Schlumberger Foundation Fellowships for Women in Science
PhDour score

The Faculty for the Future program, launched in 2004, awards fellowships to women from developing and
emerging economies to pursue PhD or Post-doctoral research in science, technology, engineering and
mathematics (STEM) at leading universities worldwide.

ELIGIBILITY:

You:

 are a female and are a citizen of a developing country or emerging economy*. You are not eligible to apply if you hold dual citizenship of which one is citizenship of a developed country. (N.B. If you have been awarded a Faculty for the Future grant and after the award you obtain citizenship of a developed country, the grant will be discontinued as of the date of such additional citizenship);

 are preparing for a PhD degree or post-doctoral research in the physical sciences, engineering, technology and related disciplines. Awards in biological sciences are limited to interdisciplinary research between physical and biological sciences. The Faculty for the Future program does not fund Master level studies;

 are enrolled, admitted or have applied to a host university/research institute abroad (applications are no longer accepted where a candidate has not yet applied to a university). If you are applying for a sandwich course the final degree must be awarded by the Host University abroad (i.e., not from the home country university);

 hold an excellent academic record;

 have a proven track record of teaching experience or can demonstrate commitment to teaching;

SCHOLARSHIP VALUE:

Faculty for the Future grants are based on actual costs for eligible expenses up to a maximum of USD
50,000 per year for a PhD and maximum of USD 40,000 per year for a Post-doc and may be renewed through
to completion of studies.

DURATION: Studey period

DEADLINE: 10 November 2023

NO OF AWARDS: Unknown

HOW TO APPLY: Apply online

GET MORE INFORMATION HERE

CLICK HERE FOR SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION GUIDANCE AND ASSISTANCE 

the author

I find joy in filling the World with Scholars that can protect the environment. Being a Scholarship adviser seems to me as the right path to making this happen.

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