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Find similar grantsHearst Journalism Awards Program is sponsored by William Randolph Hearst Foundation. Annual program offering scholarships to undergraduate journalism students for outstanding performance, with matching grants to their schools.
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Scholarships, Grants and Stipends - Hearst Journalism Awards Program Scholarships, Grants and Stipends Up to $700,000 will be provided annually in scholarships, grants and stipends to participating and winning journalism students and accredited journalism undergraduate universities. Scholarship funds will be sent to the accredited university for the student’s benefit. The university will then distribute the funds per their discretion.
Monthly Competition Scholarships and Matching Grants The top five ranking entrants in the 14 monthly competitions win the following scholarships: The top five students’ schools are awarded matching grants.
Championship Scholarships The Championship winners and finalists win the following scholarships: The winning universities of the Intercollegiate Writing, Photo, Audio/Television/Podcast and Multimedia Competitions win the following awards: The winning universities of the Intercollegiate Overall Competition (the combined points from above) win the Each university receives a $250 stipend for entering a competition for a potential total of $3,500 for full participation in the monthly competitions.
This is granted simply for participating regardless of placement in the competition.
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Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Undergraduate journalism majors or minors currently enrolled in ACEJMC-accredited domestic universities. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Up to $700,000 in awards Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
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Hearst Foundations General Grantmaking is sponsored by William Randolph Hearst Foundation. The Hearst Foundations provide funding to well-established nonprofit organizations working in the fields of culture, education, health, and social services. Support is provided for programs, capital projects, and occasionally endowments or general operations. The foundations look for best-in-class organizations that demonstrate measurable impact and serve large demographic or geographic constituencies. Geographic focus: United States Focus areas: Culture, Education, Health, Social Service
Social Service Grant is sponsored by William Randolph Hearst Foundation. The Hearst Foundation's Social Service Grant focuses on tackling chronic poverty by funding direct-service organizations that implement effective solutions for economic independence and family strengthening. It prioritizes scalable programs that serve significant populations and gives special consideration to organizations addressing affordable housing, domestic violence, and youth development.
The Kavli Foundation sponsors an AI-for-Science Postdoctoral Fellowship through FutureHouse's Independent Postdoctoral Fellowship program, supporting one fellow per cohort to pursue an independent, AI-enabled research project in neuroscience. The fellowship provides a $125,000 annual stipend plus comprehensive benefits, travel allowance for conferences, dedicated software engineering support for building AI research tools, access to advanced computational resources (GPU clusters and cloud computing), and wet lab access for experimental validation. Fellows work in collaboration with an advisor or co-advisor who is a member of a Kavli Institute, pursuing bold, curiosity-driven projects in neuroscience ranging from molecular and cellular mechanisms to systems-level understanding of the brain. The fellowship begins September 2026 and runs for one year with a possible one-year extension. Research areas include AI-driven analysis of brain imaging data, machine learning for neural circuit mapping, computational neuroscience models, AI tools for analyzing large-scale neural recordings, and deep learning applied to connectomics and brain-computer interfaces.
Semi-Annual Competitive Grants is sponsored by Robert G Iii And Maude Morgan Cabell Foundation. The foundation provides grants primarily for permanent capital projects such as building acquisition, construction, renovation, and technology infrastructure. It favors focused, strategic support rather than token grants and typically awards funding on a challenge or match basis to stimulate broad community support. The application is a two-stage process beginning with a mandatory Contact Form followed by an invitation for a full application. Geographic focus: Virginia (preference for Richmond metropolitan region) Focus areas: Cultural Arts, Historic Preservation, Environment and Conservation, Community Development, Higher Education Infrastructure, Social Services, Health