Scholarship: Nordson BUILDS Scholarship Program
Application Deadline: May 15, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/nordson-builds-scholarship-program/
Advancing Black Male Student Success presents a comprehensive portrait of Black male students at every stage in the U.S. education system: preschool and kindergarten; elementary, middle and high schools; community colleges and four-year postsecondary institutions; and master’s and doctoral programs. Each chapter is a synthesis of existing research on experience, educational outcomes, and persistent inequities at each pipeline point. Throughout the book, data are included to provide statistical portraits of the status of Black boys and men. Authors include, in each chapter, forward-thinking recommendations for education policy, research and practice.
[BOOK LINK]
Scholarship: The Farm Kids for College Scholarship
Application Deadline: April 13, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/farm-kids-college-scholarship/
adam and ronan are in love???? like they see each other all the time and give long hugs and quick kisses when they pass each other??? they talk about agriculture and adam’s college courses??? they make breakfast together in the mornings for their adopted dream child opal ?? they love each other and support each other unconditionally !!!! tell me that’s not the most healthy and wholesome thing you’ve ever heard i love these two nerds !!!!!!!!!!!
Scholarship: The No Bull Sports scholarship
Application Deadline: March 1st, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/no-bull-sports-scholarship/
Ivy students watching a Harvard - Yale football game in the 60s
IFEC Scholarship Application
Application Deadline is March 15, 2017.
http://usascholarships.com/ifec-scholarship-application/
Presented to selected students who are participating in international exchange activities through Nipissing University. Recipients must demonstrate financial need. Applications are available in the Financial Aid Office.
Scholarship: The CM CARES Religious Scholars Program
Application Deadline: April 15th, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/cm-cares-religious-scholars-program/
When you factor in tuition, room and board, books and other fees, this is what going to a top 10 school will run you yearly. And this photoset doesn’t even include the most expensive school of the top 10. Yes, it gets worse.
Dear Sir/Madam,
The Grote Chemistry Scholarship Program is available for the students who had completed a course in high school chemistry and had achieved grade point average of 3.5 or above.
Application Deadline is February 15, 2017
We thought your students might find this information useful.
http://usascholarships.com/grote-chemistry-scholarship-program/
Scholarship: SAWE Scholarship / Frank Fong Memorial Scholarship
Application Deadline: April 1, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/sawe-scholarship-frank-fong-memorial-scholarship/
It was such a sunny day at home I couldn’t resist the chance to take the train along the coast. I’ve taken my dissertation reading and I’m heading to Brighton. ☀️📖🚃
MedEvac Foundation International Children’s Scholarship
Deadline is July 31, 2017
http://usascholarships.com/medevac-foundation-international-childrens-scholarship/
14.4.16 Flowers are finally beginning to bloom on my campus.
xx Sunny
Scholarship: Freeman Awards for Study in Asia
Application Deadline: March 1, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/freeman-awards-study-asia/
Imagine calling Woozi (and the rest of Seventeen) whenever you start getting nervous because you know their voices and sweet words can help you calm down.
Scholarship: Freeman Awards for Study in Asia
Application Deadline: March 1, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/freeman-awards-study-asia/
Preparing to ravenously stuff his face, the grad student catches the confused and pitying glances of two of his students.
Scholarship: Accenture Student Veterans Scholarship
Application Deadline: March 31, 2017
Link: http://usascholarships.com/accenture-student-veterans-scholarship/
Pictured: (Esther) Juanita Jackson Smart and Richard Smart with daughter Deborah Smart. My mother. Korean War Vet and Teacher, Richard, and English Teacher, Juanita, left a segregated South Carolina when my mother was about 6 in search of better opportunities for their two children and for themselves. They moved to Detroit, Michigan where they both worked in the school system, influencing the lives of hundreds of kids over the course of their careers. They both studied every summer at various universities to complete their Master’s degrees. As fervent believers in education, they insisted on sending my mother to the best schools in town. As a result, my mother integrated two elementary schools in Detroit and was the only black child in each school until her younger brother, Richard Smart III, joined her. My mother, a copious reader, inhaled thousands of words a week. She won the school spelling bee. Her prize, a shiny new encyclopedia was stolen out of her locker. The school authorities accused her own brother of taking it because “none of the other children in the school would ever steal.” The encyclopedia was never found. Unphased by school nonsense, mother continued to read books and get A’s. She graduated from Cass Technical High School with a focus on the sciences. The following year she attended The University of Michigan where she then became the only black student in her organic chemistry classes. She studied hard and made up songs to remember anatomy. She took Calculus as an elective because “it was fun.” She studied some more. Riding her bike down South Division street, she stopped at her mailbox during her Senior Year to find a letter from the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine. She was accepted to medical school. My mother continued making up songs and studying all the way through medical school, continuing to be unphased by her position as one of the only students of color. She became Dr. Deborah Y. Smart in 1979. Her younger brother went on to graduate from The University of Michigan and The Wayne State University Law School. Dr. Smart dated and intimidated several men who were not accustomed to a well-read black woman doctor for a girlfriend. She decided she would likely adopt a child and live her life happily as a mother and a full-time physician who loved to read. She met my father at her best friend’s wedding. He was nice. He often brought food to the hospital where she worked when she was on 24-hour call. Eventually she agreed to marry him. Richard and Juanita Smart continue to live in Michigan and are active in several national and city organizations. They are still fervent believers in the power of education and support and encourage their grandchildren to do and be their best. They travel to South Carolina at least once a year, making sure to visit the family cemetery where they say: “If you could only see what we did, Momma and Daddy. If only you were here.” Happy Black History Month.