For DonorsFor Applicants

Future Female Educators Scholarship

$1,000
1 winner$1,000
Awarded
Next Application Deadline
Apr 30, 2022
Next Winners Announced
May 16, 2022
Education Level
Any
Eligibility Requirements
Education Level:
Must be a high school senior, undergraduate, or graduate student
Gender:
Must identify as female
Field of Interest:
Must be studying education
Status:
Must be a US citizen or permanent resident

Educators play a significant role in the lives of their students, even well into adulthood. Many adults can still think of a specific teacher or professor that had a positive impact on them. 

However, becoming a teacher isn’t easy—especially on the wallet. In order to support the next generation of teachers, it’s critical to supply future educators with the resources they need to pursue their degrees.

This scholarship seeks to ensure that students who want to become teachers have the necessary funding to do so by supporting female-identifying students who are studying education. 

Any female-identifying high school senior, undergraduate, or graduate student who will be working on an education degree at an accredited university in Spring 2022 may apply for this scholarship. 

To apply, tell us why you’re studying education, what you hope to do with your degree, and why education is important to you.

Selection Criteria:
Ambition, Need, Boldest Bold.org Profile
Published November 9, 2021
Essay Topic

Why are you studying in the education field? What do you hope to utilize your education for in the future? Why is education important to you?


300–500 words

Winning Application

Karla Gonzalez
University of California-Los AngelesSpokane, WA
As a first-generation, low-income Latina, inequitable circumstances were a reality growing up. At fourteen, I learned to balance school while working twenty hours a week. At seventeen, I navigated college applications without the generational know-how afforded to the children of college graduates. Soon after, I arrived at Stanford, where I committed myself to opening doors for students from backgrounds like mine. Growing up I faced a lot of challenges, but future students might not have to if changes were made to our existing systems. After graduation, a desire to help others access educational opportunities led me to teach in Baltimore. Growing up I learned that hard work, even if that meant working twice as hard, translated into opportunity and success. In Baltimore, I learned that sometimes inequity is so vast that a student’s hard work alone is not enough. My students deserved better, so I organized college tours, offered free SAT prep and college counseling after school, and tried to fill in the gaps my students faced. As I removed barriers for my students, I wondered how all students, not just those in my classroom, could be supported at scale. When I left the classroom, I committed to making every space I touch more equitable. Today, I determine what to spend my time on based on its potential to build an equitable world. I have raised millions of dollars for Khan Academy, an online platform that provides free, educational resources to millions of students every month, coached low-income students through the college application process, and led a giving circle that invests thousands of dollars a year in Latinx led nonprofits educating youth. I have also advocated for the needs of low-income students of color in spaces of privilege I can access. At Khan Academy, this advocacy translated into an organizational wide shift to better serve historically under-resourced students. At UCLA, as the Graduate Student Association's Director of Campus Relations, I spearheaded a project to interview dozens of graduate students, focusing on students from under-resourced backgrounds, to better understand how UCLA can create an environment where all students can thrive. Along the way, I learned a lot about education’s shortcomings, particularly for students from low-income backgrounds like mine, and how I can contribute. Since starting my Ed.D. in the Educational Leadership Program, I have a better understanding of how to address educational inequity. In the future, I hope to lead a team delivering world-class educational technology resources to students and serve on an elected school board where I can drive student outcomes at scale. An Ed.D. at UCLA is a unique opportunity to hone the research and leadership skills that will ensure I can contribute in educational spaces where voices like mine— those of a first-generation college going woman of color from a low-income background—are too often missing. Students from low-income backgrounds deserve as much opportunity as students from more affluent backgrounds, and I am committed to making that a reality.

FAQ

When is the scholarship application deadline?

The application deadline is Apr 30, 2022. Winners will be announced on May 16, 2022.