|
University Scholarship Summer
Opportunity:
How to Develop A Great Application
Resume |
Budget | Application Statements
The following are tips to help you in your quest for a University
Scholarship Summer Opportunity.
Resume
It is important to develop a resume that has no
spelling or grammatical errors. Your resume does need to be approved by the
CRC before you can apply for the University Scholarship Summer Opportunity, but you should still double check it
before adding it to your application. If you have previous experiences that
relate to the internship or experience for which you are applying, be sure
to include them on your resume and even group them in a category, i.e.
Music Experience or Finance Experience. If you do not have
previous experiences that relate to your proposed internship, do not worry;
having previous related experiences is not included in the criteria for
receiving funding.
Bottom line: The Committee prefers that your resume has
no spelling and/or grammatical errors.
Budget
Be sure to include your experience dates at the top of
the page. Remember, the experience should be 8 weeks long. This time period
can include the time traveling to and from the experience site; for
instance, the Committee is aware that flying abroad to get to your site can
eat up a few days.
Feel free to fill in as much of the Explanation section
as needed. If utilities are included in rent, tell us that. If you need
health or car insurance during the summer, you should include these items.
If you need clothing, explain why; it needs to be specific to the work
environment (former applicants have requested clothing allowances to
purchase a suit for the corporate world, rain gear for work on a vessel,
etc.). Ask friends or family what they normally spend per person on food
each week; applicants often underestimate in this area. Be sure to allow
yourself some funds to eat out every once in a while. Double check your
travel expenses. If you are going to a remote village in Ghana, you should
include all travel to get there – plane, taxi, and bus. If you are going to
be working in a city, be sure to include travel from home or Wesleyan to get
there initially (and the return trip) as well as subway expenses. If you do
not fill out a major category like Food or Travel, please explain why you do
not need funds in that area.
Although you are allotted $3500 per year for two summer experiences, you
can use more of your total funds one summer, leaving a lesser amount for the
other summer; spread the funds out over three summers; or use all your total
funded amount - $7000 – in one summer. If you find that your total expenses
for one summer add up to an amount higher than $3500 and you do not want to
or cannot use funds form the next year’s allotment, then you can offset this
with income. Income can include a stipend from the experience, a part-time
job before, after or during the granted period, as well as savings or
assistance from family. Be sure to check with Dean Garrett if you need to
verify how much funds are remaining in your account.
Finally, double check to make sure your numbers add up
correctly!
Bottom line: The Committee
cannot accept a budget which does not have a major category (like Food)
without explanation or severely underestimates the funds for a category
($200 allotted for travel to London) without an explanation.
Application Statements
Although the above components of the application are key, perhaps the most
important section of the application includes the statements you prepare.
The following are some tips for developing the application statements. We
have also compiled three samples of winning statements from former University Scholarship Summer
Opportunity recipients that can be used as good examples for University Scholarship Summer
Opportunity applications.
Statement #1: Describe the summer work, independent project, study away, course
selection, internship or research experience.
Give us some good detail about the company or
organization. Information can often be found on the organization’s
website; feel free to cut and paste their mission statement (the
description of what they do and why they exist). If you are working in
a division of a company or organization, be sure to describe that as
well. If you are planning an independent experience, you need to
provide some good details of the experience, including a timeline
specifying where you will be, when you will be there and what you will
be doing. Similarly, the course should be described in this section.
This statement only needs to be about one or two
paragraphs long.
Bottom Line: The Committee just needs to have an
idea of what the organization or company is doing for their line of
work, what the project overview is or what the course is comprised of.
Statement #2: Briefly describe your responsibilities and tasks. Be as specific as you
can. For an independent project, include a timeline, specifying when
tasks will be completed over the time period indicated.
Be pretty specific about your intended duties. You
should contact the potential internship employer and ask for a thorough
description of what you may do there as an intern. This statement only
needs to be one or two paragraphs. If you are developing an independent
experience, you should be equally specific about your work/duties
planned. If you are taking a course, a brief description of the
syllabus, if available, would suffice.
Bottom Line: The Committee will not fund an
internship or experience that offers little responsibility. Answering
phones and greeting clients is only acceptable if it is a part of the
role you play; there must be other duties that require you to take
responsibility in some form. Also, if you have only included a very
vague description of your duties, you are unlikely to be funded.
Statement #3: How have you communicated with the
sponsor and determined mutual interest?
It is very important for you to have a conversation with
a potential sponsor at a company or organization. Several things can
happen that could prevent you from receiving your internship: You may
not qualify for their internship, the internship may no longer be
available, or an intern may already be selected for that year. One
paragraph is usually sufficient.
Bottom Line: The Committee needs to know that you
have contacted your potential employer/sponsor and had a discussion
about the internship/experience, etc.
Statement #4: How will this experience enhance or
broaden your career goals?
This is one of the most important sections of the application.
The Committee really wants to know why this internship or experience is
important to you. The best essays generally take a “past, present
and future” approach. In other words, tell us what in the past has
inspired you to explore this career (courses, experiences, exploratory
searches, events, courses, and/or internships). Then explain why
this internship or experience is a good next step for you in your
exploration and/or experience; i.e. what you will feel you will learn to
or how it will add to your past experiences or knowledge base.
Finally, tell us what contribution this experience will have towards
your future goals and give us a sense of what you think are your future
goals. You do not need to have specific goals (though some of our
applicants do); just give us an idea of what you think you might like to
do some day.
Don’t worry too much about the length of this
statement. However, most applicants write anywhere from a few
paragraphs to two pages. Generally, we have found that one short
paragraph doesn’t give you an opportunity to explain to us who you are
and why we should fund you. Finally, we do expect good, grammatically
correct writing free of spelling errors!
Bottom Line: This part of the proposal is not an
academic statement. Your statement must be compelling; you need to
persuade the Committee to fund your experience. We need to understand
why this experience is important to you as an individual and why we
should fund it.
Final Bottom Line: Start early to explore
internship opportunities. Once you have done your research to select an
internship, pick the one you feel is the best for you. Use this one to
apply. You cannot apply for more than one internship nor can you
describe more than one internship in your application.
If you are funded, you are expected to
participate in the internship you described in your application. If -
and only if - the offer for that internship opportunity falls through,
you must use the Application Revision to request that the Committee fund
a new internship. Only after the Committee has received and approved
the new request and you and your sponsor have completed the Confirmation
Forms, will you receive your funds.
Please remember that counseling staff are
available at the CRC to review your entire application as well as help
you with exploring internships and other opportunities.
Questions? Contact Persephone Hall, Associate Director, CRC, ext. 2180 or
phall@wesleyan.edu |