List of National Scholarships
List of National ScholarshipsHere you will find a list of the major scholarships and fellowships you can apply for through ONSA. We also assist students interested in other nationally competitive awards. Each scholarship contains a further link to important resources and application tips.
After exploring the scholarship links, we invite you to fill out our Request Advising Appointment form, to let us know what scholarships you're interested in and what your goals are.
Also, you may contact us at onsa [at] honors [dot] umass [dot] edu (subject: Requesting%20an%20Advising%20Appointment) (onsa[at]honors[dot]umass[dot]edu) to schedule a scholarship advising appointment.
Beinecke Scholarship
Beinecke ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Monday, January 20, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Juniors, U.S. citizens, with documented financial need
What It's For:
Graduate degree
Fields of Study:
Arts and Humanities
Social Sciences
Scholarship Website:
The Beinecke Scholarship Program was established in 1971 to provide substantial scholarships for the graduate education of young men and women of exceptional promise. The program seeks to encourage and enable highly motivated students to pursue opportunities available to them and to be courageous in the selection of a graduate course of study in the arts, humanities, or social sciences. Preference is given to candidates for whom the awarding of a scholarship would significantly increase the likelihood of the student’s being able to attend graduate school. Since 1975, the program has selected more than 500 college juniors from more than 100 different undergraduate institutions for support during graduate study at any accredited university.
Each scholar receives $4,000 immediately prior to entering graduate school and an additional $30,000 while attending graduate school. There are no geographic restrictions on the use of the scholarship, and recipients are allowed to supplement the award with other scholarships, assistantships, and research grants. Scholars are encouraged to begin graduate study as soon as possible following graduation from college, and must utilize all of the funding within five years of completing undergraduate studies.
Eligibility Requirements:
- College junior pursuing a bachelor's degree
- Planning to enter a master's or doctoral program in the arts, humanities, or social sciences after graduation
- Able to demonstrate financial need during undergraduate years
- U.S. citizen or United States national from American Samoa or the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
Candidate Profile:
- Superior intellectual ability and demonstrated academic achievement beyond excellent grades
- Independent projects, extracurricular activities, and/or internships related to the applicant's interests or future goals
- Clear plan for graduate education connected to applicant's career path and future goals
Application Components:
- Application Form
- Resume
- 1,000 word personal statement
- Three letters of recommendation from faculty members
- Certified transcript (or transcripts)
Application Procedure
HFA and SBS Colleges recommend ONSA competitive applicants by December 1, every year. One needs to be recommended by their College. From this pool, ONSA and the faculty committee select one student to nominate to the Beinecke Foundation. For advising or questions, meet with an ONSA advisor.
Boren National Security Education Scholarship
Boren National Security Education ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
Who Should Apply?
First-year students, sophomores, juniors, and seniors, as long as they are enrolled at UMass Amherst during their time abroad; U.S. citizens
What It's For:
Study abroad for immersive learning of less-commonly taught languages (one semester or full year) in specific geographic areas and languages
Fields of Study:
Any field relevant to U.S. national security
Scholarship Website:
Boren Scholarship supports students interested in spending one, preferably two, semesters in a non-western country in order to promote long-term linguistic and cultural immersion. These awards provide up to $25,000 to U.S. undergraduate students to study abroad in areas of the world that are critical to U.S. interests and underrepresented in study abroad, including Africa, Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America, and the Middle East. Western Europe, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are excluded. Boren Scholars represent a variety of academic backgrounds, but all are interested in studying less commonly taught languages, including but not limited to Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, and Swahili.
Boren Scholarships focus on geographic areas, languages, and fields of study deemed critical to U.S. national security. Applicants identify how their study abroad program, as well as their future academic and career goals, will contribute to U.S. national security. National security is broadly defined to include not only the traditional concerns of protecting American well-being, but also areas such as sustainable development, environmental degradation, global disease and hunger, population growth and migration, cyber security, human rights, and economic competitiveness. Recipients of the scholarship agree to work in the federal government for at least one year after completing their study abroad.
Eligibility Requirements:
- U.S. citizen at time of application
- Enrolled in a degree program at time of application and during study abroad
- Applying to a full-semester or academic year study abroad program in a country outside of Western Europe, Canada, Australia, or New Zealand
- Must plan to study a less commonly taught language in an eligible world region for full semester or (preferred) academic year. Intermediate/Advanced French will be considered for study under the African Flagship Languages Initiative (AFLI). A limited number of undergraduate students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields may be funded for summer programs of at least 8 weeks.
Candidate Profile:
- Commitment to national security (broadly defined) and a desire to work in government service in an area pertaining to national security after graduation
- Academic background and preparation commensurate with future career goals (e.g., independent projects or other study abroad experience, language learning, internships, volunteer experience, etc.)
- Study abroad program that prioritizes language learning and immersion
- Clear connections among one's chosen study abroad program, desire to pursue language learning, and future goals in relation to national security
- Cultural knowledge and adaptability, flexibility, and maturity
Application Components:
- Online application
- Two letters of recommendation (Three for Boren Fellowship for Graduate Students)
- Two essays, which are detailed here
- Certified transcript (or transcripts)
- Language self-assessment form
- One-page study abroad description with cost information
Application Procedure
If you wish to receive comprehensive advising support, including feedback from ONSA staff and a formal endorsement of your application, you need to meet the campus application deadline of January 8, 2025.
Students who do not follow these campus deadlines will not be eligible to receive feedback and the endorsement, but may still apply independently to the Boren scholarship.
Carnegie Junior Fellows Program
Carnegie Junior Fellows ProgramCampus Deadline:
December 1
The award provides a one-year paid internship in Washington, D.C., with the Carnegie Endowment for Peace. Junior Fellows work as research assistants on projects, such as non-proliferation, democracy-building, migration, international economics, trade and development, China, and Russian/Eurasian issues. Junior Fellows have the opportunity to conduct research for books, co-author journal articles and policy papers, participate in meetings with high-level officials, contribute to congressional testimony, and organize briefings attended by scholars, activists, journalists, and government officials. Selection criteria include a high GPA (3.7 or above) with coursework in international relations, government, history, economics, or area studies, as well as a commitment to a career in international affairs. Up to ten awards are given annually.
Eligibility:
Applicants must be graduating seniors or have graduated in the last academic year and must not have begun graduate studies. Applicants do not have to be U.S. citizens however; all applicants must be eligible to work in the U.S. Candidates should have a strong transcript overall GPA (at least 3.7+) and have substantial coursework in the topic for which they are applying. Some program areas require specific language or qualitative skills in addition to coursework in the research area topic. Fellows must be available to work from September 1 through June 30.
Institutional Endorsement/Nomination Required: Yes
For more information contact onsa [at] honors [dot] umass [dot] edu (onsa[at]honors[dot]umass[dot]edu) and visit: James C. Gaither Junior Fellows Program.
Churchill Scholarship
Churchill ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Wednesday, October 1, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Seniors & recent graduates, U.S. citizens
What It's For:
One year at Cambridge University for graduate degree in science, engineering, or mathematics
Fields of Study:
Science
Engineering
Mathematics
Scholarship Website:
The Churchill Scholarship funds 18 scholarships per year, comprised of 16 Churchill Scholarships in science, mathematics, and engineering, and two Kanders Churchill Scholarships in science policy. It is for one year of Master’s study (courses run between 9 and 12 months). The award covers tuition, roundtrip airfare to the UK, visa fees and health surcharge, and a stipend that is set 5% higher than the UK Research Council standard. Recipients are eligible to apply for a $4,000 special research grant. The total value is around $65,000.
Eligibility Requirements:
- U.S. citizen
- Ages 19–26
- May not have attained a doctorate at the time they take up the award
Candidate Profile:
- Exceptional academic achievement and talent in an eligible area of study (GPA: min. 3.7, but usually 3.9 or higher)
- Strong record of research in your field
- Potential to contribute to the advancement of knowledge in the sciences, engineering, or mathematics by pursuing original, creative work
- Preparedness for rigorous, independent graduate study and research
- Demonstrated leadership, extracurricular involvement, and social engagement
Application Components:
- List of research and relevant employment experience (e.g., lab positions, internships)
- Program of Study essay of no more than one, single-spaced page, including a rationale for your chosen program of study at Cambridge and a clear link to your future goals
- Personal Statement of no more than two pages, single-spaced
- Certified transcript (or transcripts)
- Four letters of recommendation from faculty members. Share this important information with your recommenders: Instructions for Recommenders: U.K. & Ireland Awards.
