A 2021 honors graduate in English and linguistics, Eva Rothenberg has been selected for the 2024 Marshall Scholarship. The competitive award covers up to three years of graduate study in the U.K.
Pell Grants are celebrating 50 years of changing students’ lives. At Emory, they’re just one piece of the Emory Advantage program, where students with financial need receive grants, offering the opportunity to graduate debt-free.
Through need-based aid such as scholarships, grants and the newly expanded Emory Advantage program, students can make the most of their time on campus. Meet just a few Emory students pursuing their dreams with support from financial aid.
Emory University is expanding the Emory Advantage program to replace need-based loans with grants and scholarships in undergraduate financial aid packages.
Annie Li, a senior in Emory College majoring in history and sociology, has been selected for the Marshall Scholarship. The competitive award covers up to three years of graduate study in the U.K.
Biology major Ahmed Aljohani is Emory’s 21st student to be selected for the Rhodes Scholarship, which provides for study at the University of Oxford in England. Scholars are chosen based on outstanding intellect, character, leadership and service.
Emory President Gregory L. Fenves has set the academic year 2021-22 tuition and fee schedule for Emory’s undergraduate, graduate, and professional schools. The tuition review process included leaders from across the university.
Two Emory seniors with deep experience in public policy and a recent alumnus now working in global business will represent Emory as Schwarzman Scholars, joining 140 other remarkable international scholars at Tsinghua University.
A scholarship endowed by Bradley N. Currey Jr., former chair of Emory's Board of Trustees, in honor of Emory President Emeritus James T. Laney supports Emory College students with financial need. Recipients are Korean, Korean American or interested in Korean or East Asian cultures.
A new report by a nationwide alliance of leading colleges and universities highlights Emory University's efforts to improve opportunity for low- and moderate-income students.
Emory senior Elliot Shuwei Ji, Emory/Georgia Tech dual degree student Veronica Chua and recent alumna Zhongyuan "Echo" Zeng have been selected as Schwarzman Scholars, among only 147 chosen from more than 2,800 applicants around the world.
Emory seniors Leigh Schlecht, Lamar Greene, Camila Reed-Guevara and Namrata Verghese reached the final interviews for the Rhodes Scholarship, the largest cohort of Rhodes finalists for the university in at least 30 years.
Emory joins 100 institutions that are working to attract, enroll and retain high-achieving, low- and moderate-income students, from before they arrive on campus to graduation and beyond.
Chelsea Jackson, a political science and African American Studies double major, is Emory's 20th student to be selected for the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship, which provides for study at the University of Oxford in England.
For Financial Literacy Month, Emory students and alumni can join Salt, a new online tool that promotes financial literacy, and attend an array of campus events.
Jireh Breon Holder took classes at Emory while earning his degree in drama from Morehouse College. Known for exploring political themes, he returns to campus as an exciting new voice in American theater.
Led by Adrienne Slaughter, Emory's new Office of Student Success Programs and Services, offers a central resource for emotional support, academic assistance, financial emergencies, veterans' services and a range of scholarship programs.
Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine has named Emory University a "Best Value" for 2015-16, ranking the university 10th in its annual Best Value survey of 100 top private universities that exemplify excellent academics while keeping costs to a minimum.
Emory University raised more than $250 million in gifts and commitments in fiscal year 2015, marking the third year in a row that annual philanthropic support for the university exceeded $200 million.
Emory University student Leah Michalove is one of 32 American college students selected as a 2016 Rhodes Scholar. A native of Sandy Springs, Georgia, Michalove is the 19th student from Emory to be selected for the prestigious scholarship, which provides for two or three years of study at the University of Oxford in England.
After setting a new record for applications, the Class of 2019 comes to campus with impressive academic abilities and extensive accomplishments in leadership, community service, athletics and the arts.
Emory University's Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing received a $700,000 award from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) to train nursing students to become primary care nurse practitioners and/or nurse midwives. The school will award 35 students with $10,000 scholarships over the next two years.
Emory's Board of Trustees has approved a 2.3 percent increase in tuition rate for undergraduates enrolled in Emory College of Arts and Sciences for 2014-15, from $43,400 to $44,400.
Candidates for the scholarship, most likely lifelong overachievers, have already written many personal statements, and society has shaped the genre in their minds, says Joanne Brzinski, senior associate dean for undergraduate education at Emory University.
Chelsea G. Brewer received the Blackmun-Elsberry Scholarship at Emory School of Law, making it possible to continue towards her goal after her school in South Carolina closed.
A $10,000 scholarship identifies future leaders who, as Emory employees, are enrolled in Goizueta's Executive MBA program.
A new animated video for the Scholarship Endowment Initiative celebrates the power of scholarships to change students' lives.
The Beckham family, with a generational history of attending Emory, has directed its endowment to benefit the Student Hardship Fund.
Freshman Janay DeVillasee, who received the Brittain Scholarship this year, talks about what the all-expenses award means to her and her family, the obstacles she has overcome and plans for her time at Emory.
At Vassar, Amherst College and Emory University, 22 percent of undergraduates in 2010-11 received federal Pell Grants, which go mostly to students whose families earn less than $30,000 a year. | Chroncle of Philanthropy
Emory's director of federal affairs provides an update from Capitol Hill.
After a challenging year leading the University Senate and Faculty Council, Professor Gray Crouse reflects on what was achieved and work that lies ahead.
Emory's Board of Trustees has approved a 2.5 percent increase in the total tuition, fees, and room and board cost for undergraduates enrolled in Emory College of Arts and Sciences for 2013-2014.