Gates Cambridge Scholarship

Scholarship program funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Gates Cambridge Scholarship is an international postgraduate award for students to study at the University of Cambridge. The scholarship is extremely competitive with around 0.5% of applicants receiving an award in recent years.[1]

Awarded forPost-graduate study at the University of Cambridge
LocationCambridge, England
Established2000
Quick facts Awarded for, Sponsored by ...
Gates Cambridge Scholarship
Awarded forPost-graduate study at the University of Cambridge
Sponsored byBill and Melinda Gates Foundation
LocationCambridge, England
Established2000
Websitegatescambridge.org
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The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation established the Gates Cambridge Scholarships in 2000 with a $210 million donation to support outstanding graduate students' study at the University of Cambridge.[2] The gift is the largest single donation to a British university.[3][4] The Gates Cambridge Trust's endowment is valued at £333.9 million as of 2023.[5]

The scholarship covers the cost of a postgraduate degree at the University of Cambridge and includes funding for academic and professional development. As of 2023, 2,156 students from more than 112 countries have received the scholarship and more than 200 Gates Cambridge Scholars are studying at any time.[6]

Eligibility and selection criteria

Applicants from any country other than the United Kingdom are eligible to apply for the Gates Cambridge Scholarships. Candidates must apply to pursue one of the following full-time residential degrees at the University of Cambridge:

Applicants concurrently apply to a course, college and department and the offer of a Gates Cambridge Scholarship is conditional on the student gaining full placement in each.

The Gates Cambridge Trustees use four criteria to choose Scholars:

  • Academic excellence: Competitiveness is evaluated through academic transcripts, references, experience and the potential to succeed on the chosen course. A departmental nomination is crucial for demonstrating this criterion;
  • Choice of course: The Trust seeks Scholars who will have an academically transformative experience at Cambridge. Candidates must demonstrate intellectual superiority and the necessary skills and expertise to complete the course which they have chosen;
  • A commitment to improving the lives of others: A defining characteristic of Scholars is their deep devotion to improving lives of others as evident by their past, current and future commitment to the societies in which they will live and work;
  • A capacity for leadership: Candidates must show exceptional leadership elements and a pledge to 'take others with them' as future leaders of their fields and communities.[7]
Selwyn College, Cambridge University

Generally, each class of Gates Cambridge Scholars is composed of 23 PhD and 13 one-year Scholars. The Gates Cambridge Trust uses a three-stage selection process to select its Scholars. The application process begins with prospective students applying to study for an eligible degree at the University of Cambridge, either during the U.S. or the global round. Following the initial application, each academic department at the University of Cambridge ranks and nominates eligible applicants for the scholarship. Departmental nominees are the most academically outstanding applicants for postgraduate studies in the department. The list of departmental nominees is then forwarded to the Gates Cambridge Trust, where it is divided into broad subject areas and passed to the Shortlisting Committees. Each Committee reviews the entirety of a departmental nominee and applies the Gates Cambridge selection criteria to shortlist applicants for interview. All shortlisted candidates are interviewed to assess how they meet all Gates Cambridge criteria and Scholars-Elect are selected only after the interview.[8] For 2023 entry, 75 Scholars were selected from a pool of 6,184 applicants.[6]

Goals

The aim of the Gates Cambridge programme is to build a global network of future leaders committed to improving the lives of others. Scholars and alumni are already becoming leaders in their fields and contributing to finding solutions to some of the world's most pressing problems.

Gates Cambridge Scholars organizations

In 2002, Gates Cambridge Scholars organized and elected a student committee titled The Gates Scholars' Council. The Council aims to represent the Gates Scholars at Cambridge and to build a scholar community interwoven into the fabric of the university. In cooperation with the Gates Cambridge Trust, the university and various academic and professional organizations, the Scholars' Council organizes a number of academic, social and professional events that have distinguished and built the reputation of the Gates Scholars at Cambridge University. The scholarship is particularly known for its strong academic and social community at Cambridge.[citation needed]

In 2005, the Scholars once again self-organized to create the Gates Scholars Alumni Association, which aims to build upon the friendships and contacts that were first made at Cambridge and to bridge the gap between the different generations of scholars.[9] It is an active and growing organization, with members dispersed all over the world.[citation needed]

Controversies

Criticism of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation reduced its investments in non-renewable energy in 2016, after recipients of the Gates Cambridge Scholarship had urged the Foundation's trustees to divest from fossil fuels a year earlier.[10][11]