- Letter of interest or commitment from the director of an appropriate laboratory at Cambridge
Application Procedure
Students must apply independently for admission to the University of Cambridge through the GRADSAF by mid-October and will complete a separate application for the Churchill Scholarship. Students MUST be nominated by UMASS in order to apply for the Churchill. As such, an UMASS faculty internal committee will read and select two nominees for the Churchill Scholarship competition.
ONSA staff encourage you to set an advising appointment during the spring semester to discuss your eligibility and competitiveness for the UK/Ireland scholarships. After discussing with us your academic record and leadership and research experience for these highly competitive scholarships, students will pre-apply with ONSA by June 1.
The pre-application process officially informs ONSA about your application plan and allows students to start working early on their applications. Complete and submit the U.K./Ireland Scholarships Pre-Application by June 1.
APPLY with ONSA by October 1:
Finalize your Churchill application. We will access your application from there.
THE CAMPUS DEADLINE OF OCTOBER 1 IS REQUIRED; WE WILL NOT ACCEPT APPLICATIONS AFTER THIS DATE.
After the campus deadline, we will review your application and inform you if you will be endorsed for the national competition.
UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE DEADLINE: October (check their website for the exact date)
Churchill applicants must also apply to their graduate program at Cambridge. Some key points regarding the Cambridge application:
- If your account is inactive for 2 or more weeks, your application will be automatically deleted, so be sure to log in frequently.
- Your application will require 2 academic letters of recommendation. Your online submission of the Cambridge application will send automated email prompts to your references, who will then have 14 days to submit their letters.
- Your Cambridge program may have its own requirements, such as an additional research proposal or other essays, additional test scores, or differing deadlines. Carefully review their website.
- Churchill College MUST be your first choice of college on the Cambridge application.
Critical Language Scholarship (CLS)
Critical Language Scholarship (CLS)Application Deadline:
Applications are due in November each year. There is no campus deadline.
Who Should Apply?:
Undergraduate students
Scholarship Website:
Critical Language Scholarship (CLS)
The Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) Program offers an intensive summer opportunity for American college and university students to gain proficiency in one of a dozen critical languages essential to the United States’ global engagement. Languages include Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Swahili, Turkish, and Urdu.
The CLS Program, funded by the U.S. Department of State, provides U.S. students from all degree programs with the chance to experience immersive language and cultural learning. Participants can choose between two pathways to study critical languages: in-person (CLS Program) or online (CLS Spark).
CLS Program
The in-person CLS Program allows students to spend eight to ten weeks abroad learning one of the selected critical languages while earning academic credit. Classes are taught by native speakers at host institutions abroad. The scholarship covers round-trip travel, tuition, group excursions, and a modest stipend for living expenses. Many of the languages offered through the CLS Program do not require prior language experience. For detailed information about languages and proficiency levels, visit: https://clscholarship.org/languages.
CLS Spark
The CLS Spark initiative provides beginner-level virtual language instruction in Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Russian, as well as advanced beginner-level instruction in Japanese. This pathway is open to undergraduate students who are eager to start their journey into language learning.
Eligibility Requirements:
- A U.S. citizen or national
- At least 18 years old by May of the program year
- Enrolled in an accredited U.S. degree-granting program at the time of application
Application Components:
- CLS Online application
- Four short essays
- No Letter of Recommendation/Reference required
For more information and advising, email ONSA at: onsa [at] honors [dot] umass [dot] edu (onsa[at]honors[dot]umass[dot]edu)
DAAD Study Scholarship (German Academic Exchange Service)
DAAD Study Scholarship (German Academic Exchange Service)Campus Deadline:
Sunday, October 19, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Undergraduates
DAAD Study Scholarship deadline is October 19; all other DAAD scholarships have external deadlines
What It's For:
Study opportunities in Germany
Fields of Study:
Any field
Scholarship Website:
DAAD Study Scholarship for graduating seniors requires a nomination.
UMass campus deadline for nominations is October 19 midnight.
- Support for one or two years of study in Germany
- Can be used to earn a Master’s degree at a German university
- German language ability should be commensurate with needs
- Final-year undergrads may apply
- Students in their last year of undergraduate studies at an accredited U.S. or Canadian university.
- U.S. or Canadian citizens or permanent residents
- Foreign nationals who live in the U.S. or in Canada by the time of application deadline are eligible, if your last degree was obtained in the U.S./Canada, or you will have received a degree in the U.S./Canada before your scholarship starts.
- All other foreign nationals may need to apply via a different DAAD office
- Recent B.A./B.S. or M.A./M.S. graduates who completed their last degree no longer than 6 years ago
- U.S./Canadian students in the first year of a Master’s degree program in Germany may apply to fund their second year
- Applicants may not have been living in Germany for more than 15 consecutive months by the time of application deadline
Tips for Success:
- Follow the instructions on the DAAD web pages
- Express why a stay in Germany is critical for your academic or professional goals
- Choose the right school in line with your post-graduation goals
- Focus on academic goals and your background to achieve them
- Explain clearly why you chose the location or program
- Submit quality letters of recommendation addressing your specific study plans
- Make sure your application is on time and complete
Fulbright U.S. Student Program
Fulbright U.S. Student ProgramCampus Deadline:
Monday, September 8, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Seniors, graduate students, UMass Amherst alumni, U.S. citizens
- Get started by filling out the undergraduate student/alumni Fulbright Pre-Application.
- Complete the pre-application anytime in the Spring semester (on rolling basis) before June 1 to have access to the full range of application support for current undergraduate students, which includes workshops, advising, and individual application feedback.
- Students who do not submit this pre-application by the June 1 deadline can still apply but may not be eligible for application development support or feedback on application essays.
Are you a current UMass graduate student? Contact the Office of Professional Development for information on application support for these individuals.
What It's For:
The Fulbright U.S. Student Program supports research, English teaching abroad, or graduate study in more than 140 countries worldwide. Grant lengths and dates vary by award. Please consult the specific award description for details on opportunities in a specific country.
Fields of Study:
Any field
The Fulbright U.S. Student Program provides an unparalleled opportunity to teach, study, and conduct research in over 140 countries worldwide. As envisioned by U.S. Senator J. William Fulbright, the program is designed to:
- promote mutual understanding through a commitment to the free flow of ideas and people across national boundaries,
- expand, through this understanding, the boundaries of human wisdom, empathy and perception,
- create true and lasting world peace through cooperation in constructive activities among people of different nations.
Eligibility:
- Seniors, recent graduates, current graduate students, or alumni
- U.S. citizenship required
- Language proficiency in non-English-speaking countries commensurate with the proposed project (varies by country and grant type)
Types of grants:
- Study/Research grants, which allow recipients to conduct independent research or study in over 140 countries. Applicants develop an independent project proposal, which may include university coursework, independent library, lab, or field research, or special projects in the social sciences, life sciences, or visual and performing arts. Applicants must identify a contact in their host country and procure a letter stating that he or she will serve as the applicant's institutional affiliation during the student's stay. In the majority of cases, students applying for study/research grants do so to fund a research experience. Students applying for study/research grants in the creative and performing arts must submit supplementary materials in addition to their application.
- English Teaching Assistantship (ETA) grants are available in select countries and provide recipients with the opportunity to teach English as a second language to students from elementary school through university level, depending on the country. ETAs serve as supplemental instructors in a classroom, generally providing conversation practice and teaching American culture for approximately 20 hours per week. Unlike research/study grants, for which an applicant must identify a specific location within the host country, ETAs simply apply to a country, and those awarded grants are assigned a location based on need. Applicants cannot request specific assignments.
Candidate Profile:
General
- Strong academic record
- Compelling rationale for study, research, or teaching in your chosen country
- Demonstrated ability and desire to foster mutual understanding and cultural exchange
- Explanation of how the Fulbright experience will support your future goals
- Demonstrated preparation, maturity, and adaptability
- Knowledge of your host country, including its language and culture
Relative to Study/Research Grants
- Feasible project proposal with clear purpose, methodology, and timeline
- Previous research experience and demonstrated preparation for proposed project
- Description of the significance and/or innovation of your research/study
Relative to ETAs
- Previous teaching/instruction experience (e.g., mentoring, tutoring, classroom teaching, or related experiences)
- Description of the pedagogical theory and/or practices you will bring to a classroom in your host country
- Well-developed, specific ideas for engaging second-language learners
Application Components:
- Online application
- Statement of Grant Purpose essay (2 pages)
- Personal Statement (1 page)
- Three letters of recommendation
- Official transcript (or transcripts)
- Letter of affiliation (for research grant applicants) from an appropriate contact in your host country (e.g., professor, lab or archive director, etc.)
