Practical Guide for Getting Funding for University Education
Written by Myfinance Team
Friday, 23 October 2009
There are countless
opportunities for individuals seeking to pursue academic study at all levels to
obtain financial support from private foundations, directly from academic
institutions and from various governmental and intergovernmental agencies.
In addition, there
are a number of fellowships that provide funding for independent
research/internships/language study as part of (or after completing) an
academic program. As part of developing increased field experience and
opportunities, outside funding can be a wonderful opportunity to support work.
It is not always easy
to obtain a fellowship, as there can be significant competition for a limited
number of fellowships.
This guide is divided
into four parts. The first is general suggestions how to obtain funding, the
second is how to develop/write a successful funding application, the third is
key funding/scholarship resources and the fourth is a list of key funding
institutions.
Approaches
for Obtaining Funding for University Education
Direct
Funding from the University
- A number of competitive universities at the BA (sometimes) MA (more
often) level will offer partial (and occasionally full scholarships)
directly to the most competitive students and especially at the Ph.D.
level.
Outside
Scholarships
- There are many, many resources available to students depending on the
location of study. The Ford International Fellowship is great (only open
to citizens of certain countries), the Rotary World MA Peace Fellows (open
to all, for study at six select universities. Applicants need to be over
25 and have at least a few years work experience in the peace/development
field).
Government
Agencies
- Often select government agencies do provide funding opportunities. For
example the US government provides Fulbright Scholarships and others. The
German Government has the DAAD Agency. Check with the embassies of
respective countries on their websites in your country or do some general
searching.
Friends/Family/Local
Businesses
- Sometimes through a combination of creative support from friends/family
and local business there may be a way to piece together funding. However,
investing some time in energy in researching and applying for appropriate
opportunities can be invaluable. Below are some suggestions for how to
write a successful funding application and information on several leading
fellowships and key organizations.
Suggestions for Writing Successful
Fellowship Applications
1.Carefully
Read the Funding Requirements and Goals of the Fellowship - This may sound like common sense,
but it is critical to carefully read over the details of any funding
opportunities. What are the goals of the funder? What are the administrative
details (deadline, citizenship restrictions, etc.)? Many people do not take the
time to educate themselves and frame their applications using the appropriate
language to meet the goals of the funders. Alternatively, they may miss key
logistical details that can cause an application to be disqualified.
2.Frame
Your Previous (and future) Experience as Part of a Coherent Narrative - One of the keys to writing a winning
application is to demonstrate clearly how your previous academic and
professional experience makes you qualified for a particular opportunity. Write
a coherent narrative, demonstrating long-standing interest in a particular
region, topic, explain how the fellowship will help you develop additional
expertise and how this will be useful in the post-fellowship period in your
career and for the larger society.
3.Search
out Multiple Fellowship Opportunities
- Applying for fellowships can be very competitive. If possible, apply for
several different fellowships at the same time. Consider that for many
competitions there can be between 5-20 applicants per fellowship. Thus if you
can identify various opportunities that are of interest and apply for several
this will help increase your chances of having at least one (or more successful
applications).
4.Keep
your Essays Focused, Clear and Logical
- For most fellowship review processes, a single reviewer may read between
20-50 applications. Thus, it is important that in writing your essays that you
provide clear, logical and easy to follow arguments. If it is a research
fellowship, explain your research goals, questions, methods of research and
intended outcomes. If it is a language fellowship, provide a clear plan of
study and demonstrate your commitment to pursuing further language beyond this
particular fellowship.
5.Proofread
and Peer Review
- One method that can help ensure a quality application is to have your
professors and/or colleagues read through the application. Ask if your essays
are compelling, to assist with grammatical editing, etc. Sometimes working in
peer groups where you might share your initial ideas with colleagues can help
in further refining and developing your proposal.
6.Learn
from Rejection.Often
applications may not be approved. You can take this a learning opportunity.
Some donors will provide you with feedback about why you were not successful
and perhaps encourage you to revise and resubmit in future years.
7.Start
Early Many fellowship applications are due eight-12 months in advance. Thus you need to start research and
exploring opportunities with sufficient time.
