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AMERICAN DREAM SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
Established
in partnership with the United Negro College Fund, the
American Dream Scholarship Program is open to African
Americans with financial need. Applicants must be U.S.
citizens or permanent residents, with a minimum 2.5
grade point average (on a 4.0 scale), who meet Pell
Grant eligibility criteria, and are enrolled full time
at approved, accredited, undergraduate institutions.
Scholarships range from $500 to $5,000.
www.thesalliemaefund.org/smfnew/scholarship/american_dream.html
THE ASSOCIATION OF BLACK
EDUCATORS OF NEW YORK
The Association of Black Educators of New York (ABENY,
Inc.) has a
scholarship that is awarded to high school seniors.
Please review
the information and follow the instructions to the
letter.
Contact information:
http://www.abeny.org/ Association of Black Educators of New York, Inc.
P.O. Box 250713
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11225-9997
Telephone: (718) 735-2840
COLLEGE NOW
In ost cases,
a New York City public high school teams up with one or
more of the 17 City University of New York (CUNmY)
colleges to create a College Now partnership. The
program then offers eligible students a number of ways
to improve their high school performance and get a
jumpstart on college.
College Now
offers many activities and opportunities, academic
courses campus-based tours and cultural events, such as
theater or dance performances, and even exclusive
scholarship offers.
http://harlemonline.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2421
COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRANSFER SCHOLARHSIP
Offered in
collaboration with the Hispanic Scholarship Fund, this
program provides scholarships to Latino students
transferring from a community college to an approved,
accredited higher education institution.
www.thesalliemaefund.org/smfnew/scholarship/comm_college_transfer.html
FINANCIAL AID OFFICES
This page links to financial aid office web pages and
online handbooks for postsecondary institutions
including colleges, universities, community colleges and
vocational/technical schools. It should be of interest
to students, parents and financial aid administrators.
http://www.finaid.org/otheraid/fao.phtml
FINDING FOUNDATION SUPPORT FOR
YOUR EDUCATION
This free course guides students through the process of
seeking financial support from foundations to pursue
their studies.
The course is designed to help you:
Learn about foundation support;
Articulate your plan of study;
Create your unique profile and help you determine your
affiliations;
Identify potential funders and match their giving
interests with your profile;
Understand the application process;
http://foundationcenter.org/getstarted/training/online/free_ffsye_detail.jhtml
FIRST IN MY FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP
PROGRAM
The First in My Family Scholarship Program, developed in
partnership with the Hispanic College Fund, offers
scholarships to Hispanic-American students who are the
first in their family to attend college and have
financial need. The program is open to Hispanic
Americans who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents
enrolled as full time undergraduate students at
approved, accredited institutions. Students must have a
minimum grade point average of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale).
Scholarships range from $500 to $5,000.
www.thesalliemaefund.org/smfnew/scholarship/first_family.html
THE FOUNDATION CENTER, NEW YORK
79 Fifth Avenue/16th Street
New York, NY 10003-3076
Tel: 212-620-4230
www.foundationcenter.org/newyork
Our libraries maintain a limited collection of other
publishers' scholarship materials, primarily those that
list foundation-sponsored grants and awards.
For access to a more complete collection of college
guides and scholarship directories, as well as a good
collection of career and vocational guidance materials,
you should visit your local public library or your
school's financial aid office.
HARVARD
UNIVERSITY FREE TUITION
Harvard University has announced that from now on
undergraduate
students from low-income families will pay no tuition.
In making the
announcement, Harvard's president Lawrence H. Summers
said, "When only
10 percent of the students in Elite higher education
come from
families in lower half of the income distribution, we
are not doing
enough. We are not doing enough in bringing elite higher
education to
the lower half of the income distribution."
If you know of a family earning less than $60,000 a year
with an honor
student graduating from high school soon, Harvard
University wants to
pay the tuition. The prestigious university recently
announced that
from now on undergraduate students from low-income
families can go to
Harvard for free ... no tuition and no student loans! In
addition,
Harvard announce reduced fees for students from families
with incomes
between $60,000 and $80,000.