- Foreign language forms (when specified on your host country's profile page)
- Supplementary materials (for research/study grant applicants in the creative and performing arts)
Click here for more Fulbright application resources ...
Application Procedure:
All applicants currently enrolled at a university MUST be reviewed and nominated by their university.
Detailed campus application information is provided directly to applicants once they submit their Fulbright Pre-Application.
Fulbright Application Timeline
Fulbright Application Timeline- SUBMIT your Fulbright Campus Pre-Application by June 1.
- CHOOSE your host country carefully after reading the country specifics and preferred candidate profiles online.
- CREATE a project statement following Fulbright proposal guidelines.
- CONSULT faculty, at least one with discipline-specific expertise and one with country specific knowledge.
- Whether applying for an ETA or study/research grant, create a plan for culturally engaging with your host country.
- DEVELOP a personal statement. What in your personal and academic life has led you to your proposed plan of study in your proposed country?
- IDENTIFY three faculty members to serve as references. Provide them with a copy of your essays. All three should be able to address your project.
- OBTAIN letters of affiliation if required for your project. Start your search now.
- TEST your language proficiency. Plan to upgrade your proficiency level as much as possible before your departure.
Timeline
MARCH — APRIL — MAY
- Attend campus information sessions and schedule individual meetings with ONSA advisors. Choose your host country, select project type, and determine your language proficiency.
MAY — JUNE
- Contact faculty members who have expertise in your research area to discuss your project. Research country affiliations.
- June 1: Submit your Fulbright Campus Pre-Application.
- By the end of June, write your first draft of project proposal and personal statement. Discuss and review your drafts with ONSA advisors.
JULY
- Create an online application account via the Fulbright national website. You can do this step at any time after June 1.
- Continue improving your draft of project proposal and personal statement. Discuss and review your drafts with faculty and mentors in your department.
- Establish your country affiliation.
- Secure commitment for letters of recommendation from three faculty members. Request official transcripts.
- Continue to review your drafts with ONSA advisors and the UMass Amherst Writing Center.
AUGUST
- Continue to review your drafts with ONSA advisors, your recommenders, and the UMass Amherst Writing Center.
- Ask three faculty members to write letters of recommendation for you. These letters are due by September 8th on the Fulbright application portal. Supply your recommenders with a copy of your project proposal, personal statement and any other relevant materials.
- Obtain your affiliation letter.
- Review final application procedures with ONSA advisor.
SEPTEMBER
- September 8: Submit your completed Fulbright application via Fulbright's online application portal. Letters of recommendation must be submitted by September 8 as well.
JANUARY
- Notification from the US Fulbright Commission as to whether your application has been selected to be forwarded to the country Fulbright Commission.
MARCH — JUNE
- Award notification from the country Fulbright Commission.
Fulbright Deadlines and Application Support
Fulbright Deadlines and Application SupportONSA supports Fulbright undergraduate students and alumni applicants who pre-apply by June 1 to prepare a competitive application and stay on track to complete all the applications steps by the September 8 campus deadline. ONSA offers summer workshops, advising, drop-in office hours, and feedback on application essays to keep applicants motivated -- join us to get your Fulbright journey off to a strong start!
Are you a current UMass graduate student? Contact the Office of Professional Development for information on application support for these individuals.
Fulbright Walk-in Advising, in person, no appointment:
- April 10, 10-11: 30 AM, CHC 206
- April 11, 10 -11:30 AM, CHC 313
- April 17, 3-4:30 PM, CHC 206
- April 24, 10-11:30 AM, CHC 206
- April 30, 2-3 PM, CHC 313
- May 1, 10-11:30 AM, CHC 206
- May 8, 3-4:30 PM, CHC 206
The Zoom link will be sent to all June 1 pre-applicants for all the sessions below:
- How to Write a Competitive Fulbright Application, June 4, 12-12:45 PM, virtual; (Must have submitted the June 1 pre-application to participate)
- How to Write a Competitive Fulbright Application, June 5, 11-11:45 PM, virtual; (Must have submitted the June 1 pre-application to participate)
- How to Write a Competitive Fulbright Application, June 6, 2-2:45 PM, virtual; (Must have submitted the June 1 pre-application to participate)
- Fulbright Focus Group on Letters of Recommendation: June 16, 12-12:45 PM, virtual
- Fulbright Focus Group on Foreign Language Evaluation, June 19, 12-12:45 PM, virtual
- Fulbright Focus Group on Letters of Affiliation, June 23, 12-12:45 PM, virtual
Fulbright Virtual Chats with ONSA advisors from June 23 until August 25 (bi-weekly Chat Sessions with ONSA advisors; schedule and the Zoom link will be provided to those who pre-applied by June 1)
Fulbright Essay Review Dates: In order to be nominated by ONSA, Fulbright pre-applicants must send their drafts for review to onsa [at] honors [dot] umass [dot] edu (onsa[at]honors[dot]umass[dot]edu) following this schedule:
- Deadline to submit personal statement: July 10
- Deadline to submit your ETA statement of grant purpose: August 4
- Deadline to submit your revised drafts of both essays for all applicants: August 20
SEPTEMBER 8: CAMPUS ENDORSEMENT DEADLINE FOR ALL APPLICANTS, NO EXCEPTIONS
About the Fulbright
- Recorded Webinars
- Research the type of award you hope to pursue and in which country.
- Learn more about eligibility and the application components for Fulbright.
Submit your Fulbright Campus Pre-Application
Start your application via Fulbright's online application portal
Fulbright Application Timeline
Campus (ONSA) deadline for applications is September 8.
Gates-Cambridge Scholarship
Gates-Cambridge ScholarshipWho Should Apply?:
Seniors and recent grads; open to international students; open to citizens of any country outside the UK
U.K./Ireland Pre-Application must be completed and submitted by June 1.
What It's For:
Graduate degree at Cambridge University
Fields of Study:
Any field
Scholarship Website:
The Gates-Cambridge Scholarship is for one to four years of graduate study and research at the University of Cambridge. A small number are also available for study towards a second undergraduate degree. Award covers full cost of study at Cambridge plus airfare to and from the U.K.
Eligibility:
Seniors and recent graduates. May be citizens of any country outside the United Kingdom and may apply to any subject available at the University of Cambridge. Applicants must apply directly to the University of Cambridge and complete the supplemental portion of the application to the Cambridge Trusts to be considered for the award. The scholarship is open to applicant who will pursue one of the following full-time courses at the University of Cambridge:
- PhD (three-year research-only degree)
- MSc or MLitt (two-year research-only degree)
- A one-year postgraduate course (e.g., MPhil, LLM, MASt, Diploma, MBA, etc.)
Candidate Profile:
Candidates will be expected to have excellent transcripts showing evidence of sustained achievement in study, together with academic references that speak of the candidate's leadership potential, social commitment, intellectual ability, and why further study at Cambridge is particularly appropriate. The Gates Trust looks for students with enthusiasm, robustness of intellect, a willingness to engage, and humility. The four key selection criteria are:
- Academic excellence: Applicants should have an extremely strong academic record, with a GPA over 3.7. Successful applicants will have the ability to make a significant contribution to their discipline while at Cambridge, with a strong aptitude for research, analysis and a creative approach to defining and solving problems.
- Leadership potential: Successful applicants must demonstrate a clear ability to “take others with them.”
- Commitment to improving the lives of others: Gates Scholars will be driven by the values of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which include a commitment to reducing inequities and improving lives around the world, particularly in the areas of health and education, often through the use of science and technology.
- Good academic fit with Cambridge: The Trust expects a good match to be made between the applicant's qualifications and aspirations and what Cambridge has to offer. This means that the applicant’s research track record and future goals should connect with their targeted Cambridge program and proposed research supervisor(s) at Cambridge.
Application Components:
- Three letters of recommendation from faculty members. Share this important information with your recommenders: Instructions for Recommenders: U.K. & Ireland Awards
- 500 word Personal Statement
- Certified transcript (or transcripts)
- Cambridge admission application - GRADSAF
The Graduate Admissions Office or academic department to which you are applying may also require the following materials:
- English language test scores (if English is not the student’s first language)
- Research proposal or example of your written work
- GRE/GMAT scores
Application Procedure
This award does not require institutional endorsement. Students apply directly to the Gates Foundation; it is, however, in the best interest of applicants to work through ONSA. This involves support and feedback throughout preparation of the application materials to help students craft the strongest application possible. Contact us for advising approximately 2 months before the national deadline and send us your draft no later than 2 weeks before submitting it.
