The Emily Jayne Robinson Scholarship Fund generously supports BYU students studying French by offering need-based scholarships to French majors and minors.
Applicants must be full-time students of BYU-Provo who are currently declared as a French major/minor, French Studies secondary major, or French Teaching major/minor. Additionally, students must have at least a 3.0 GPA. As per the scholarship fund’s stipulations, preference will be given to French-speaking students from Africa and students with greater financial need. While priority is given to these applicants, other students may also receive scholarships.
This scholarship only accepts applications during winter semesters.
Scholarship for students pursuing a career in teaching the Humanities. Students must be enrolled in and completing their student teaching for the semester awarded. Students doing a teaching internship do not qualify.
As part of the college's support for experiential learning, HUM grants offer resources for student-initiated, faculty-mentored research projects outside the classroom. Students can apply to the College of Humanities, with a faculty mentor’s endorsement, for up to $1,200 in scholarship funding to support their work.
HUM Grant-funded experiences should be high-impact learning opportunities in which student and faculty research interests converge. A significant project with substantive mentoring should lead to improvement in core humanities learning outcomes, such as advanced research, writing, and presenting.
H-MEGs support student-centered, faculty-driven research experiences up to $10,000 for year-long and $5,000 for short-term grants. Short-term Spring/Summer grants offer faculty and students opportunities to collaborate on research with a narrower scope and outcomes that can be achieved within a tighter framework. Grant work outcomes should be submitted by the end of summer.
Scholarships opportunities for study abroad programs are coordinated through the Kennedy Center. Some BYU-sponsored scholarships are included while others are sponsored by outside organizations. Grants are also available.
The Liberal Arts Advisement and Careers (LAAC) office offers scholarships. This includes scholarships offered through the college of Humanities not linked otherwise on this page.
A U.S. Department of Education scholarship to encourage the study of specific underrepresented languages. Scholarship provides full tuition + $5,000 stipend for undergraduate students and full tuition + $15,000 stipend for graduate students. Students must plan to use the language in their future career.
Bonne Semence Scholarship
A needs-based scholarship for students participating in the French Study Abroad.