Merit scholarships are typically awarded on the basis of academic, athletic or artistic merit, in addition to special interests. Some merit scholarships also consider financial need, but rewarding talent is the primary objective.
In most cases the scholarship sponsor has a set of criteria they use to select the winners from among the qualified applicants. (This is in contrast to scholarship lotteries which select winners randomly.) So a key to winning a scholarship is to identify the sponsor's criteria and tailor your application to those criteria.
Sponsors can have a variety of goals in offering a scholarship.
Some companies offer scholarships as a form of community development, to invest in the future of the communities where they are based. Others offer scholarships to help retain current employees and recruit future employees. Colleges may offer scholarships to recruit a talented and diverse student body. Colleges may also offer scholarships in specific majors to encourage students to enroll in underrepresented majors (e.g., scholarships for women and minorities in science and engineering). Membership organizations tend to offer scholarships to promote their field or the mission of the organization. Other scholarships may be established to honor the memory of someone who has passed away, to provide a legacy that perpetuates his or her values.
The first step is to make sure you qualify for the scholarship.
If the application requirements specify that you must have a 3.7 or higher GPA and you have a 3.6 GPA, don't bother applying. Most scholarship sponsors receive so many qualified applications that they do not have the time to consider applications that fail to satisfy the requirements. You may be a wonderful and talented person, but if your application is not qualified, the selection committee is not going to look at it.
On the other hand, if you barely miss the application requirements, you should try to improve until you qualify. For example, if you have a 3.6 GPA and the award requires a 3.7 GPA to apply, you could try working hard in school to improve your grades until you achieve a 3.7 GPA. This is why it is worthwhile to search for scholarships as soon as possible. Many awards also have prerequisites, such as requiring a portfolio of your work or a project report, that can take time to prepare.
The FastWeb scholarship database will only show you awards that match your profile. FastWeb has the tightest match of any scholarship database, so you're less likely to waste time on awards for which you aren't qualified.
As noted previously, all scholarship sponsors receive more qualified applications than they have awards available. The most competitive scholarships have a selection ratio of 1 in 400. The least competitive awards have a selection ratio of 1 in 10. According to the 1999-2000 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study, 6.9% of undergraduate students receive private sector scholarships, and the average amount received is $2,051. That means that your raw odds of winning a scholarship are 1 in 14.5.
But scholarship sponsors aren't going to give you money simply for breathing. They want to give money to the most talented qualified applicant. So to maximize your chances of winning the award, you need to identify the criteria they will use to select the winner. Sometimes the sponsor has published the criteria they use. Sometimes you have to critique your application from the sponsor's perspective.
It is important to remember that scholarship sponsors are evaluating applications, not applicants. You need to ensure that your application and the supporting materials contain all the relevant information the committee needs to evaluate your candidacy. The committee only knows what your application and your letters of recommendations tell it. Write an application that highlights the aspects of your background that match the sponsor's goals.
Saturday, January 10, 2009
MBA Scholarships
The MBA is a massive financial investment. Just think about the cost of the course, which could be anything from about £10,000 up to near to £30,000 a year. Then there is the cost of living, which in reality is the same as the cost of going to work – what with your food and your travel and your mortgage or rent if you do not own a home in the city where you are studying. Then you have the cost of books, which can add up to near to £1,000 in the year or two that you are studying. You also have the cost of a laptop, which will make your life easier as you won’t be reliant on the computer systems at your business school, and there is software to get as well.
If you are taking a full-time course then you should also remember that you are foregoing your salary, which could be any amount after tax and is an opportunity cost of doing your degree. Even if you are taking a part-time course you still need to be able to pay for the course. You need to be able to fund all of this – and unless you have a lot of savings, can take out a good value loan, or have generous parents, then it will be difficult. This is why it’s very important to apply for scholarships.
Scholarships are basically awarded to those who are believed to be worthy of them. This is important to realize. Organizations who offer scholarships try their best to do so on merit. What they regard as merit can differ between organizations so it’s important for you to find out what the organization that you are applying to require in a “scholar”.
Searching for Scholarships
• Start Searching for Scholarships ASAP. It pays to start your search for scholarships as soon as possible. Many scholarships have early deadlines, even as early as August or September. If you start searching in January, you will miss the deadlines for half the awards.
Start searching for scholarships at an earlier age. Most students don't start searching for scholarships until their senior year in high school. But there are many awards available for students in earlier grades, even junior high school.
