SHE-CAN Scholarship Coalition
What is the SHE-CAN Scholarship Coalition?
In Fall 2015, SHE-CAN launched the SHE-CAN Scholarship Coalition by bringing together some of the most prestigious colleges in the US: Beloit, Bucknell, Gettysburg, Lafayette, Muhlenberg, Northwestern, Oberlin, Scripps, and University of Minnesota.
The Coalition is a group of US colleges and universities committed to building global female leadership by supporting SHE-CAN scholars with full scholarships. By coming together and accepting scholars from the same set of countries year-after-year, Coalition schools are educating leaders who return in powerful cohorts and together become catalysts for equality, peace, and economic prosperity.
These schools are able to extend their scholarships to a subset of women who otherwise could not afford the non-scholarship cost to attend university abroad through their partnership with SHE-CAN. Therefore, they are pushing their scholarship investments down the socio-economic pyramid, working to bridge the income divide and contributing to lasting systematic change.
In Fall 2015, SHE-CAN launched the SHE-CAN Scholarship Coalition by bringing together some of the most prestigious colleges in the US: Beloit, Bucknell, Gettysburg, Lafayette, Muhlenberg, Northwestern, Oberlin, Scripps, and University of Minnesota.
The Coalition is a group of US colleges and universities committed to building global female leadership by supporting SHE-CAN scholars with full scholarships. By coming together and accepting scholars from the same set of countries year-after-year, Coalition schools are educating leaders who return in powerful cohorts and together become catalysts for equality, peace, and economic prosperity.
These schools are able to extend their scholarships to a subset of women who otherwise could not afford the non-scholarship cost to attend university abroad through their partnership with SHE-CAN. Therefore, they are pushing their scholarship investments down the socio-economic pyramid, working to bridge the income divide and contributing to lasting systematic change.