ONSA staff encourage you to set an advising appointment during the spring semester to discuss your eligibility and competitiveness for the UK/Ireland scholarships. After discussing with us your academic record and leadership and community engagement experience for these highly competitive scholarships, students will pre-apply with ONSA by June 1.
The pre-application process officially informs ONSA about your application plan and allows students to start working early on their applications. Complete and submit the pre-application by June 1: U.K./Ireland Scholarships Pre-Application
University of Cambridge Deadline:
Early OCTOBER. For exact date check their website.
Gates Cambridge scholarship applications are part of the University of Cambridge application. Some key points regarding the Cambridge application are:
- If your account is inactive for two or more weeks, your application will be automatically deleted, so be sure to log in frequently.
- Your application will require two academic letters of recommendation, plus the third, personal reference. Your online submission of the Cambridge application will send automated email prompts to your references, who will then have 14 days to submit their letters.
- Your Cambridge program may have distinct requirements, such as a research proposal or other essays, test scores, or differing deadlines. Carefully review their website!
Gilman Scholarship
Gilman ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
N/A
Scholarship Website:
The U.S. Department of State’s Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship is a grant program that enables students of limited financial means, who are often underrepresented in study abroad, to study or intern abroad. The Gilman Scholarship Program is open to U.S. citizen undergraduate students who are receiving Federal Pell Grant funding at a two-year or four-year college or university to participate in study and intern abroad programs worldwide.
Applicants must be in the process of applying to, or accepted for, a credit-bearing study or internship abroad program approved by their institution. The scholarship is open for programs taking place anytime during the semester (fall and spring), summer, or winter vacation. There are more than 3,000 scholarships annually, each awarding up to $5,000.
There are two application cycles each year; one in early October and one in early March.
For more information, visit: gilmanscholarship.org
Goldwater Scholarship
Goldwater ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Friday, November 14, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Sophomores and juniors, U.S. citizen or permanent resident
What It's For:
Undergraduate study in natural sciences, engineering, mathematics (STEM fields)
Fields of Study:
STEM fields such as engineering
Mathematics
Natural science (student must be planning a research career)
Scholarship Website:
The Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Program was established by the U.S. Congress in 1986 to honor Senator Barry Goldwater, who served his country for 56 years as a soldier and statesman, including 30 years of service in the U.S. Senate. The aim of the foundation is to provide a continuing source of highly qualified scholars to work as scientists, mathematicians, and engineers. Goldwater Scholarships support students with a passion for research and potential to contribute to their disciplines, and who plan to pursue a graduate degree. Up to 300 U.S. students will be selected each year for scholarships of up to $7,500/year.
Eligibility Requirements:
To be eligible for nomination for a Goldwater Scholarship, a student must:
- Be a full-time matriculated sophomore or junior pursuing a degree
- Intend to pursue a research career in a natural science, mathematics or engineering*
- Have a college grade point average of at least a 3.00 on a 4.00 scale
- Be a U.S. citizen from the 50 states or the District of Columbia; a U.S. national for those students nominated by institutions in Puerto Rico, Guam, Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands; or a permanent resident. A permanent resident nominated for the scholarship must include a letter stating his/her intent to become a U.S. citizen. A photocopy of the nominee’s Permanent Resident Card, also known as the Alien Registration Card or Green Card, must also be submitted.
* The natural sciences, engineering, and mathematics fields and sub-fields used by the Goldwater Foundation to determine eligibility are those used by the National Science Foundation for its Graduate Research Fellowship Program. These include: chemistry, computer & information sciences and engineering, engineering, geosciences, life sciences, materials research, mathematical sciences, physics & astronomy, and psychology.
While research in medicine is not supported by the National Science Foundation, students interested in pursuing careers in medicine or veterinary medicine are eligible for a Goldwater Scholarship if research is a central part of the student’s career goals.
Candidate Profile:
- Outstanding academic performance, especially in the major
- Commitment to pursuing an advanced degree in science, engineering, computer science, technology, or mathematics
- Potential to make a significant contribution to one's field through a commitment to research
- Significant participation in research
- Extracurricular activities and/or work experience (e.g., internships) consistent with the applicant's intellectual interests and career goals
Application Components:
- Online application
- Three letters of recommendation from faculty members
- 3-page research essay
- Transcript
- If applicable: copy of Permanent Resident Card (formerly known as the Alien Registration Card) and a letter of intent to become a U.S. citizen
Application Procedure
All applicants MUST be nominated by their college or university. As such, UMass Amherst applicants are reviewed by an internal committee and four nominees are sent forward to the Goldwater Foundation for consideration.
Detailed campus application information is provided directly to applicants once they meet with ONSA advisers.
Luce Fellowship
Luce FellowshipEstablished in 1974, the Luce Scholars Program, funded by the Henry Luce Foundation, provides stipends, language training, and individualized professional placement in Asia for 18 Luce Scholars each year in a variety of fields. The program welcomes applications from college seniors, graduate students, and young professionals, with a wide range of backgrounds and experiences, and is especially interested in attracting those who have had limited exposure to the countries, cultures, and people of Asia.
The Luce Scholar year is a 13-month commitment beginning with the orientation in June through the wrap-up meeting in July of the following year. After a series of virtual sessions that begin in April and a five-day in-person orientation in Asia in late June (all designed to build community and prepare for a year of living and working in Asia), Luce Scholars spend July and August engaged in intensive language training in their respective placement countries. (Language study is a program requirement and is fully funded through the intensive two-month period with additional funds available to each Luce Scholar for continued training throughout the Luce year.)
Individually tailored professional placements begin in early September and are arranged for each Scholar based on their professional interest, background, and qualifications. These assignments, where Luce Scholars contribute their talents to NGOs, government agencies, private companies, universities, think tanks, and museums, and work alongside Asian colleagues, are the heart of the Luce Scholar experience. In the past, placements have been made in Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, and Timor Leste. See where Luce Scholars were placed last year.
Eligibility:
The Luce year is experiential, not academic in nature. The selection committee is most interested in knowing if candidates demonstrate potential for leadership and accomplishment.
- Candidates must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents.
- Candidates may be graduating seniors, recent graduates, or young professionals under the age of 32, OR if older than 32, candidates must have received their bachelor's degree within the past three years.
- Candidates who have spent a significant amount of time (18 weeks or more since beginning college) in more than one of the countries where we place Luce Scholars are not eligible to apply for the Luce.
- Candidates who have spent 18 weeks or more (since beginning college) in only one of the countries where we place Luce Scholars are eligible to apply but will not be placed in the country where they have spent significant time.
Application deadline: October (check the official website)
Read more about our application procedures.
This award does not require institutional endorsement. Applicants submit their applications directly to the Luce Foundation; it is, however, in the best interest of applicants to work through ONSA. This involves support and feedback throughout preparation of the application materials to help students craft the strongest application possible. Contact us for advising approximately 2 months before the national deadline and send us your draft no later than 2 weeks before submitting it.
For more information contact %20onsa [at] honors [dot] umass [dot] edu (onsa[at]honors[dot]umass[dot]edu).
Marshall Scholarship
Marshall ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Friday, August 15, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Seniors or within two years of graduating from their undergraduate institution; U.S. citizens
U.K./Ireland Pre-Application must be completed and submitted by June 1.
What It's For:
1–3 years of graduate study in the United Kingdom
Fields of Study:
any field offered at a U.K. institution
Scholarship Website:
The Marshall Scholarship finances up to 40 independent, wide-ranging students who have outstanding leadership potential and who wish to study for a graduate degree by any institution in the United Kingdom. The program seeks to encourage applicants' personal and intellectual growth by fostering their understanding and appreciation of contemporary Britain, its relationship with the United States, and its role on the world stage.
Eligibility Requirements:
- Must be a U.S. citizen.
- Seniors, graduate, or professional students, and recent alumni are eligible to apply within two years of earning their undergraduate degree.
- A minimum 3.7 GPA is required.
- Must not have studied at, nor hold a degree from, a British university.
- Applicants cannot apply directly to the Marshall Commission; rather, they must receive university endorsement in order to submit a Marshall application.
Candidate Profile:
- Intellectual distinction, strong motivation, and a mature character
- Rationale for pursuing your chosen program of study at a particular university in the U.K.