• Apply to as many awards as possible. Apply to every award for which you are qualified, no matter how small the award amount. Every penny helps, and winning an award adds a line to your resume that can help you win other awards. The less lucrative scholarships are often less competitive, so you have a better chance of winning them. Several small awards can add up to a significant amount of money.
You can't win if you don't apply. Even if you are extremely talented, your chances of winning any particular scholarship are low, since you are competing with many other equally talented applicants. To improve your odds of winning a scholarship, apply to more scholarship competitions.
Do not, however, apply for awards for which you do not qualify. It is a waste of your time. Scholarship sponsors receive far more qualified applications than they have awards available, so they are not going to look at any candidate that doesn't satisfy their criteria.
• Seek out less competitive scholarships. Seek out small local awards that are not listed in most of the national databases and scholarship books. These awards are less competitive, and so your chances of winning them are greater. Examples include the local PTA scholarship, Dollars for Scholars scholarship, local cultural and religious organizations, local businesses, and your parent's employer. You can also find information about local awards on bulletin boards at the local public library and outside your guidance counselor or school financial aid office. (TheFastweb scholarship database is particularly thorough about listing small local awards, and encourages all scholarship sponsors to submit information about their awards, even local awards. Fastweb can code those awards to show them only to students who qualify.)
• Use up-to-date award information. When looking for information about scholarships in books, check the copyright date of the book. A book that is more than one year old is too old to be useful. Similarly, ask how frequently an online scholarship database is updated. Most are updated annually or quarterly. The Fastwebscholarship database is updated daily.
• Beware of scholarship scams. If a scholarship has an application fee or other required fees, it isn't worth your time and money to apply. At best such "scholarships" are recirculating the fees to the students, and at worst no money is ever awarded. Never invest more than a postage stamp to obtain information about or to apply for a scholarship.
• Ask the school about academic scholarships. Many colleges offer presidential or academic scholarships to attract talented students. This is especially true at second and third tier institutions. You might be able to get a free ride at a college that isn't as well known.
The main difference between colleges is not in the quality of the faculty or the quality of the facilities, but in the students. After all, Harvard and MIT graduate more PhDs than they can hire as faculty, so many less-well-known institutions have top notch faculty. Since you will be spending more time learning from your peers than inside a classroom, you should visit the school while classes are in session to get a feel for how well you will fit in. But if you like the atmosphere at the school and the school has a good program in your major, there's no reason why you shouldn't accept a full-tuition scholarship at your third choice school. This is especially true if you intend to go on to grad school, since nobody cares where you got your bachelor's degree when you have a PhD or MD.
• Ask to be nominated. If a scholarship requires that you be nominated by your school or the local chapter of the organization, find out who is responsible for nominating applicants, and ask them to nominate you. Often the nominator will not have a formal process for selecting a nominee. If the nomination deadline is approaching, sometimes they will nominate you simply because you're the only one who asked. Even if they have a formal process, by introducing yourself and your qualifications to them you will have improved your chances of being nominated (assuming you didn't annoy them by being too persistent). Provide the nominator with a copy of your accomplishments resume.
• Don't forget to renew your scholarship. If you won a renewable award last year, make sure you satisfy any requirements for retaining it in subsequent years. This may involve maintaining satisfactory academic progress, maintaining a minimum GPA, continuing to study in the same major, retaining full-time enrollment, submitting an annual progress report, and providing a copy of your transcript each year. Some scholarships may require community service or other activities.
If you are taking a full-time course then you should also remember that you are foregoing your salary, which could be any amount after tax and is an opportunity cost of doing your degree. Even if you are taking a part-time course you still need to be able to pay for the course. You need to be able to fund all of this – and unless you have a lot of savings, can take out a good value loan, or have generous parents, then it will be difficult. This is why it’s very important to apply for scholarships.
Scholarships are basically awarded to those who are believed to be worthy of them. This is important to realize. Organizations who offer scholarships try their best to do so on merit. What they regard as merit can differ between organizations so it’s important for you to find out what the organization that you are applying to require in a “scholar”.
Searching for Scholarships
• Start Searching for Scholarships ASAP. It pays to start your search for scholarships as soon as possible. Many scholarships have early deadlines, even as early as August or September. If you start searching in January, you will miss the deadlines for half the awards.