The Foundation gave Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi its 2019 Global Goalkeeper Award for the Swachh Bharat Mission[12] and the "progress India has made in providing safe sanitation under his leadership."[13] More than 100 Gates Cambridge Scholars and alumni had condemned the Foundation's decision, following the Indian government's decision to withdraw the special status of the disputed territory of Jammu and Kashmir.[14][15]

Notable scholars

More information Name, University ...
Name University Cambridge
College
Year Nationality Field
Kayla BarronUS Naval AcademyPeterhouse2010 USANASA astronaut
Eric CerviniHarvard UniversityKing's2015 USAhistorian
Charles B. ChangHarvard UniversityTrinity2005 USAlinguist
Molly CrockettUCLAKing's2006 USAneuroscientist
Johanna HaninkUniversity of MichiganQueens'2006 USAclassicist
Juliet LapidosYale UniversityHughes Hall2005 USAjournalist and author
Kate MarvelUC BerkeleyTrinity2003 USAclimate scientist and science writer
Kamalini MukherjiJadavpur UniversitySt. John's2002 Indiavocalist
Greg NanceUniversity of ChicagoFitzwilliam2011 USAultramarathon runner and entrepreneur
Jaya SavigeUniversity of QueenslandChrist's2008 Australiapoet
Robyn ScottUniversity of AucklandSt. Catharine's2004 New Zealandentrepreneur and writer
Jay SilverGeorgia TechChurchill2002 USAtoy inventor
Tara WestoverBYUTrinity2008 USAwriter and memoirist
Melanie WoodDuke UniversityTrinity2003 USAmathematician
Yeo Bee YinUniversiti Teknologi PetronasCorpus Christi2009 Malaysiapolitician
Tyler GoodspeedHarvard UniversityEmmanuel2009 USAeconomist
Usha VanceYale UniversityClare2010 USAlawyer, Second Lady of the US
Mary FanUniversity of ArizonaSt. John's2007 USAlaw professor
Bilal MahmoodStanford UniversityKing's2009 USAentrepreneur and civil servant
Carol Ibe Georgetown University, University of Oxford Newnham 2015 USA founder, JR Biotek Foundation
Jerelle Joseph University of the West Indies Churchill 2014 Dominica professor of chemical and biological engineering
Alessio Ciulli University of Florence Wolfson 2002 Italy professor of chemical and structural biology, Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry
David Haskell Yale University Queens' 2001 USA Editor-in-chief of New York and co-founder of Kings County Distillery
Iryna Shuvalova National University of Kyiv, Dartmouth College St. John's 2016 Ukraine poet, translator and scholar
Jessica Grahn Northwestern University Wolfson 2001 USA music neuroscientist
Shadrack Frimpong University of Pennsylvania, Yale University Jesus 2020 Ghana entrepreneur and global health leader, founder of Cocoa360
Brady Wagoner Clark University Corpus Christi 2005 USA professor of psychology
Michael G. Masters University of Michigan Hughes Hall 2001 USA lawyer and global security consultant
Jana Zaumseil Leipzig University St. John's 2003 Germany professor of physical chemistry
Victoria Herrmann Lehigh University, Carleton University Pembroke 2014 USA polar geographer and climate change communicator
Scott Kaufman Carnegie Mellon University King's 2003 USA cognitive scientist, author, podcaster, coach, and popular science writer
Urbasi Sinha University of Cambridge Queens' 2002 India quantum physicist and professor
Rob Henderson Yale University St. Catharine's 2018 USA writer and political commentator
Emily Kassie Brown University St. John's 2016 Canada investigative journalist and documentary filmmaker
Caitlin Casey University of Arizona St. John's 2007 USA observational astronomer
Todd Tucker George Washington University Queens' 2012 USA academic, political scientist, and political commentator
Yassamin Ansari Stanford University St. John's 2012 USA US congresswoman
Kate Brandt Brown University Selwyn College 2007 USA Chief Sustainability Officer at Google
William Greenleaf Harvard University Trinity 2002 USA molecular biologist, biophysicist, inventor, and professor
Njoki Wamai University of Nairobi, King's College London Queens' 2012 Kenya feminist activist and professor
Naomi Woo Yale University Clare 2013 Canada conductor and pianist
Christopher Tooley Massey University, University of Auckland Girton 2002 New Zealand academic, executive and indigenous health leader
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See also

References

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