- Preparedness for rigorous, independent graduate study
- Potential to make a significant contribution to society and to one's field of study
- Demonstrated leadership and community involvement
- Desire to act as a U.S. cultural ambassador to the U.K. and to understand the "special relationship" between the U.K. and U.S.
The specific selection criteria are:
- Academic merit: The quality of the applicant’s proposed program of study, their knowledge of their proposed courses and supervisors, evidence of academic excellence and background relevant to their planned field of study, and the quality and breadth of their recommendations.
- Leadership potential: Ability to deliver results, strength of purpose (as evidenced in commitment to extracurricular involvements), creativity and innovation in the applicant’s approach to solving problems, and self-awareness in their desire to contribute to society and their impact so far.
- Ambassadorial potential: Knowledge of U.S./U.K. relations, evidence of transferable extracurricular activities, interpersonal skills and ability to engage with others, self-confidence, and ability to seize opportunities.
In summary, applicants should have a clear idea of what they want to study, how their goals build on their past accomplishments in and out of the classroom, and how they expect to make a major contribution or help to advance their field.
Application Components:
- Online application, including 5 written components:
— 1,000-word Personal Statement
— 500-word Proposed Academic Program essay
— 500-word Post-Scholarship Plan essay
— 500-word Leadership essay
— 500-word Ambassador Potential essay - Official transcript
- Three letters of recommendation tailored for the Marshall Scholarship. Letters should be written to the "Marshall Scholarship Committee" and are limited to 1,000 words. Share this important information with your recommenders: Instructions for Recommenders: U.K. & Ireland Awards.
- UMass Amherst Endorsement Letter
Application Procedure
All applicants MUST be nominated by their college or university. As such, UMass Amherst applicants must apply through ONSA.
ONSA staff encourage you to set an advising appointment during the spring semester to discuss your eligibility and competitiveness for the UK/Ireland scholarships. After discussing with us your academic record and leadership experience for these highly competitive scholarships, students will pre-apply with ONSA by June 1.
The pre-application process officially informs ONSA about your application plan and allows students to start working early on their applications.
After June 1 pre-application deadline, you will work on your essays, which will allow you to move forward with a full application for the campus endorsement process. In some cases, we may recommend that you consider other opportunities that are a better fit.
APPLY with ONSA by August 15:
Finalize your Marshall application on the Marshall website. We will access your application from there.
THE CAMPUS DEADLINE OF AUGUST 15 IS FIRM. WE WILL NOT ACCEPT APPLICATIONS AFTER THIS DATE.
After August 15, we will review your application and inform you if you will be endorsed for the national competition.
Mitchell Scholarship
Mitchell ScholarshipThe selection is paused for 2024-2025.
Read more here: https://us-irelandalliance.org/mitchellscholarship/news/mitchell-scholarship-program-selection-to-pause
Who Should Apply?:
Seniors and graduate students; U.S. citizens
U.K./Ireland Pre-Application must be completed and submitted by June 1.
What It's For:
One year of graduate study in the Republic of Ireland
Fields of Study:
Any field offered at an Irish Institution
Scholarship Website:
The Mitchell Scholarship Program was named to honor former U.S. Senator George Mitchell’s pivotal contribution to the Northern Ireland peace process and covers one year of graduate study at any university in Ireland or Northern Ireland for up to 12 scholars annually (tuition, housing, a living expenses stipend, and an international travel stipend). The program seeks to introduce and connect generations of future Americans to Ireland, while recognizing and fostering intellectual achievement, leadership, and a commitment to community and public service.
Eligibility Requirements:
- U.S. citizen
- 18 years of age or older, but not yet 30, on September 30th of the year of application
- Bachelor's degree in hand by start of degree program in Ireland
Candidate Profile:
- Excellent academic performance and intellectual distinction
- Outstanding record of leadership as demonstrated by academic, campus, community, and/or work activities
- Sustained commitment to community and public service
- Personal and/or professional interest in U.S.-Ireland relations (e.g., cultural, political, economic, etc.). Candidates need not be Irish or have Irish ancestry to apply, nor will such candidates receive priority.
- Potential to succeed in independent graduate study abroad
Application Components:
- 1,000 word Personal Statement
- Four letters of recommendation. Share this important information with your recommenders: Instructions for Recommenders: U.K. & Ireland Awards.
- Letter of institutional endorsement from UMass (full-time students only)
- Certified transcript (or transcripts)
- Scanned PDF of your signature
- Passport-style photo (PDF)
Application Procedure
An institutional endorsement is required for current full-time students. Contact ONSA if interested in applying. Applicants do NOT need to apply separately for university admission. The candidate’s assignment to a university in Ireland or Northern Ireland is part of the application process.
ONSA staff encourage you to set an advising appointment during the spring semester to discuss your eligibility and competitiveness for the UK/Ireland scholarships. After discussing with us your academic record and leadership and community engagement experience for these highly competitive scholarships, students will pre-apply with ONSA by June 1.
The pre-application process officially informs ONSA about your application plan and allows students to start working early on their applications.
After June 1 pre-application deadline, you will work on your essays, which will allow you to move forward with a full application for the campus endorsement process. In some cases, we may recommend that you consider other opportunities that are a better fit.
Finalize your Mitchell application on the national website. We will access your application from there.
THE CAMPUS DEADLINE OF AUGUST 15 IS REQUIRED. WE WILL NOT ACCEPT APPLICATIONS AFTER THIS DATE.
After August 15, we will review your application and inform you if you will be endorsed for the national competition.
Mitchell National Deadline: late September (consult Mitchell Scholarship website for specific date)
Payne International Development Graduate Fellowship
Payne International Development Graduate FellowshipThe USAID Donald M. Payne International Development Graduate Fellowship Program seeks to attract outstanding young people who are interested in pursuing careers in the Foreign Service of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). If you want to work on the front lines of some of the most pressing global challenges of our times — poverty, hunger, injustice, disease, environmental degradation, climate change, conflict and violent extremism – the Foreign Service of the U.S. Agency for International Development provides an opportunity to advance U.S. foreign policy interests and reflect the American people's compassion and support of human dignity.
The USAID Donald M. Payne International Development Graduate Fellowship seeks outstanding young people interested in careers in international development as USAID Foreign Service Officers. The Payne Fellowship Program awards ten fellowships valued at up to $48,000 annually to fund a two-year master's degree, arranges internships on Capitol Hill and at USAID missions overseas, and provides professional development and support activities. Fellows who successfully complete the program become USAID Foreign Service Officers.
Fellows may use the fellowship to attend a two-year master's program in an area of study relevant to the USAID Foreign Service, including international development, international relations, public policy, business administration, foreign languages, economics, agriculture, environmental sciences, health, or urban planning at a U.S. graduate or professional school approved by the Payne Program. At the end of the two-year fellowship, Fellows enter the USAID Foreign Service. Applicants must be college seniors or graduates looking to start graduate school in the fall of the year they apply, have GPAs of at least 3.2, and be U.S. citizens. The program welcomes applications from those with any undergraduate major and encourages applications from members of minority groups historically underrepresented in the USAID Foreign Service and from those with financial need.
For more information, visit: paynefellows.org
Pickering Graduate Foreign Affairs Fellowship
Pickering Graduate Foreign Affairs FellowshipThe Pickering Graduate Fellowship aims to attract outstanding students who have an interest in pursuing a Foreign Service career in the U.S. Department of State. The Program seeks outstanding young people interested in careers in the Foreign Service of the U.S. Department of State. The program provides benefits of up to $95,000 over two years toward a two-year master's degree, arranges internships on Capitol Hill and at U.S. embassies, and provides mentorship and professional development support. Fellows can use the fellowship to attend two-year master's programs in U.S. institutions to study any area of relevance to the Foreign Service, including international relations, public policy, public administration, economics, or business administration. Upon successful completion of the two-year, Fellows join the Foreign Service of the U.S. Department of State, embarking on a uniquely rewarding career of international service. Applicants must be college seniors or graduates looking to start two-year graduate programs in the fall, must have GPAs of at least 3.2, and must be U.S. citizens. The program welcomes any undergraduate major and encourages applications from members of minority groups historically underrepresented in the Foreign Service and those with financial need.
The application deadline is in late September.
Information and application materials can be found at: pickeringfellowship.org.