Start searching for scholarships at an earlier age. Most students don't start searching for scholarships until their senior year in high school. But there are many awards available for students in earlier grades, even junior high school.
• Apply to as many awards as possible. Apply to every award for which you are qualified, no matter how small the award amount. Every penny helps, and winning an award adds a line to your resume that can help you win other awards. The less lucrative scholarships are often less competitive, so you have a better chance of winning them. Several small awards can add up to a significant amount of money.
You can't win if you don't apply. Even if you are extremely talented, your chances of winning any particular scholarship are low, since you are competing with many other equally talented applicants. To improve your odds of winning a scholarship, apply to more scholarship competitions.
Do not, however, apply for awards for which you do not qualify. It is a waste of your time. Scholarship sponsors receive far more qualified applications than they have awards available, so they are not going to look at any candidate that doesn't satisfy their criteria.
• Seek out less competitive scholarships. Seek out small local awards that are not listed in most of the national databases and scholarship books. These awards are less competitive, and so your chances of winning them are greater. Examples include the local PTA scholarship, Dollars for Scholars scholarship, local cultural and religious organizations, local businesses, and your parent's employer. You can also find information about local awards on bulletin boards at the local public library and outside your guidance counselor or school financial aid office. (TheFastweb scholarship database is particularly thorough about listing small local awards, and encourages all scholarship sponsors to submit information about their awards, even local awards. Fastweb can code those awards to show them only to students who qualify.)
• Use up-to-date award information. When looking for information about scholarships in books, check the copyright date of the book. A book that is more than one year old is too old to be useful. Similarly, ask how frequently an online scholarship database is updated. Most are updated annually or quarterly. The Fastwebscholarship database is updated daily.
• Beware of scholarship scams. If a scholarship has an application fee or other required fees, it isn't worth your time and money to apply. At best such "scholarships" are recirculating the fees to the students, and at worst no money is ever awarded. Never invest more than a postage stamp to obtain information about or to apply for a scholarship.
• Ask the school about academic scholarships. Many colleges offer presidential or academic scholarships to attract talented students. This is especially true at second and third tier institutions. You might be able to get a free ride at a college that isn't as well known.
The main difference between colleges is not in the quality of the faculty or the quality of the facilities, but in the students. After all, Harvard and MIT graduate more PhDs than they can hire as faculty, so many less-well-known institutions have top notch faculty. Since you will be spending more time learning from your peers than inside a classroom, you should visit the school while classes are in session to get a feel for how well you will fit in. But if you like the atmosphere at the school and the school has a good program in your major, there's no reason why you shouldn't accept a full-tuition scholarship at your third choice school. This is especially true if you intend to go on to grad school, since nobody cares where you got your bachelor's degree when you have a PhD or MD.
• Ask to be nominated. If a scholarship requires that you be nominated by your school or the local chapter of the organization, find out who is responsible for nominating applicants, and ask them to nominate you. Often the nominator will not have a formal process for selecting a nominee. If the nomination deadline is approaching, sometimes they will nominate you simply because you're the only one who asked. Even if they have a formal process, by introducing yourself and your qualifications to them you will have improved your chances of being nominated (assuming you didn't annoy them by being too persistent). Provide the nominator with a copy of your accomplishments resume.
• Don't forget to renew your scholarship. If you won a renewable award last year, make sure you satisfy any requirements for retaining it in subsequent years. This may involve maintaining satisfactory academic progress, maintaining a minimum GPA, continuing to study in the same major, retaining full-time enrollment, submitting an annual progress report, and providing a copy of your transcript each year. Some scholarships may require community service or other activities.
Labels:
MBA,
scholarship
Sunday, January 4, 2009
What have I done these days?
I’ve enjoyed the ielts prep online courses these days, especially the part of speaking test. The tutor spoke English very fluently with British accent, to be precise, the Welsh accent, which made me think of Rhydian from Wales and he is working for Wuxi EF now.
The movie I downloaded called A Few Good Men, which is hard to follow. If I could get all the words from this kind of movie, my English listening comprehension would be enough to live in the United States.
Today I talked a short while with a couple of native English speakers, one boy from Canada, and a girl England. They liked speak fuck and asshole, and I was astonished when I heard they were throwing shit to each other. You know, many people around me are learning English pretty hard, and take it so seriously. But the native speakers show little respect to their mother tongue, aka our lingua franca.
