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Overview
Financial Aid Links |
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Merit Scholarships
The Hodson Trust Scholarship
Hodson Trust Scholarships ($26,500 per year) are offered to approximately 20 first-year students. This highly competitive merit-based scholarship is renewable for up to three additional years of undergraduate study if the recipient maintains a 3.0 GPA.
Students selected as Hodson Trust Scholars have demonstrated excellence in their curriculum, extraordinary intellectual curiosity, academic inquisitiveness, and extensive leadership in high school and community activities.
All accepted freshman applicants are considered for this scholarship. No additional application or nomination is required. Recipients are notified along with their acceptance to the university in April.
The Robert C. Byrd Scholarship
This merit-based scholarship is offered by the federal government to high school seniors. Contact your high school counselor or state education agency for information on this scholarship or visit http://www.ed.gov/programs/iduesbyrd.
Baltimore Scholars Program
The centerpiece of the Baltimore Scholars Program is a full-tuition scholarship for up to four years of undergraduate study at Johns Hopkins. To be eligible, students must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents who have lived with a custodial parent in Baltimore City for the last three years and who have been enrolled in a public high school in the city for 10th, 11th, and 12th grades. If admitted to Johns Hopkins, students must also enroll no later than two years following high school graduation, maintain Baltimore City residency, and have enrolled in no post-secondary coursework.
City students must also file the required documents for need-based financial aid. Participants also benefit from tailored faculty and academic advising. To learn more, download a Baltimore Scholars Program brochure and factsheet.
ROTC
Army ROTC scholarship opportunities include renewable full-tuition scholarships with a monthly stipend and money for books. Four-, three-, and two-year scholarships are available. Military service as a commissioned officer is required after graduation. Scholarships for incoming freshmen are based on the results of high school GPA; SAT or ACT tests; extracurricular, leadership, and athletic activities; and an interview with a representative of the ROTC department.
For more information on the Hopkins Army ROTC program and scholarships, please contact the office at (410) 516-7474, (800) JHU-ROTC, or visit www.jhu.edu/rotc.
Air Force ROTC is also available to Johns Hopkins students. Classes are conducted at the University of Maryland. The Air Force offers competitive and noncompetitive scholarships. Each scholarship pays up to $15,000 toward tuition, $510 for books, and a monthly nontaxable stipend ranging between $300 and $400. Learn more by calling (301) 314-3242 or visiting http://www.afrotc.umd.edu or http://www.afrotc.com.
Woodrow Wilson Undergraduate Research Fellowships This program is designed for undergraduates who are excited by the opportunity to engage in hands-on learning with a faculty mentor in the humanities, social sciences, or natural sciences.
The fellowship provides up to $10,000 to 15 freshmen (up to $7,500 to five sophomores) in the support of project expensesincluding travel, equipment, and the use of archives or laboratories. (The fellowship does not count as financial aid.)
Each Wilson Research Fellow benefits from the mentorship of a leading professor and may choose to focus on a single long-term project in one field, or complete projects in related or even disparate fields. The program is designed for maximum flexibility; with the help of their mentors, Wilson Research Fellows may choose to begin immediately or to wait until after they have progressed in their course work. Fellows meet regularly as a group and are invited to present their results to the Johns Hopkins community in the spring of their senior year.
Freshman applicants interested in the Wilson Research Fellowship should submit their Wilson application online. Rising sophomores should apply directly through the program coordinator.
To learn more about the Wilson Research Fellowship, click on www.jhu.edu/woodrowwilson. |
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