Rangel International Affairs Graduate Fellowship
Rangel International Affairs Graduate FellowshipWant to make a difference in the world? Promote U.S. and global interests? Consider the Charles B. Rangel International Affairs Graduate Fellowship Program. The Program seeks outstanding young people interested in careers in the Foreign Service of the U.S. Department of State. The program provides benefits of up to $106,000 over two years toward a two-year master's degree, arranges internships on Capitol Hill and at U.S. embassies, and provides mentorship and professional development support. Fellows can use the fellowship to attend two-year master's programs in U.S. institutions to study any area of relevance to the Foreign Service, including international relations, public policy, public administration, economics, or business administration. Upon successful completion of the two-year, Fellows join the Foreign Service of the U.S. Department of State, embarking on a uniquely rewarding career of international service. Applicants must be college seniors or graduates looking to start two-year graduate programs in the fall, must have GPAs of at least 3.2, and must be U.S. citizens. The program welcomes any undergraduate major and encourages applications from members of minority groups historically underrepresented in the Foreign Service and those with financial need.
The application deadline is in late September.
Information and application materials can be found at: rangelprogram.org/graduate-fellowship-program.
Rhodes Scholarship
Rhodes ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Friday, August 15, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Seniors and alumni; U.S. citizens
Citizen of a qualifying Rhodes country or global applicants from countries not covered above
U.K./Ireland Pre-Application must be completed and submitted by June 1.
What It's For:
Graduate degree at University of Oxford, England
Fields of Study:
Any field
Scholarship Website:
The Rhodes Scholarship supports exceptional, well-rounded students with promising leadership potential and a commitment to public service who plan to enroll in any graduate degree program at the University of Oxford. The Rhodes is the oldest and perhaps the most prestigious international graduate scholarship program in the world. The foundation seeks to develop outstanding leaders who are committed to the common good and who will promote international understanding and peace. The scholarship covers all university and college fees for one to two years, plus a personal stipend and airfare to and from the U.K.
Eligibility Requirements:
Applicants from one of the Rhodes eligible countries must apply for the Rhodes Scholarship for that country; all other applicants may apply for the Global Rhodes Scholarship.
The following information primarily applies to applicants from the United States, Canada, and those eligible for a Global Rhodes Scholarship. These individuals must seek a nomination from UMass Amherst.
- Candidates for the United States, Canada, and the Global Rhodes Scholarship must:
- be a U.S. or Canadian citizen or lawful permanent resident, DACA recipient, or citizen of a country not covered by an existing Rhodes Scholarship
- be age 18, but not yet 24, by October 1 of application year or be up to a maximum age of 28 if the first undergraduate degree was earned within the last 2 years
- have academic standing sufficiently advanced to assure completion of a bachelor's degree before October 1 of year following application
Candidate Profile:
- Record of literary and scholastic achievement beyond outstanding grades
- Strong moral character: truth, courage, devotion to public duty, humility
- Ambitious vision, the drive to make that vision a reality, and the ability to inspire others
- Energy to use one's talents to the fullest (demonstrated by extracurricular strength, such as in sport, debate, music, dance, etc.)
- Rationale for the chosen program of study at Oxford and a clear link with future goals
Application Components:
- 5-8 recommendation letters, 4 of which must be from individuals who have instructed you academically at the university level. Share this important information with your recommenders: Instructions for Recommenders: U.K. & Ireland Awards.
- 1,000 word personal statement
- A list of principal activities (a focused resume or CV)
- Evidence of age (e.g., birth certificate or passport)
- Certified transcript (or transcripts)
- Passport-size photograph
- Proof of citizenship
- English language proficiency (if English is not the applicant’s first language)
Application Procedure
All applicants MUST be nominated by their college or university. As such, UMass applicants must apply through ONSA.
ONSA staff encourage you to set an advising appointment during the spring semester to discuss your eligibility and competitiveness for the UK/Ireland scholarships. After discussing with us your academic record and leadership experience for these highly competitive scholarships, students will pre-apply with ONSA by June 1.
The pre-application process officially informs ONSA about your application plan and allows students to start working early on their applications.
After June 1 pre-application deadline, you will work on your essays, which will allow you to move forward with a full application for the campus endorsement process. In some cases, we may recommend that you consider other opportunities that are a better fit.
APPLY with ONSA by August 15:
Finalize your Rhodes application on the national website. We will access your application from there.
THE CAMPUS DEADLINE OF AUGUST 15 IS REQUIRED. WE WILL NOT ACCEPT APPLICATIONS AFTER THIS DATE.
After August 15, we will review your application and inform you if you will be endorsed for the national competition.
Schwarzman Scholarship
Schwarzman ScholarshipWho Should Apply?:
Rising seniors, recent graduates
What It's For:
One-year master's degree at Tsinghua University in Beijing, China; master's in global affairs
Fields of Study:
Any field
Scholarship Website:
The Schwarzman Scholarship provides a year of study leading to a Master's degree in Public Policy, Economics and Business, or International Studies at Tsinghua University in Beijing, China. All courses are taught in English.
This award does not require UMass endorsement; however, if you wish to receive comprehensive advising support, including feedback on your application essays from ONSA staff, you will need to contact us approximately two months before the external deadline, and send us your draft no later than two weeks before submitting your application.
Eligibility Requirements:
- Seniors, graduate or professional students, and alumni not yet 29 years of age.
- U.S. and non-U.S. citizens
- Note: Applicants who hold passports from Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan or Macao have a separate deadline at the end of May (check their website).
Candidate Profile:
Candidates are evaluated based on their potential to be future leaders in their professional fields and broadly in society, who seek a better understanding of China's role in the world. Students from any major can apply and Mandarin classes are included in the coursework. The program expects to fully fund 200 students annually (90 from the U.S., 40 from China, and 70 from the rest of the world). The Schwarzman Foundation endeavors to mix practical and theoretical knowledge to train those who aspire to make the world a more peaceful and prosperous place. Applicants with a strong profile possess:
- Academic excellence
- Outstanding leadership or leadership potential
- Entrepreneurial spirit and a willingness to take risks
- Exemplary character as demonstrated in letters of recommendation
- Desire to better understand China’s role in the world
- Desire to find innovative solutions to problems and effect change
- Experiences beyond undergraduate academics through internships, community service, work experience, and/or graduate coursework
DEADLINE for students from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macao: MAY
Applicants who hold passports from Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macao must officially apply online through the China application system prior to the deadline in May. Finalists will be invited to interview at Tsinghua University in Beijing in early July. The Schwarzman Scholarship does not formally require a university endorsement process for Chinese applicants. Thus, Chinese applicants may choose to independently submit application materials to the Schwarzman. However, if you are interested in obtaining feedback on your application from ONSA, please provide a complete PDF of your Schwarzman Scholars application and a current résumé for our review at least two weeks before deadline.
DEADLINE for non-Chinese, including American students: SEPTEMBER
Unlike other prestigious scholarship processes, the Schwarzman Scholarship does not formally require university endorsement. An applicant may independently submit application materials to the Schwarzman Scholarship. However, if you are interested in obtaining feedback on your Schwarzman Scholarship application please send your essays to ONSA at least two weeks before deadline.
Application Components:
Your application must include:
- Three letters of recommendation addressing specifically your qualifications as a Schwarzman Scholar. Two letters should be from academics or professionals in your field. The third recommender should focus on leadership and ideally also be aware of the leadership example you used for your essay. Please see Schwarzman criteria for more specific guidelines.
- Schwarzman Scholars application.
- Transcripts/academic records from every degree-granting college or university attended (undergraduate or graduate – must be combined into one PDF and then uploaded). If transcripts are not in English, official translations must be included.
- Essay One: Statement of Purpose and Leadership (750 words).
- Essay Two: Current Affairs Essay (500 words).
- Current resume/CV (no longer than 2 pages).
- 1-minute video introducing yourself (not required but strongly recommended). The video can be up to one minute in length, and candidates are invited to introduce themselves in any style or setting they think best conveys their interests and personality. Note: the file must be less than 20MB in order for you to upload it to the application.
Application Procedure
While students and alumni can apply directly to the Schwarzman Program, it is in the best interest of applicants to work through ONSA's review process. This involves support throughout preparation of the application materials and feedback to help applicants craft the strongest application possible. Contact us for advising approximately 2 months before the external deadline and send us your draft no later than 2 weeks before submitting it.
Soros Fellowship
Soros FellowshipThe Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans program honors the contributions of immigrants and children of immigrants to the United States. Each year, we invest in the graduate education of 30 New Americans—immigrants and children of immigrants—who are poised to make significant contributions to U.S. society, culture or their academic field. Each Fellow receives up to $90,000 in financial support over two years, and they join a lifelong community of New American Fellows. Eligible students must be 30 or younger as of the application deadline, be enrolled in a graduate program, or plan to start their graduate studies in the next academic year.