The movie I downloaded called A Few Good Men, which is hard to follow. If I could get all the words from this kind of movie, my English listening comprehension would be enough to live in the United States.
Today I talked a short while with a couple of native English speakers, one boy from Canada, and a girl England. They liked speak fuck and asshole, and I was astonished when I heard they were throwing shit to each other. You know, many people around me are learning English pretty hard, and take it so seriously. But the native speakers show little respect to their mother tongue, aka our lingua franca.
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Guidelines for determining eligibility and awarding partial nonresident tuition waivers for international students
1. Current and future budget constraints will be taken into consideration when making all decisions on policy and partial tuition remissions.
2. To be eligible for the partial tuition waiver, an applicant must be in F-1 or J-1 status, an applicant for F-1 or J-1 status (outside the U.S.), or a citizen of the U.S. whose legal residence is outside the United States. Applicants for political asylum will be considered for the partial tuition waiver on a case-by-case basis.
3. Consideration will be given to distributing the partial tuition waivers among students from the widest possible variety of countries and as equitably as possible between males and females, graduates and undergraduates.
4. The partial tuition fee waiver will be awarded in two categories, i.e., undergraduate and graduate. Receipt of an undergraduate partial fee waiver in no way implies continuation of that waiver at the graduate level of education.
5. Partial fee waiver decisions will be made by the following:
• New and continuing undergraduates: International Student Advisor
• New and continuing graduate students: Director of Graduate Studies in consultation with International Student Services
6. The decision to grant a partial tuition waiver to a new or transfer student will be based on:
• Financial need
• Academic achievement (new students: admission in good standing, continuing students; minimum 3.00 grade point average or equivalent)
7. International students who were admitted without a partial tuition waiver and request a partial fee waiver as a continuing student must:
• Complete one full semester in full-time status before applying for the partial waiver
• Earn a minimum 3.00 grade point average
• Update a completed “Declaration of Finances” on file
• Prove financial need by demonstrating a substantial change in financial support from the time of admission to the university to the time of application
8. Continuing undergraduate student fee waiver recipients must meet all of the following requirements for continuation of the partial fee waiver in future semesters:
• Enroll in and successfully complete a minimum of 12 credits each semester
• Maintain a minimum 2.00 gpa for each semester
• Maintain the following minimum cumulative gpa each semester
Freshman (0-29 credits earned) 2.00
Sophomore (30-59 credits earned) 2.25
Junior (60-89 credits earned) 2.5
Senior (90 + credits earned) 2.50
9. Continuing graduate student fee waiver recipients must meet all of the following requirements for the continuation of the partial fee waiver in future semesters:
• Maintain full-time status - Enroll in 9 graduate credits per semester or 6 credits if a graduate assistant.
• Maintain a minimum 3.00 cumulative graduate grade point average
Exceptions to the full-time status provision may be granted in the last semester if degree requirements can be met with less than a full-time course enrollment. This and any other requests for an exception to the full-time status provision of the tuition waiver must be approved by the Director of Graduate Studies and authorized by International Student Services.
10. An undergraduate partial tuition waiver recipient is eligible for the partial tuition waiver to cover coursework leading toward the completion of their degree, but for no additional undergraduate coursework after the undergraduate degree has been completed, unless the courses lead toward completion of a graduate program. The same applies to graduate students.
11. A partial tuition waiver recipient will not be eligible for the partial waiver for a second degree at the same educational level.
12. An applicant who has earned an undergraduate or graduate degree in the United States will not be eligible for the partial tuition waiver for the same educational level at UW Oshkosh.
13. International students sponsored with grants from their home governments are ineligible for the partial fee waiver. Those receiving government loans will be considered on an individual basis.
14. Undergraduate fee waiver recipients who have earned a total of 120 credits must justify continuation of the award to cover credits beyond that point. A letter of explanation from the student’s academic advisor may be required.
15. Fee waiver recipients who fail to meet minimum requirements for continuation of the award may be granted the award on a probationary basis in the following semester. Failure to meet the minimum requirements in a second consecutive semester likely will result in the loss of the waiver.
16. The student whose waiver has been rescinded is eligible for reinstatement of the waiver in the semester immediately following the semester in which minimum requirements are met.
17. Eligibility for a partial fee waiver will be permanently revoked following the second time the waiver has been rescinded.
18. Any tuition waiver above the amount of out-of-state tuition, up to a full tuition waiver, can be recommended by the members of the International Student Fee Waiver Committee and other interested parties to the Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh or his designee for approval.
