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Dani’sDeclassifiedGuide: ScholarshipSuccessandResources

By Danielle Schroeder

College in the United States is expensive. And while I did receive an annual merit scholarship throughout my five years, there were still additional expenses that I needed to pay out of pocket each year towards tuition, textbooks, and other expenses. As someone who was awarded over $25,000 in scholarships throughout college, I have learned a great deal about scholarship applications. Below are four tips from my personal experience that I hope can help you!

1. Compile list of applicable scholarships

There are so many scholarships out there, one of the best tips I can give is cast a wide net to see what scholarships that are applicable to you. Some are based on major, specialty interest within your major, demographics, geographical location currently for school or where you permanent residence is At the end of this post, I have included links to scholarships that I have applied to as well as further resources Also for professional societies like SWE and ASCE, search locally, regionally, and society-wide as you being awarded locally does not mean that you cannot apply on the Society level

2.

Prioritize securing letters of recommendation.

There are many parts to some scholarship applications, but one of the most crucial is the letter of recommendation typically by a professional or faculty member. If they require a letter of recommendation, I recommend prioritizing this first as to give your letter writer ample time to write this letter and submit! As someone who has written many letters of recommendations, I am always happy to help and honored when I am asked! A good practice is to give at least 3 weeks of a heads up before it is due to respect the time of whoever you are asking. We are busy but want to help you succeed!

To help you with this ask in the future, I have included a draft email template below:

SUBJECT: YOUR NAME Letter of Recommendation Request deadline DATE Hello NAME,

I hope you had a wonderful weekend! I would like to apply for SCHOLARSHIP NAME which requires a letter of recommendation and WHY YOU ARE APPLYING As a past president of Drexel SWE who is also someone I constantly look up to (OR WHY THIS SPECIFIC PERSON), I would like to know if you could write this letter of recommendation for me

For reference, I have also attached my current resume, more information about this scholarship, and how to submit the letter of recommendation This letter is due DATE AND TIME Please let me know if you have any further questions or concerns

Thank you, Danielle

Also, don’t forget to send the person who took the time to write you a letter of recommendation a thank you email / note after you receive the scholarship!

3. Keep past scholarship essays in one place. This tip boils down to work smart, not hard – I kept mine in a Google drive folder throughout college, but any central place is good as scholarship essays tend to ask similar questions I have been able to reuse paragraphs of past scholarship essays which helped me to save time

Some questions I have seen:

What would you like to be doing five or ten years after graduation and how do you think this will help both the profession and humanity in general?

Define career goals and educational objectives pertaining to the use of technology in the transportation industry

Both of these questions are generally asking about my goals for my future in my field so I was able to use most of the same essay for both scholarship applications. Also as someone who still struggles with talking about my accomplishments, this folder can also be used to hype yourself up after a long day!

4. Don’t be afraid to apply again!

My junior year I applied for a local scholarship that was open to all engineering students in the area…and was not awarded it. The following year, I updated the application and resubmitted my senior year, and was awarded the scholarship. If you don’t receive an award one year, don’t let that keep you from applying again the following year!

Good luck on your scholarship search and application process!

Scholarship Resources and Links:

Scholist app on Instagram Resources Links – https://linktr ee/Scholist app

College Scholarship App Scholly – https://myscholly com/

Scholarship Finder Tool: https://www careeronestop org/Toolkit/Training/find-scholarships aspx

STEM Scholarships for Women updated in 2020 – https://www nitrocollege com/blog/ultimate-guide-stem-scholarships

ASCE Philadelphia Scholarship – http://sections asce org/philadelphia/home

Delaware Valley Engineer’s Week Scholarships – https://www engrclub org/content aspx?page

DVGI scholarship – http://www dvgi org/StudentScholarships html

SWE Scholarships – https://swe org/scholarships/

ITS Pennsylvania (ITSPA) Scholarship – https://www itspennsylvania com/ Philadelphia SWE Scholarship – http://philadelphia swe org/scholarship html

WTS Scholarships – https://www wtsinternational org/resources/scholarships

Traffic Club of Philadelphia Scholarships – http://www tcphila org/page-1661506

Drexel – Non-annual merit Scholarships – https://drexel edu/studentlife/get involved/programs events/slawards/scholarship-awards

Feel free to reach out to me at DaniTheEngineer blog@gmail com with any other resources that I should add to the lists above or any link no longer is in use

About the Author

Danielle Schroeder, PE, ENV SP is a Civil Engineer in the Transportation Industry in Philadelphia, PA She graduated from Drexel University in 2017 and received her B S and M S in Civil Engineering through Drexel’s accelerated degree program She is a licensed professional engineer in Pennsylvania and a certified Envision sustainability professional (ENV SP) She is highly involved in several professional organizations including Society of Women Engineers (SWE), Women’s Transportation Seminar (WTS) and the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) For her work with these organizations and her extensive outreach work, Danielle was honored as one of ASCE’s New Faces of Civil Engineering in 2021. Danielle focuses on the rehabilitation of the physical infrastructure of the past through her job, and she inspires future women engineers through STEM outreach. She is inspiring the next generation of engineers through extensive STEM outreach and has inspired thousands of students through in-person and virtual events As the first engineer in her family, she uses her well-established blog Stemchangemaker org in and social media pages to share advice based on her journey as an engineer in the infrastructure industry and to educate the public that engineering is an excellent career choice for women In her spare time, Danielle enjoys traveling, snowboarding, playing tennis, and taking long walks with her partner, Doug, and their rescue dog, Nemo