The application deadline is in late October.
For more information, visit: pdsoros.org
Truman Scholarship
Truman ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Juniors interested in public service
What It's For:
Graduate degree and career in public service
Fields of Study:
Any field
Scholarship Website:
Click here for more Truman Scholarship application resources...
Truman scholars are movers and shakers, agents of change, students who are committed to changing the world and serving the public. The Truman Foundation awards 60-65 scholarships annually to college juniors who wish to pursue graduate school in preparation for careers in public service. The scholarship includes up to $30,000 toward graduate studies, leadership training, and a 10-week Washington, D.C. Summer Institute following graduation. The Foundation defines public service as government employment at any level, uniformed services, public interest organizations, nongovernmental research and/or education organizations, public and private schools, and public service-oriented nonprofit organizations - in short, those organizations and agencies whose primary purposes are to help needy or disadvantaged persons or to protect the environment.
Eligibility Requirements:
- U.S. citizen or U.S. national
- Current junior (based on date of graduation, not credit hours accumulated)
- Planning to pursue an advanced degree: Master's degree, doctorate, or professional degree such as a law degree or a Master of Public Administration, Master of Public Health, Master of Social Work, Master of Education, Master of Public Policy, or Master of International Affairs
- Will pursue a career in which you will serve as a "change agent," for example, improving the ways that government agencies, nonprofit organizations, or educational institutions serve the public
Candidate Profile:
- Record of sustained service to community as demonstrated by participation in extracurricular activities, volunteer work, internships
- Demonstrated skills as an effective leader, advocate, and/or activist ("agent of change")
- Intellectual rigor and a strong academic record that illustrate preparedness for graduate study
- Clear plans to pursue a career in public service
- Well-developed and pragmatic policy proposal essay that addresses a specific problem
Application Components:
- Online application form
- Personal Statement
- Policy Proposal essay
- Three letters of recommendation, each addressing a particular area:
- Leadership abilities and potential
- Commitment and desire for a career in public service
- Intellect and ability to succeed in graduate school
- Transcript
Application Procedure
All applicants MUST be nominated by their college or university in order to apply for the Truman Scholarship. As such, UMass applicants are reviewed by the internal faculty committee and up to four nominees are sent forward to the Truman Foundation for consideration.
Detailed campus application information is provided directly to applicants once they meet with ONSA advisers.
Truman Application Resources
Truman Application ResourcesThe following are helpful and valuable resources for Harry S. Truman Scholarship applicants:
Instructions for Recommenders of Truman Scholarship Applicants shows exactly what the Truman Foundation is looking for in letters of recommendation. Ensure an effective series of letters by referring your recommenders to this one-page resource.
Insightful strategies and tips in choosing your topic and formulating your policy proposal are available in this Tips for Truman Applicants document.
Crafting Your Personal Statement offers sound advice on staying on point in your Truman application questions. Writing style, clarity, and effective composition are just a few areas covered in this important set of guidelines.
Tips for Truman Applicants
Tips for Truman ApplicantsTopic and Policy Proposal — Choosing your Topic
Select a topic that is:
- In your field. It should be a topic in the professional field you hope to enter and should relate to the problem or need of society you identified in your response to Item 9 of the Truman application.
- Controversial. Substantial debate exists on what to do and there is some legitimacy to the opposite side of the position which you are taking.
- Important. The proposal focuses on a problem that has significance to the U.S. government, to a substantial segment of the population, to your state, to the environment, or to an international community.
- Not overwhelming. It is “small” enough to be presented on one page. If it is too large to handle well, break off a small piece. For example: While the health care problem is too large, various elements, such as AIDS risk reduction, dealing with a specific disease, or prenatal care for economically disadvantaged women, could be discussed.
- Interesting to you. You care about the topic and would like to learn more about it.
- Intellectually approachable for you. You should possess a good understanding of the problem, including a reasonable grasp of why the problem exists and has not been solved, as well as the difficulties in implementing the solution you recommend. The nature of the problem has been well-documented, and statistical data and current references are available. You can find current substantive references (books, scholarly journals) as well as regular press or weekly news magazines to help you make the case.
- Tractable. You should come up with a specific plan to present and to defend at a Truman interview. You might even be able to pose a fresh approach.
Writing the Policy Proposal
Be sure to:
- Address your proposal to the government official who has the most authority to deal with this issue. If you write to the chair of a legislative committee, verify that his or her committee has the jurisdiction to do what you propose. Be careful about addressing it to the President. Generally, a cabinet officer or a chair of a Congressional committee will have more authority than the President. A Note about Presidential Transitions: We recognize that during a period of transition, you may not know to whom to address your proposal prior to the deadline. Your options are either to address your proposal to whomever currently holds the post and provide a date of your proposal (e.g., Secretary John King, November 2016) or address it generically (e.g., Incoming Deputy Secretary of the Interior Overseeing Water Policy). You will be expected to be current both on the person holding this position as well as their likely views on your proposal, should you be selected for interview.
- Use statistical data to define the problem. Choose your sources carefully and use persuasive data to explain your position. If you rely on data from the internet, be certain that it is credible. List only those sources that you used heavily. A laundry list of citations and footnotes will not be considered.
- Make your recommendations specific, clear, and understandable. You wouldn't want the intended recipient to say, "So, what exactly am I supposed to do?"
- Handle obstacles fairly. Don't just say “not enough money” or “votes,” but capture briefly the legitimacy of the opposition.
- Your policy proposal should be approximately 500 words, exclusive of citations. The online application also includes an equivalent character limit (4,200 characters, including spaces).
Truman Personal Statement Tips
Truman Personal Statement TipsCrafting Your Personal Statement
No matter how strong your record of activities and achievements (Items 2–6 of the Application) and your grades, nor how well-prepared your Policy Proposal may be, together they are not sufficient to get you invited to an interview. Through your responses to Items 7–13, you must convince the Truman Scholarship Finalists Selection Committee that you are a potential Truman Scholar deserving of an interview. The Truman personal statement — collectively, the contents of Items 7–9 and 11–13 of the Application — is a critical factor in determining your advancement in the Truman competition.
A compelling personal statement will enable you to stand out in a field with other high-achieving applicants. It will help you overcome any gaps or inadequacies in your record. It can predispose the interview panel to want to give you a Truman Scholarship rather than to merely hear your case and then decide.
The passions, accomplishments, ambition, and creativity that you present in a carefully prepared personal statement will go a long way toward success in the Truman competition. Your ability to well portray these characteristics should be of enormous value in competitions next year for graduate fellowships and admissions to highly selective graduate schools.
Writing an effective personal statement is difficult. Points in this section should help you — but count on a lot of thought, effort, feedback from the Truman Faculty Representative, rewriting, and editing to produce an outstanding personal statement. The skills that you develop in writing an excellent personal statement for the Truman competition will likely be skills that you will employ throughout your professional career.
Recognize that the people who read your Truman application, and decide whether you advance in the Truman competition, are pros. Veteran members of the Truman Scholarship Finalists Selection Committee have read hundreds of Truman applications. They distinguish easily between the sincere and the insincere, the truth and the puffery, the carefully prepared and the hastily prepared, the substantive and the superficial. Don’t try to guess what they want to read. Just write honestly, simply, and clearly about yourself and your aspirations.
Understand your motivations for a career in public service. Think about why you want to be in the public sector as opposed to the potentially more lucrative and less emotionally challenging private sector.
Get a mentor/critic to help you with your personal statement. Generally, this will be the Truman campus representative. If you are unable to work closely with your campus representative, find a professor to assist and encourage you when you’re bogged down in telling your story.
Before answering any of the application items, think strategically about yourself and your candidacy. Ask yourself: “What are the most important characteristics and values, goals and ambitions, life experiences and service activities that define who I am?” Then decide which of these you wish to emphasize in your Truman personal statement. Don’t try to cover every aspect.
Everybody has a special story; some people just tell their story better. Share those stories that have been formative in your development as a potential change agent. These stories are often interesting and compelling.
In telling your story, you’ll want to use your responses to Items 7–9 and 14 to bring out some dimensions that are not obvious from reading your list of activities (responses to Items 2–4). Reveal why you are committed to public service.
Read some good personal statements to see how effective and revealing they can be. The Truman Foundation’s Advice & Guidance web page contains links to excellent examples from nominees’ responses to Items 7, 8, 9, 11, and 14. To the extent possible, develop a unified, integrated set of responses. The Policy Proposal should be related to the areas identified in Items 9, 11, 12, and 13.
