The Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Inc. (ISI) established the William E. Simon Fellowship for Noble Purpose to support graduating college seniors who are committed to engaging directly in the civic life of their community, such as contributing to the development of new jobs and opportunities for others. The Simon Fellowship program provides unrestricted grant awards in the amounts of $40,000, $20,000 and $10,000 to those graduating college seniors who have demonstrated passion, dedication, a high capacity for self-direction, and originality in pursuit of a goal that will strengthen civil society.

Past Simon Fellowship winner, Evan Hewitt, a graduate of the Templeton Honors College at Eastern University, proposed to found the first public library of Rwanda, the Gahini Library.  English language books are an urgent need for the entire nation of Rwanda after the national secondary language officially changed from French to English in 2008. Teachers were required to teach in a language they didn’t know and are struggling as much as young students. The Gahini Library is helping to serve a community of over 2,000 students in a building donated by the Anglican Gahini diocese.

“[Rwandans] need books and we have books,” says Hewitt. With the library, his aim is “to take all the books that people are just throwing away or ignoring in the US and put them in a place where they’re going to be precious resources.” Read more.

Are you a graduating senior with a noble idea like Ewan? The next deadline for the William E. Simon Fellowship for Noble Purpose is January 17, 2012.

If I wasn’t already tied to my research in New Zealand, I would definitely apply for this one! Fulbright is inaugurating a new Public Policy Fellowship in academic year 2012-13 that will allow fellows to serve in professional placements in foreign government ministries or institutions, to gain hands-on public sector experience while carrying out PhD research. The 11 countries offering this new fellowship include: Bangladesh, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Haiti, Ivory Coast, Jamaica, Mongolia, Nepal, Nigeria, Thailand and Tunisia. Areas of public policy focus include: public health, education, agriculture, justice, energy, environment, public finance, economic development, information technology, and communications.

According to the website, the Fulbright Public Policy Fellows will serve in a capacity similar to a “special assistant” for a senior level official. Fulbright is looking for PhD students with a strong service orientation, flexibility and resourcefulness, outstanding organizational skills, a wide range of competencies including strong writing, communication and IT skills, and an ability to work behind the scenes in a supportive role. Fellows may be responsible for activities such as policy and budget development and analysis; program monitoring and evaluation; drafting speeches, talking points, and correspondence; record keeping and note taking; and general project management. Fellows would spend approximately 32 hours per week in their professional assignment and 8 hours per week pursuing a related academic project.

Apply now for this PhD fellowship - deadline is February 1, 2012!

The GlobalPost and The Open Hands Initiative picked 17 talented young journalists from Egypt and the U.S. to collaborate on how best to report on a democracy in transition in Egypt. The “Covering a Revolution” Fellows are fully-funded to develop a “Special Report” for the GlobalPost on the impact of the revolution. The Fellows arrived in Egypt on October 10 and hit the ground running.

According to GlobalPost, Merrit Kennedy, a graduate student in human rights law, was swept into helping National Public Radio as a translator and fixer but is now covering the story. Another Fellow, Mohamed Abdelfattah, then a young videographer for Al Ahram online, was accused by police of  ”chanting against Mubarak.”

The fellowship began with a three-day workshop with leading Egyptian political analysts, human rights workers and veteran journalists, who briefed the Fellows and provided them background on field reporting in Cairo and across Egypt. Fellows will be covering events like the emergence of new political parties, the reform of the police force accused of widespread abuses, and the role of the internet and social networking in the revolution.

The Fellows will produce a multi-part series for the GlobalPost as well as a blog, which will document the activities of the team.

Meet Joy Alison, one of the Fellows featured in our IndieGoGo campaign movie! Joy recently earned a prestigious fellowship to spend one year in Kenya!