19. Full tuition waiver awards shall be limited to a maximum of 15 students (30 student semester awards) per year or a maximum total award amount of $150,000 per year, whichever is greater.
2. To be eligible for the partial tuition waiver, an applicant must be in F-1 or J-1 status, an applicant for F-1 or J-1 status (outside the U.S.), or a citizen of the U.S. whose legal residence is outside the United States. Applicants for political asylum will be considered for the partial tuition waiver on a case-by-case basis.
3. Consideration will be given to distributing the partial tuition waivers among students from the widest possible variety of countries and as equitably as possible between males and females, graduates and undergraduates.
4. The partial tuition fee waiver will be awarded in two categories, i.e., undergraduate and graduate. Receipt of an undergraduate partial fee waiver in no way implies continuation of that waiver at the graduate level of education.
5. Partial fee waiver decisions will be made by the following:
• New and continuing undergraduates: International Student Advisor
• New and continuing graduate students: Director of Graduate Studies in consultation with International Student Services
6. The decision to grant a partial tuition waiver to a new or transfer student will be based on:
• Financial need
• Academic achievement (new students: admission in good standing, continuing students; minimum 3.00 grade point average or equivalent)
7. International students who were admitted without a partial tuition waiver and request a partial fee waiver as a continuing student must:
• Complete one full semester in full-time status before applying for the partial waiver
• Earn a minimum 3.00 grade point average
• Update a completed “Declaration of Finances” on file
• Prove financial need by demonstrating a substantial change in financial support from the time of admission to the university to the time of application
8. Continuing undergraduate student fee waiver recipients must meet all of the following requirements for continuation of the partial fee waiver in future semesters:
• Enroll in and successfully complete a minimum of 12 credits each semester
• Maintain a minimum 2.00 gpa for each semester
• Maintain the following minimum cumulative gpa each semester
Freshman (0-29 credits earned) 2.00
Sophomore (30-59 credits earned) 2.25
Junior (60-89 credits earned) 2.5
Senior (90 + credits earned) 2.50
9. Continuing graduate student fee waiver recipients must meet all of the following requirements for the continuation of the partial fee waiver in future semesters:
• Maintain full-time status - Enroll in 9 graduate credits per semester or 6 credits if a graduate assistant.
• Maintain a minimum 3.00 cumulative graduate grade point average
Exceptions to the full-time status provision may be granted in the last semester if degree requirements can be met with less than a full-time course enrollment. This and any other requests for an exception to the full-time status provision of the tuition waiver must be approved by the Director of Graduate Studies and authorized by International Student Services.
10. An undergraduate partial tuition waiver recipient is eligible for the partial tuition waiver to cover coursework leading toward the completion of their degree, but for no additional undergraduate coursework after the undergraduate degree has been completed, unless the courses lead toward completion of a graduate program. The same applies to graduate students.
11. A partial tuition waiver recipient will not be eligible for the partial waiver for a second degree at the same educational level.
12. An applicant who has earned an undergraduate or graduate degree in the United States will not be eligible for the partial tuition waiver for the same educational level at UW Oshkosh.
13. International students sponsored with grants from their home governments are ineligible for the partial fee waiver. Those receiving government loans will be considered on an individual basis.
14. Undergraduate fee waiver recipients who have earned a total of 120 credits must justify continuation of the award to cover credits beyond that point. A letter of explanation from the student’s academic advisor may be required.
15. Fee waiver recipients who fail to meet minimum requirements for continuation of the award may be granted the award on a probationary basis in the following semester. Failure to meet the minimum requirements in a second consecutive semester likely will result in the loss of the waiver.
16. The student whose waiver has been rescinded is eligible for reinstatement of the waiver in the semester immediately following the semester in which minimum requirements are met.
17. Eligibility for a partial fee waiver will be permanently revoked following the second time the waiver has been rescinded.
18. Any tuition waiver above the amount of out-of-state tuition, up to a full tuition waiver, can be recommended by the members of the International Student Fee Waiver Committee and other interested parties to the Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh or his designee for approval.
19. Full tuition waiver awards shall be limited to a maximum of 15 students (30 student semester awards) per year or a maximum total award amount of $150,000 per year, whichever is greater.
