universities for the five scholarships.

Ruth can tell you stories about many successful candidates!

Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship

Sophomores and Juniors apply

Information regarding the 2008 competition will be posted by September 1, 2007.
Temple Representative: Duane Smith (Office of the VPUS)
The Foundation will award undergraduate scholarships in the spring of 2004 for use during the 2004-2005 academic year. The awards will be made on the basis of merit to two groups of students -- those who will be college juniors and those who will be college seniors in the 2004-2005 academic year -- who have outstanding potential and intend to pursue careers in mathematics, the natural sciences, or engineering. Four-year institutions are eligible to nominate up to four students who are in the sophomore or junior class during the 2003-2004 academic year. To be considered, a student must be nominated by his or her college or university using the official nomination materials available to each institution on the Foundation's website. Each scholarship covers eligible expenses for tuition, fees, books, and room and board, up to a maximum of $7,500 annually. Junior-level scholarship recipients are eligible for a maximum of two years of scholarship support, and senior-level scholarship recipients are eligible for a maximum of one year of scholarship support.

Harry S. Truman Scholarship

Juniors apply
Temple Deadline: December 5, 2007
National Deadline: January 31, 2008

Temple Representative: Ruth Ost
The Truman Foundation is a $30,000 merit-based grant awarded to undergraduate students, who wish financial support to attend graduate or professional school in preparation for careers in government. Candidates must attend an accredited U.S. college or university and be nominated by the institution's Truman Faculty Representative [candidates MAY NOT apply directly], be U.S. citizens or U.S. nationals, complete an application and write a policy recommendation, be in the upper quarter of their junior class. The Foundation seeks candidates who have extensive record of public and community service, are committed to careers in government or elsewhere in public service, and have outstanding leadership potential and communication skills. The Foundation expects to award 75-80 scholarships in 2004. (Temple had one winner in 2004 and two winners in 2003.)

Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs Fellowship

Sophomores apply
Temple Deadline: December 5, 2007
National Deadline: February 2008

Temple Representative: See Ruth Ost.
The fellowship program is funded by the US 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.  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.

Morris K. Udall Foundation

Sophomores and Juniors Apply
Temple Deadline: January 22, 2007
National Deadline: March 6, 2007

Temple Representative: Ruth Ost
Each year, the Foundation awards 80 undergraduate scholarships of up to $5,000 to juniors and seniors in fields related to the environment (broadly defined, e.g., science, policy, history, etc.), and to Native American and Alaska Natives in fields related to health care or tribal policy. Up to $5000 for one year of undergraduate student; renewable by application.