To find out more about Harvard offering free tuition for
families
making less than $60,000 a year visit Harvard's
financial aid website
at:
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/daily/2006/03/30-finaid.html
Or call the school's financial aid office at (617)
495-1581.
JACKIE ROBINSON FOUNDATION
Through its Education and Leadership Development
Program, the Jackie
Robinson Foundation provides scholarships of up to
$7,500 annually to
minority high school students showing leadership
potential and
demonstrating financial need to attend an accredited
4-year college or
university of their choice.
http://www.jackierobinson.org/apply
MR TOM JOYNER FOUNDATION
Mr. Tom Joyner's Foundation is offering "full ride"
scholarships for
graduating high school seniors.
http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/foundation/fullride
MULTIPLE
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR MINORITIES
Click the link below for a list of over 50 scholarship
programs that are available to minorities. Please
be sure to let us know (by
clicking here) if any of the
links are no longer active or needs to be updated.
http://harlemonline.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1057
http://harlemonline.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2680
THE NATION SECURITY EDUCATION PROGRAM
The National Security Education Program (NSEP) David L.
Boren Scholarships offer a unique opportunity for U.S.
undergraduates to study abroad. NSEP awards scholarships
to American students for study of world regions critical
to U.S. interests (including Africa, Asia, Eastern
Europe, Eurasia, Latin American & the Caribbean, and the
Middle East). The countries of Western Europe, Canada,
Australia, and New Zealand are excluded.
Program Areas of Focus
NSEP focuses on geographic areas, languages, and fields
of study deemed critical to U.S. national security. It
draws on a broad definition of national security,
recognizing that the scope of national security has
expanded to include not only the traditional concerns of
protecting and promoting American well-being, but also
the challenges of global society, including: sustainable
development, environmental degradation, global disease
and hunger, population growth and migration, and
economic competitiveness.
The NSEP Service Requirement
The NSEP service requirement stipulates that award
recipients work in the federal government in positions
with national security responsibilities. The Departments
of Defense, Homeland Security, State, or any element of
the Intelligence Community are priority agencies.
https://www.iieapp1.org/nsep/nseplogin.asp
THE SALLIE
MAE 911 EDUCATION FUND
The Sallie
Mae 911 Education Fund was created in response to the
terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.
The
scholarship program is open to children of those who
were killed or permanently disabled as a result of the
terrorist attacks and who are enrolled as full-time
undergraduate students at approved, accredited
institutions. Scholarship awards of up to $2,500 per
applicant, per school year, may be renewed annually,
subject to satisfactory academic progress.
www.thesalliemaefund.org/smfnew/scholarship/911_fund.html
UNMET NEED SCHOLARSHIP
Open to families with a combined income of $30,000 or
less, this program is intended to supplement financial
aid packages that fall more than $1,000 short of
students' financial need. This scholarship is not
designed as a substitute for aid provided by an
institution.
The Unmet Need Scholarship program is open to U.S.
citizens and permanent residents who are accepted or
enrolled as full-time undergraduate students at
approved, accredited institutions. Students must have a
minimum 2.5 grade point average (on a 4.0 scale) to be
eligible to apply. Recipients will be selected based on
financial need. Unmet Need Scholarships range from
$1,000 to $3,800.
http://www.thesalliemaefund.org/smfnew/scholarship/Unmet_need.html
WRITERS OF PASSAGE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
In partnership with the National Association for Equal
Opportunity in Higher Education (NAFEO), this program
involves an essay competition that awards winning
students from a Historically Black College or
University, or a predominantly black college, with a
$5,000 college scholarship. Universities that
scholarship winners are attending receive a $20,000
grant from The Sallie Mae Fund.
www.thesalliemaefund.org/smfnew/scholarship/writers_passage.html
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