Labels:
tuition waivers
The Difference Between a Fellowship and a Scholarship
Both a fellowship and a scholarship are considered grants, and sometimes the terms may be used interchangeably. Most fellowships are also scholarships, but scholarships may not be fellowships. Some differences exist between a fellowship and a scholarship, but these can be variable and depend upon the grant-giving organization.
A fellowship and a scholarship are usually differentiated because scholarships tend to be given to undergraduate college students, primarily for the purpose of general education expenses. They may be limited as to the type of major a student has, but most are more general and award gifts of money for education based on superior school performance. Some also take into account need, or may require specific skills. The Miss USA pageant and Miss America pageant are both scholarship programs. Women who win these pageants receive money to continue their education at the undergraduate or graduate level.
In many cases, you don’t need to get into a swimsuit in order to win a scholarship. Most are based on application only, and any qualifications that make you particularly eligible to receive the scholarship. There are many peculiar conditions which may make you eligible for a scholarship: your last name, your status as a single parent, your possessing a disabling condition, or your specific research goals as a student. More general scholarships given by countries and states may be given to students who will attend school full time, have a minimum grade point average (GPA) of at least a B average, and who can demonstrate financial need.
One difference between a fellowship and a scholarship is that most fellowships are not based on need. They are usually based on skill, GPA, and qualifications to work in a certain field. Another distinction between a fellowship and a scholarship, is that most fellowships are payment for some type of work, such as teaching at the college level, while obtaining a master’s degree or Ph.D, or doing extra training in a hospital to earn board certification as a specialist in a certain field of medicine after an M.D. has been earned. Fellowships tend to pay for internships or fieldwork, so that students, usually at the graduate level, can enhance their training in their field of interest.
There are some paid internships available to students at the undergraduate level. These may qualify as both a fellowship and a scholarship, or they may simply be referred to as scholarships. Many of the country’s top museums offer fellowship and intern opportunities to students at the undergraduate level, usually in their junior or senior year of college.
The fellowship further implies a limited timeline and a stated period of months in which work or internships will be completed and people will be paid. The main difference here between a fellowship and a scholarship is that most scholarships last for at least a semester in school, though some may be given more generally to pay for school expenses. Fellowships can last for a few days, a few weeks, a couple of months, a year, or a couple of years depending upon the scope of the work involved, and they normally pay in increments, by monthly stipend, instead of awarding the total amount of money at one time.
A fellowship and a scholarship are usually differentiated because scholarships tend to be given to undergraduate college students, primarily for the purpose of general education expenses. They may be limited as to the type of major a student has, but most are more general and award gifts of money for education based on superior school performance. Some also take into account need, or may require specific skills. The Miss USA pageant and Miss America pageant are both scholarship programs. Women who win these pageants receive money to continue their education at the undergraduate or graduate level.
In many cases, you don’t need to get into a swimsuit in order to win a scholarship. Most are based on application only, and any qualifications that make you particularly eligible to receive the scholarship. There are many peculiar conditions which may make you eligible for a scholarship: your last name, your status as a single parent, your possessing a disabling condition, or your specific research goals as a student. More general scholarships given by countries and states may be given to students who will attend school full time, have a minimum grade point average (GPA) of at least a B average, and who can demonstrate financial need.
One difference between a fellowship and a scholarship is that most fellowships are not based on need. They are usually based on skill, GPA, and qualifications to work in a certain field. Another distinction between a fellowship and a scholarship, is that most fellowships are payment for some type of work, such as teaching at the college level, while obtaining a master’s degree or Ph.D, or doing extra training in a hospital to earn board certification as a specialist in a certain field of medicine after an M.D. has been earned. Fellowships tend to pay for internships or fieldwork, so that students, usually at the graduate level, can enhance their training in their field of interest.
There are some paid internships available to students at the undergraduate level. These may qualify as both a fellowship and a scholarship, or they may simply be referred to as scholarships. Many of the country’s top museums offer fellowship and intern opportunities to students at the undergraduate level, usually in their junior or senior year of college.
The fellowship further implies a limited timeline and a stated period of months in which work or internships will be completed and people will be paid. The main difference here between a fellowship and a scholarship is that most scholarships last for at least a semester in school, though some may be given more generally to pay for school expenses. Fellowships can last for a few days, a few weeks, a couple of months, a year, or a couple of years depending upon the scope of the work involved, and they normally pay in increments, by monthly stipend, instead of awarding the total amount of money at one time.
Labels:
fellowship,
scholarship
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