Gilman Scholarship (US citizens receiving Pell Grant only)
Phi Kappa Phi Study Abroad Scholarship March 15 deadline, 3.75+ GPA
The Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange for Young Professionals Germany
Freeman Awards for Study in Asia (8 week summer program, semester or year abroad in specified Asian country)
US Department of State Resources for Study Abroad: Safety, Opportunities, Visas, etc.
Fulbright Opportunities
Fulbright U.S. Student Program
Fulbright Open Study/Research Awards
- 2025-26: Competition Deadline: October 8
- Internal Application Deadline: August 30
- The Fulbright Study/Research grant is the traditional award opportunity where a candidate designs a proposal for a specific country. 3.7+ GPA
Fulbright English Teaching Assistantships (ETA)
- 2025-26: Competition Deadline: October 8
- Internal Application Deadline: August 30
- The English Teaching Assistant (ETA) Programs place Fulbrighters in classrooms abroad to provide assistance to the local English teachers. ETA’s help teach English language while serving as cultural ambassadors for the U.S. The age and academic level of the students varies by country, ranging from kindergarten to university level. Consult the website for details on specific country requirements, numbers of awards, application and details.
Fulbright Background
The US Congress created the Fulbright program in 1946 to foster international understanding through educational exchanges. It was named in honor of Senator J.W. Fulbright and is funded by the U.S. government.
The Scholarship
The Fulbright program funds a number of different opportunities, including exchange of scholars, travel grants, and dissertation research. However, most scholarships are for graduating seniors or recent graduates who propose to spend a year abroad studying or researching at a foreign university. The two primary programs are Fulbright full grants, which cover the cost of round-trip transportation, tuition, maintenance, and insurance; and the Fulbright Teaching Assistant program, which selects students who wish to teach English in Belgium, France, Germany, Hungry, Korea, and Taiwan. Note: Students applying for full grants must have sufficient proficiency in the written and spoken language of the host country to communicate with the people and carry out the proposed study.
Application
The application form consists of 11 parts, including personal information, a statement of the study proposal, a short personal essay, foreign language evaluation, three references, transcript, and an evaluation by the Graduate Awards Committee. Students must have an "adequate background" (a major) in the subject they wish to pursue.
Who Should Apply
Students with strong academic records (3.7 after the freshman year) who have excellent command of a foreign language and whose project proposal is appropriate to the country proposed and can be completed in a year. Students should realize that grants to some countries are far more difficult to obtain than others, since the number of awards and the intensity of the competition vary substantially. (Fulbright grants for study in the United Kingdom are especially competitive.)
References
Three, all from professors in the major.
Internal Fulbright Application Deadline
Deadline for review of completed application: September 1. For more information, contact Florida Tech's Fulbright Program Advisor, Dr. Subasi at msubasi@fit.edu well in advance of the September 1 deadline if you meet the 3.7+ GPA requirement.
Boren Scholarships and Fellowships
Application Deadline: January 29, 2025 (On-campus deadline, December 20, 2024).
The applications for the 2025-26 David L. Boren Scholarships and Fellowships are now available at www.borenawards.org. Boren Awards provide unique funding opportunities for U.S. undergraduate and graduate students to study in Africa, Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America, and the Middle East, where they can add important international and language components to their educations. Boren Scholars and Fellows represent a variety of academic backgrounds, but all are interested in studying less commonly taught languages, including but not limited to Arabic, Hindi, Mandarin, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, and Swahili.
Undergraduate students can receive up to $20,000 for an academic year’s study abroad and graduate students up to $30,000 for language study and international research. In exchange for funding, recipients commit to working in the federal government for a minimum of one year.
The Boren Awards has several special initiatives to diversify the types of students study abroad and the languages they are studying.
- The Summer STEM Initiative for Undergraduates
- The African Flagship Languages Initiative: Undergraduate and Graduate
- The Boren-ROTC Initiative
- The South Asian Flagship Language Initiative: Undergraduate and Graduate
- The Boren Awards are initiatives of the National Security Education Program (NSEP) and are administered by the Institute of International Education.