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A scholarship is an award of financial aid for a student to further their education. Scholarships are awarded based upon various criteria, which usually reflect the values and purposes of the donor or founder of the award. Scholarship money is not required to be repaid.[1]
The term '"scholarship"' is sometimes used to describe any financial aid given to a student that does not have to be repaid. However, more precisely, and universally among college financial aid offices, scholarships and grants are quite different.
A scholarship is given to a student because of a reason: the student has qualified for or won it by academic or athletic ability, or by agreeing to follow a particular career, or has some special ethnic or other characteristic. Scholarships are not given for financial need alone.
In the U.S., a grant is given on the basis of economic need, determined by the amount to which the college's Cost of Attendance (COA) exceeds the Expected Family Contribution (EFC), calculated by the U.S. Department of Education from information submitted on the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) following formulas set by the United States Congress. (The federal EFC is sometimes modified, usually upwards, in awarding non-federal grants.) The federal Pell grant program is an entitlement: if the applicant meets the requirements - has economic Need (COA exceeds EFC), is studying at least half time towards a first undergraduate degree, is a U.S. citizen or eligible alien - the award of the money is automatic. The student has a right to it (is entitled).
In some cases obtaining scholarships does not help the student or her/his family. Scholarships reduce financial need, and the amount of the scholarship can cause Need-based aid, which the student would have received anyway, to be reduced by the amount of the scholarship.[2]
The most common scholarships may be classified as:
It is typical for people to find scholarships in their home regions. Information on these can be found by asking local institutions and organizations. Typically, these are less competitive as the eligible population is smaller.
It has become more prevalent today that scholarships are misconceived to have a discriminatory quality to them. For example, as demonstrated by student-specific scholarships, minorities are thought to have a priority over Caucasian students when it comes to receiving thesewhich? scholarships.
These beliefs are known to come from college students themselves who have been affected by their failures at obtaining adequate financial aid. Mark Kantrowitz, author of "Secrets to Winning a Scholarship", explains that the average family tends to overestimate its student's eligibility for merit-based awards and underestimate its eligibility for need-based awards. In turn, the most persistent target of this disapproval tends to be high-profile, minority-based scholarships.
Most scholarships are based on merit or talent, without considering economic need or ethnicity. Since the economically privileged usually have better schools and more access to other educational resources, merit-based awards favor the economically privileged. While Caucasians account for 62% of full-time college students in America,[10] they receive 76% of all scholarships.[11]
[12]==Top International scholarship Websites==
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University, Homeschooling, Alternative education, History, Educational technology
유엔 무역 개발 회의, 1964년, 선진국, 국가, 개발도상국
United States Army, United States Navy, United States Coast Guard, American Revolutionary War, War of 1812
United States Army, United States Department of Defense, United States Marine Corps, United States Navy, United States Coast Guard
World War II, American Civil War, United States Department of Homeland Security, United States Department of the Treasury, United States Navy
University, Sport, United States, National Collegiate Athletic Association, National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics
Turkey, Togo, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kosovo
Science, African American, Technology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Math
Supreme Court of the United States, Civil Rights Restoration Act of 1987, Grove City College, List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 465, Title IX