General Guidelines
In completing items 7–9 and 11–13 of the Truman application, you should strive to:
- Be absolutely honest. Don’t overstate accomplishments, claim credit for what should be shared, imply something other than the truth, nor propose a graduate study plan or ambitions only for the Truman competition.
- Be yourself. In a “blind reading” (e.g., your name removed) of your application with other good applications, your family and your teachers would identify you. The set of responses to these items ought to be one that only you can write.
- Make it interesting. Consider having an approach that introduces some pertinent and unusual features of you or your experiences to reveal your unique individuality and to help distinguish you from the other candidates.
- Avoid undue repetition. Don’t make the personal statement a narrative description of all of your activities previously identified in Items 2–4. Highlight the most important.
- Answer the questions concretely and specifically. You should have precise, well-focused answers responsive to the Item. Depth is better than breadth.
- Engage the reader quickly. Have intriguing or compelling opening and closing sentences in your narrative responses to Items 7, 8, and 14.
- Be current. If you cite statistics, political developments, or provocative writings, they should be up to date. Be careful about examples from high school days or early childhood.
- Understand the goal of the personal statement. The main goal of the written material is to get an invitation to the interview and to present some lines of questioning. An outstanding personal statement won’t win a Truman Scholarship for you, but a poorly prepared one will deny you the chance to interview for the scholarship.
- Maintain a sharp focus. Have precise responses to each item. Don’t try to share every interest, every societal concern, every accomplishment, every ambition, or every passion.
- Maintain a degree of modesty, especially in Item 14. Minimize the use of “I”. If you have had a rare accomplishment (e.g., member of a national team, winner or high finisher in a national competition, board for an international organization), do share it. Be careful in trumpeting high school accomplishments — many Truman Scholar candidates have been high school class presidents, varsity athletes, debate champions, and the like.
- Be realistic in Items 12 and 13.
- Be bold but not unrealistically ambitious.
- Reveal your motivations for a career in public service.
- Avoid repeating experiences. Use different examples for your responses to Items 7, 8, 9, and 14, if possible. Let the Finalists Selection Committee members see your various dimensions.
- Be thoughtful in discussing major challenges. If discrimination, poverty, family breakdown, severe illness, or another problem beyond your control has been a major factor in your development and the establishment of your ambitions, write about it. Avoid playing for sympathy. Truman Scholars are selected on the basis of accomplishment, not endurance.
- Explain “understandable” gaps or weaknesses. If you had a serious illness or unusually heavy family obligations that temporarily affected your grades or limited your participation in public service, please share it (or have your Faculty Representative bring it out).
Do’s and Don’ts for the Truman Personal Statement
(… and for other personal statements you will write someday)
Do …
- Have a consistent storyline that focuses on your special aspects and interests.
- Be positive. Be upbeat.
- Be honest about your ambitions, accomplishments, and plans.
- Say what you mean to say.
- Write simply. Rely on nouns and active verbs, not adjectives and adverbs, to carry the story.
- Make it interesting and easy to read — both in terms of writing style and appearance.
- Have lightness, color, and possibly something amusing or humorous.
- Make the opening of each response engaging.
- Take risks.
- Have perfect spelling, punctuation, and grammar.
- Get others to review your statement.
Don’t …
- Leave blank more than one-third of the response space for items 7, 8, 9, 11, and 14.
- Use qualifiers or imprecise words such as: very, quite, rather, little, many, great, somewhat, far, some, often, deep, broad.
- Try to impress readers by using words which are not a part of your normal writing vocabulary.
- Repeat the question in the opening sentence of your response.
- Overstate accomplishments.
- Make a plea for financial assistance.
- Use statistics without giving the primary source.
- Use famous quotations — it’s like name-dropping.
- Be cute, flippant, profane, or glib.
- Employ jargon, slang, or unusual abbreviations.
- Use flowery language or cluttered imagery.
- If you must write about them, approach the following topics cautiously: How much your family means to you; how difficult or unjust your life has been; how smart, capable, or compassionate you are; how much you got out of a short trip abroad; how much you learned about government from an internship.
Truman: Instructions for Recommenders
Truman: Instructions for Recommenders- Find out from the applicant which recommendation category your letter will address: (1) Commitment to a Career in Public Service; (2) Leadership Potential and Abilities; or (3) Intellect and Prospects for Continuing Academic Success.
- Mention the recommendation category in the first sentence. For example, “I am pleased to recommend Ms. XX for the Truman Scholarship and to speak to her leadership potential and abilities.”
- Content — As mentioned above, each of the three recommendation letters for a Truman candidate focuses on one of three qualities: leadership, service, or academic achievement. Please ask the candidate which letter you are being asked to write and note this focus in the first paragraph. The prompt for each letter is as follows:
Leadership — Please confirm the candidate's leadership example in the application essay. Address the candidate’s personal characteristics (confidence, persuasiveness, diligence, conviction, vitality, poise, and so forth) which you feel contribute to the candidate’s leadership abilities.
Commitment to a career in public service — Please discuss the candidate’s suitability with particular emphasis on commitment to a career in public service. Address in particular the public service activity the candidate has highlighted in the application essay. Please address the candidate’s values, interests, goals, and/or ambitions which represent commitment to a career in government or elsewhere in the public service.
Intellect and prospects for continuing academic success — Please discuss the candidate's suitability with particular emphasis on academic scholarship, intellectual capabilities, and prospects for success in graduate school, and if possible, for the program highlighted in the application. Discuss the candidate’s intelligence, academic performance, analytical abilities, and other characteristics which you think contribute to further academic success.
- Electronic submission of letters is preferred. Please create a PDF document of your letter — signed and on letterhead — and submit to onsa [at] honors [dot] umass [dot] edu (onsa[at]honors[dot]umass[dot]edu).
Recommendations should be submitted no later than November 29.
Udall Scholarship
Udall ScholarshipCampus Deadline:
Saturday, March 1, 2025
Who Should Apply?:
Sophomores and juniors
What It's For:
The Udall Foundation awards scholarships to students working towards positive solutions to environmental challenges and to issues impacting Native nations – specifically in health care and tribal policy. In addition to funding for academic expenses, the Udall Scholarship also provides access to the Udall Alumni Network, an association of change-makers, working in Native nations and environmental fields, sharing innovative ideas, professional advice, and job and internship opportunities. Udall Scholars must attend Scholar Orientation in Tucson, Arizona held in the summer following notification of the award.
Fields of Study:
Any: for students committed to a career related to environmental science
Native American health care
Native American Tribal Public Policy
Scholarship Website:
The Udall Scholarship honors Morris K. Udall, an Arizona Congressman known for authoring legislation to protect wilderness areas and for his commitment to the Native American population. The Morris K. Udall and Stewart L. Udall Foundation annually awards approximately 50 scholarships of up to $5,000 each to sophomore and junior students who have demonstrated commitment to careers related to the environment, including policy, engineering, science, education, urban planning and renewal, business, health, justice, economics, and other related fields; or Native American and Alaska Native students who have demonstrated commitment to careers related to tribal public policy or Native American health care.
Eligibility Requirements:
- Full-time matriculated sophomore or junior pursuing a degree at a university during the application year
- U.S. citizen, U.S. national, or permanent resident
- Only Native Americans and Alaska Natives are eligible to apply in tribal public policy or Native American health care; however, students applying in environment do not need to be Native American or Alaska Native to apply
Candidate Profile:
- Commitment to a clear career path, demonstrated by academic achievement and extracurricular activities
- Widely read among the speeches, legislation, and policy statements of Congressman Morris K. Udall or Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall
- Excellent critical analysis of your chosen speech or piece of legislation in your essay
- Demonstrated desire for problem-solving and consensus-building
- Demonstrated leadership potential, including the ability to form a vision, make it a reality, and inspire others
Additionally, for applicants in tribal public policy or Native American health care:
- Explanation of how you will use your education to benefit your tribe or Native Americans in general
- Demonstrated interest and involvement in tribal community (e.g., participation in cultural events, volunteering with organizations that benefit Native communities)
- Support of a tribal leader or other professional who can attest to your involvement with your tribe or other Native American organization in a letter of recommendation
Application Components:
- Online application
- Transcript
- Udall Essay of no more than 800 words on a speech, legislative act, book, or public policy statement by either Morris K. Udall or Stewart L. Udall and its impact on your interests and goals
- Three letters of recommendation
Application Procedure
All applicants MUST be nominated by their college or university. Detailed campus application information is provided directly to applicants once they declare their intention to apply.