Key
Fellowship/Scholarship Resources
There are many
resources for finding scholarship opportunities and the list below provide some
key suggestions.
Consult Your University often your
academic advisors, study abroad offices and other university divisions can
be a wonderful source of information about fellowship opportunities. Also
when you're applying to academic institutions for study, inquire about
specific funding that may be available if you're admitted.
The Peace and
Collaborative Development Site There are
hundreds of scholarship and fellowship opportunities posted on this site.
You can find these opportunities in the forums on Fellowship Opportunities
and also Research. A useful way to identify opportunities is to search by
keywords such as fellowship, scholarship, graduate, Ph.D., "Call for
Applications", etc.
The Alliance for
Peacebuilding Member List Listser for Alliance for
Peacebuilding Members that provides information on many scholarship
opportunities around the world at all levels.
Idealist, one of the leading
nonprofit career sites has recently developed the Public Service Graduate
Education Resource Center. This is a terrific site that has
key information for individuals seeking to pursue graduate programs
related to social change. The resource includes tips for how to select a
program, how to write an effective application, application procedures,
identifying funding and more.
H-HET
Website network that provides information on numerous fellowship
opportunities related to academia.
Rotary
Peace and Conflict Studies Fellowship - Rotary
Centers provide Rotary World Peace Fellows with the opportunity to pursue
a master's degree in conflict resolution, peace studies, international
relations, and related areas. Each year, up to 60 Rotary World Peace
Fellowships are offered on a competitive basis at six Rotary Centers,
which operate in partnership with seven leading universities. Applications
need to be over 25 years of age and have several years experience.
Echoing Green's
Fellowship Program - Echoing Green awards two-year
fellowships to emerging social innovators. Annually, we award fellowships
to individuals with innovative ideas for creating new models for tackling
seemingly unsolvable social challenges. These fellowships offer them the
opportunity to develop and test their ideas.
Ford
International Fellowships - The Ford Foundation
International Fellowships Program (IFP) was launched by the Ford
Foundation in 2000 to provide opportunities for advanced study to
exceptional individuals who will use this education to become leaders in
their respective fields, furthering development in their own countries and
greater economic and social justice worldwide. To ensure that Fellows are
drawn from diverse backgrounds, IFP actively seeks candidates from social
groups and communities that lack systematic access to higher education.
IFP's New York-based secretariat collaborates closely with partner
organizations in 22 countries and territories.
Fulbright
Fellowships âÂ" Offers fellowship for
US students and faculty to study and conduct research/teaching abroad and
for international students and faculty to pursue opportunities in the US.
United States Institute
of Peace Senior and Ph.D. Fellowships âÂ" The
Jennings Randolph Program for International Peace awards Senior
Fellowships to enable outstanding scholars, policymakers, journalists, and
other professionals from around the world to conduct research at the U.S.
Institute of Peace on important issues concerning international conflict
and peace. Peace Scholar Dissertation Fellowships (open to Ph.D. students
studying in the US). These fellowships are intended to support the
research and writing of doctoral dissertations addressing the sources and
nature of international conflict and ways of preventing or ending conflict
and sustaining peace.
The
Davis-Putter Scholarship Fund (US) The Davis-Putter Scholarship
Fund provides grants to students actively working for peace and justice.
These need-based scholarships are awarded to those able to do academic
work at the university level and who are part of the progressive movement
on the campus and in the community.
The Herbert Scoville
Jr.Peace Fellowship (US) The Herbert Scoville Jr.
Peace Fellowship invites college graduates (Graduate Student or
Ph.D./M.D./Other Professional) to apply for full-time, six to nine-month
fellowships in Washington, District of Columbia. Outstanding individuals
will be selected to work with nonprofit, public-interest organizations
addressing peace and security issues.
National
Security Education Program The National Security Education
Program (NSEP) provides a unique funding opportunity for U.S. students
(undergraduate, graduate and post-graduate) to study world regions
critical to U.S. interests (including Africa, Asia, Central/Eastern
Europe, Eurasia, Latin America & the Caribbean, and the Middle East).
