Slashdot Mirror


Tech Scholarships for College/University?

Mirkon asks: "I'm a potential high school graduate, and have been accepted to a four-year school for furthering my rather biased educational interests. The problem is that while I'm cheap, the school (predictably) isn't. It's still getting itself off the ground, and thus only offers the legal minimum of scholarships - for racial minorities and those with intense financial need, neither of which I qualify for. Tedious searching for third-party scholarships has revealed that there are very, very few that cater to the interests of a technologically-inclined student, and even fewer that don't give a paltry one-time prize of $500 or less. While there's certainly no shortage of 'write an essay about us/you and we might give you a scholarship' offerings, I find it hard to swallow that there aren't more and more valuable scholarships to encourage growth in the tech sector. Are there?"

3 of 577 comments (clear)

  1. Rich relatives by magarity · · Score: 5, Funny

    Your rich uncle, Sam, has practically limitless amounts of cash to lend to students of higher education for piddly interest rates. Whether this is a good idea depends on whether you're going to school to party or as a stepping stone to a high paying career.

  2. Typo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    Tedious searching for third-party scholarships has revealed that there are very, very few that cater to the interests of a technologically-inclined student

    Did you mean white, male student? Or are you outside the U.S.?

    I find it hard to swallow that there aren't more and more valuable scholarships to encourage growth in the tech sector.

    Hard to swallow? Apparently you haven't been keeping up with the news. All your jobs are belong to India. IT is a dying industry in the U.S. You might consider nursing, or something else that can't be outsourced as easily. Union NO!

  3. Potential? by verloren · · Score: 5, Funny

    My first suggestion whatever you decide is not to portray yourself as a 'potential' high school graduate. You're much more likely to get a scholarship if you can at least appear confident that you'll graduate high school.

    Cheers, Paul