GET UP TO
$5,000
Time to complete
Regular:
30-60 min
With Mos:
10-20min
Milwaukee County
Waukesha County
Washington County
Ozaukee County
Racine County
Kenosha County
Wisconsin
Public Policy & Administration
Public Relations
Political Science/Government
For Women
Age
Freshmen
Sophomores
Juniors
High school
This scholarship is for young women of any nationality aged between 16-19 living in or attending accredited schools in southeastern Wisconsin including Milwaukee, Waukesha, Ozaukee, Washington, Racine, and Kenosha counties. To qualify, you need to be pursuing careers or seek leadership positions in public policy making, government, and volunteer organizations.
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Mos helps fill out applications
Recommendation letter
You’ll need someone who knows you to write about the great
Short Responses
Answer some open-ended questions to apply.
Each scholarship has a set of requirements: specific factors that determine whether or not you're eligible to apply. You can visit the scholarship site to find this information, or fill out the Mos quiz to be automatically matched with scholarships you qualify for! FYI: the more information you share with Mos, the better scholarship matches Mos will make!
To increase your chances of getting a scholarship, apply early, follow all application instructions, and write a great scholarship essay (if applicable)! For more help, ask a Mos advisor!
If you haven't heard back within a few weeks, reach out to the scholarship organization! Some scholarship organizations email all the applicants to let them know if they were selected or not, while others only contact the winners—it usually depends on the number of applicants. It never hurts to follow up.
A letter of recommendation (letter of rec) is a letter written by someone in your life who can speak to your achievements, positive traits, and potential. It's basically a summary of why you're great and deserve the scholarship or funding you're applying for! Typically, students ask teachers, mentors, coaches, or employers (never family or friends). FYI: You have to ask someone to write a letter of rec for you.
Letters of recommendation typically come from teachers, counselors, coaches, leaders in groups you're a part of—basically any person who knows you well and is NOT a family member.
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