Scholarships
in sentence
66 examples of Scholarships in a sentence
We're giving full four-year
scholarships
to girls from villages that we see with potential.
Yeah, sucka, put the
scholarships
in the bag, yeah, yeah.
Put the
scholarships
in the bag.
And the most famous case was what we came to call the Secret Scholarship Scandal, where in fact there was about 60 million dollars in government money that had been dispersed in a series of scholarships, and the
scholarships
hadn't been advertised, and so and so on and so on.
And for those who cannot afford even this, we offer them a variety of
scholarships.
Over the next few years, governments throughout the Americas requested
scholarships
for their own students, and the Congressional Black Caucus asked for and received hundreds of
scholarships
for young people from the USA.
Why have so many countries asked for these
scholarships?
His parents, born in Nigeria, came to Germany on
scholarships.
This resulted in 1.4 million dollars being raised for our scholars to attend field trips to colleges and universities, Summer STEAM programs, as well as college
scholarships.
Now, through a series of miracles, my mother and father both got
scholarships
to go to New York City.
Empowering women, working with education, providing
scholarships
for girls so they can finish secondary school, in the clear understanding that, all around the world, as women's education improves, family size drops.
We've worked on small schools, we've funded scholarships, we've done things in libraries.
Americans have the Voice of America and the Fulbright
scholarships.
So the first ones are if you want the usual suspects, hire teachers, school meals, school uniforms,
scholarships.
I can give
scholarships
to all the girls, you know, if they work hard and stay in school.
Only one teacher (Laura Dern) in the high school understands their efforts and lets them know that they could become contenders in the national science fair with college
scholarships
being the prize.
AT&T offers
scholarships
through partner non-profit institutions and provides paid internships for up to 100 graduates.
In June, after the United States pressured Israel to allow Fulbright scholarship winners to leave the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military announced that it would grant exit permits for a few more students with “recognized”
scholarships
– but not “hundreds.”
So hundreds of us are still waiting, most without prestigious
scholarships
to draw the world’s attention.
In the meantime, we should champion the most powerful development investments: spending on child nutrition, immunization, early childhood education, and
scholarships
for girls can lead to meaningful, lifelong improvements in health and income levels.
But consider, instead, the US system: students pay for their education and, with part of the tuition these students pay, universities finance
scholarships
for deserving but poor students.
Competition between them works because it involves fighting for the best students and offering
scholarships
to deserving poor ones.
At the newly created Abdulla Al Ghurair Foundation for Education, which has $1.1 billion and a mandate to broaden opportunities for young Arabs by providing them with scholarships, we have given a lot of thought to the effectiveness – and cost-effectiveness – of the various possible approaches.
The third dimension of public diplomacy is the development of lasting relationships with key individuals over many years or even decades, through scholarships, exchanges, training, seminars, conferences, and access to media channels.
About a third of young people around the world pursue a college degree or advanced training; but, despite
scholarships
and other incentives, the percentage of refugees who do so is a mere 1%.
People must go beyond writing checks to charities and contribute actively to building schools, funding scholarships, and training teachers.
Similarly, while competition will improve the quality of research and education, this does not imply reduced public funding, a lower priority for basic research, or the elimination of
scholarships.
A Thousand Fatwas for SomaliaWASHINGTON, DC – The latest outrage by the Somali jihadist group al-Shabaab – a truck bombing in Mogadishu that killed more than 100 people, targeting students lined up for news about
scholarships
to Turkey – has produced condemnation from the United Nations, Western states, the Somali Transitional Federal Government (TFG), and Somali civic groups.
As far as education was concerned, it often meant committing resources to financial assistance for students, such as subsidized loans or
scholarships.
Indeed, its programs currently reach more than 100,000 students each year, including more than 1,600 university students who receive
scholarships.
Next
Related words
Students
Education
Their
School
Universities
Young
Training
Provide
Programs
Girls
Years
Tuition
Schools
Which
University
Through
Support
Should
Refugees
People