NSEP was designed to provide Americans with the resources and
encouragement they need to acquire skills and experiences in areas of the
world critical to the future security of our nation in exchange for a
commitment to seek work in the federal government.
Thomas
Pickering Fellowship (Graduate and Undergraduate). The
goal of the fellowship Graduate Fellowship program is to attract
outstanding students who enroll in two-year master's degree programs in
public policy, international affairs, public administration, or academic
fields such as business, economics, political science, sociology, or
foreign languages, who represent all ethnic, racial and social backgrounds
and who have an interest in pursuing a Foreign Service career in the U.S.
Department of State. The Pickering Undergraduate Foreign Affairs
Fellowship 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.
Gates Cambridge
Fellowship The Gates Cambridge Scholarship
is a merit-based scholarship established by the Gates Cambridge Trust in
order to give students from around the world the opportunity to study at
Cambridge in one of three programs: a second Bachelor's degree, one-year
postgraduate course leading to a Master's degree, or research and work
leading to a Ph.D. (scholars are funded for a period of 1 to 4 years). The
Gates Cambridge Scholarship provides University tuition, a stipend for
living expenses, and one return airfare.
Chevening
Scholarships These are prestigious awards
available to international students for post-graduate study in the United
Kingdom. They are available in more than 130 countries and around 1000 new
Chevening Scholarships are awarded globally each year. Chevening
scholarships offer an ideal opportunity for young, high-flying graduates
not only to study their chosen subject, but also to meet and network with
their peers in the unique learning atmosphere that the UK provides. The
ultimate objective is to build a network of friends of the UK, who will be
future leaders in their countries.
Key
Funding Institutions
Many of these
institutions sponsor and/or administer a number of fellowship opportunities.
Therefore spending some time on each organization's website to explore given
opportunities can be invaluable.
Soros
Foundation/Open Society Institute - Offers a
number of fellowship and scholarship opportunities for students and
professionals around the world. One new fellowship opportunity started in 2008
is the Open
Society Fellowship
International
Institute for Education - Offers a number of fellowships
for students and non-students. Most notable include Fulbright Fellowships
(which are often open to non-students), National Security Education
Program for Undergraduates and Graduates (study abroad program), and many
others.
International
Research & Exchanges Board - Offers
several fellowship opportunities for graduate students and faculty to
conduct field research abroad (short-term and long-term)
Social Science Research
Council - SSRC fellowship and grant
programs provide support and professional recognition to innovators within
fields, and especially to younger researchers whose work and ideas will
have longer-term impact on society and scholarship.
American
Council of Learned Societies - CLS offers fellowships and
grants in over one dozen programs, for research in the humanities and
humanistic social sciences at the doctoral and postdoctoral levels.
AMIDEAST
- Administers a number of private, institutional, and non-U.S. government
scholarship programs for students and professionals from the Middle East
and North Africa, most of which are for study at U.S. universities.
The
Organization for Social Science Research in Eastern and Souther...
(OSSREA) is a regional membership-based and donor-supported research and
capacity-building organization whose mission is to promote dialogue and
interaction between researchers and policy-makers in Eastern and Southern
Africa with a view to enhancing the impact of research on policy-making
and development planning. Its headquarters is based in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia. They offer several research fellowships each year.
The
International Institute of Education maintains a
useful directory of scholarships for study abroad, IIE Passport.
This valuable funding resource allows you to search by country or subject
to find the study abroad funding information that you need. Our
comprehensive database of study abroad scholarships, fellowships, and
grants can help make your dream of studying abroad a financial possibility
and a profound reality.
Alfa Fellowship Program
The Alfa Fellowship Program provides a new and exciting opportunity for
young professionals from the US to live and work in Russia and to enable
them to develop a genuine expertise through individualized professional
assignments.
1"Army officer" at Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:43by charles obeny
It is true iam very excited about the courses that you have brougth forward from various institutions and Universities.But you have not told us how to apply .Secondly me as apractical military officer who has been in the field with alot of experiences in the Great Lakes Region for 15 years.How can the United States Instituts of Peace Senior Ph.D Fellowship and The Herbert Scoville Jr Peace Fellowship(US)help me to go and study and share my war memoris research in to it anddevelopsome policy.