Sunday, January 24, 2010

Scholarship Spotlight: Masters Scholarships for Africa, India and Commonwealth Countries

Scholarship Spotlight: Masters Scholarships for Africa, India and Commonwealth Countries

University: The University of Nottingham; United Kingdom

Amount of scholarship: 30 Full Tuition Fee Scholarships; 75 Tuition Fee Scholarships of 50%

Deadline: April 30, 2010

Requirements / Criteria:

  • You are from Africa, India or one of the Commonwealth countries listed below* AND
  • you are classed as an overseas student for fee purposes AND
  • you already hold an offer to start a full-time Masters degree program (including MRes) at Nottingham in 2010 – (Faculty of Engineering, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences and Faculty of Science, plus some courses in the School of Geography, Institute for Science & Society, Institute of Work, Health & Organisations, and courses allied to Operations Management in the Business School)

    1 FULL Tuition Fee Scholarship is also available for a student fromAfrica for the MSc in Crop Improvement School of Biosciences

    6 FULL Scholarships (tuition fees, airfare, maintenance award and additional allowances) to new students registering on Masters programs in the Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences in September 2010.

Additional Information:
Application forms are available at: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/international/_online_forms/scholarships/application_page.php

For information on other sources of funding visit their scholarship funding database at http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/prospectuses/postgrad/introduction/funding/postscholarship.php

Contact:
Any questions, email:
scholarship-assistant@nottingham.ac.uk

International Office: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/InternationalOffice/contact-us/contacts.aspx

International Support Services:
t: +44 (0) 115 951 5247
f: +44 (0) 115 951 5155
e: international-support@nottingham.ac.uk

*) Commonwealth Countries: Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Brunei, Cayman Islands, Dominica, Falkland Islands, Fiji, Gibraltar, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Kiribati, Malaysia, Maldives, Montserrat, Nauru, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Pitcairn, St Helena, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent, Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Tristan da Cunha, Turks and Caicos, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, Western Samoa

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Scholarship Spotlight: J. W. Saxe Memorial Fund

J.W. Saxe Memorial Fund

Amount of the Scholarship: $2,000

A prize of two thousand dollars will be awarded to one or more college or university students involved in public service. The award is meant to enable the student to gain practical experience in public service by taking a no-pay or low-pay job or internship during a summer or other term. Preference will be given applicants who have already found such a position, but who require additional funds.

Criteria:

  • Undergraduate or graduate student in an accredited college or university.
  • Seeking support for an internship in public service, not general support.
  • Demonstrated public service activity -- past, present and/or future.
  • Financial need will be taken into consideration.

Deadline: March 15

Additional Information:
http://www.jwsaxefund.org/index.php
http://www.jwsaxefund.org/apply.php

Contact:
J. W. Saxe Memorial Fund
1524 31st Street N.W.
Washington, D. C. 20007-3074
Email: Ruth Saxe, President
ruthsaxe@aol.com
Email: Elinor Sachse, VP and Secretary
sachsedc@verizon.net

Monday, January 4, 2010

Textbook Options! (How to save money!)

Textbooks. Just the word can conjure up pictures of dollar signs added to an already expensive tuition each semester. Now you have alternatives to purchasing new textbooks that can run in the triple digits, and cost over a thousand dollars a year! To check out the increased options and what works best for you, open a tabbed web browser like Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, or Apple Safari. This will make it easier to keep track of and compare options. You might also use a spreadsheet or a table in a word document to keep track of the list of books you need for each course, along other needed information, such as the link to the store or website, price, tax, shipping & handling, and the time it takes for shipping the books. (Be aware of shipping & handling costs, as well as shipping time!). Before you start, make sure you know the name, edition, author, and ISBN number of the books you are searching for. To find this information, check with the campus bookstore (online if they have that option); ask the professor personally or send an email; check syllabi or course websites.

Used Books. Certainly nothing new, but you might find new places to purchase them.
  • Students. Ask students who took the course last semester – quite often they ask the professor if the same book will be used again the following semester, and have one for sale. Also check to see if your campus has a student-run textbook selling system in place, such as a website or bulletin board.
  • Websites. Amazon.com is a good place to purchase used books. You can also use Google or Bing to search for books by typing in the name of the book and edition, and see what other options come up.
  • Book companies and vendors. There are companies that buy and sell used textbooks, and sometimes you’ll find good deals there. A few to try: Better World Books; TextbookRecycling.com; CampusBooks,com; Textbooks.com; Half.com; CheapestTextbooks.com; … do a search and you’ll find many more. Keep in mind that book companies also buy back used textbooks, often paying for shipping, at prices better than the local campus bookstore can offer.
  • If your books just aren’t worth selling back, consider donating them to organizations such as Books for Africa. Better yet, hold a book drive on your campus to send used books and funds to people who need them (Books for Africa, Room to Read, Worldfund, Invisible Children, and more) – check out Better World Books; TextbookRecycling.com; and other book companies for more information. Not only will the textbooks go to a good cause, they will not end up in a landfill. AND – you can earn money for your campus organization! (Win-Win!!)

E-Books. Again, this is not exactly new, but there are new players and better options. Many of the book publishers have online versions of the textbooks they sell – at a reduced price; so check out the book publisher’s website for details. There are a number of sites that offer the classic texts, novels, and books free:

do a search for “free eBooks” and you will find others as well.

Amazon has two great new devices called the Kindle and Kindle DX. They are small, slim 3G wireless reading devices that let you download ebooks in 60 seconds! No monthly fees, no service plans, no hunting for Wi-Fi hotspots. (I have a Kindle, and that means reading my web email, posting to Twitter, catching up on Facebook, and surfing the Web in the car!! And, of course, reading books!) Check them out at Amazon.com (http://www.amazon.com), click on Kindle for more information. It’s rumored that Amanzon and several major textbook companies are working together for better pricing on the Kindle and textbooks. I know there are a number of universities looking into this option for students.

Barnes and Noble also has eBooks available, some free, and a free downloadable eReader – software that lets you read ebooks on your iPhone, Blackberry, or your desktop (http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ebooks) click on the link ‘download eReader’).

If you’ve never read an eBook – download a free one today and check out the tools available. You can highlight, take clippings, bookmark, and (what I like best) SEARCH! When you study, wouldn’t it be great to search your textbook like you search websites for specific terms?

Renting/Lending Textbooks. Now this is an old idea with a new twist! There are now a large number of universities, book companies, and publishing companies that have textbook rental options. The prices are usually much cheaper than the new retail price of the book. Check with your university bookstore to see if they are planning a rental option for students; some are working directly with book publishers and vendors. If not, there are websites that have online textbook rental options for students, although shipping & handling, along with shipping times, might make this a less desirable option than renting through a university program. There is a company, called Cengage Learning that makes the first couple of chapters of the rented text available online to students, so last-minute ordering isn’t such a problem. They also announced that they would start renting books to students this year, at 40 percent to 70 percent of the sale price. They also give you the option of renting selected chapters of books!

There are a couple of new Internet textbook-rental companies, BookRenter (http://www.bookrenter.com), and Chegg (http://www.chegg.com) that billed itself as “the Netflix for college textbooks.” Both advertise books at 65 – 85% off the regular price of textbooks. This is another option definitely worth looking into!

But don’t delay – order your textbooks as soon as possible so you have them in time for classes! (Ok – that’s the professor in me speaking!) Good luck with your textbook search, and good luck in your courses this semester!