STEM Scholarships

Explore STEM scholarships for students in science, technology, engineering, math, computer science, data, research, and related technical fields. Compare deadlines, award amounts, GPA expectations, eligibility requirements, and application materials so you can focus on scholarships that match both your academic track and long-term goals.

Showing 2845–2848 of 2848 scholarships

Available STEM scholarships

Browse available STEM scholarships below or use filters to refine your results by deadline, award amount, GPA, eligibility, and requirements.

Verified
EXPIRED

Funding Available for the annual meeting of the Society for the History of Technology, 2022, US

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is Home Blog Opportunities ⌄ Scholarships Grants Fellowships Awards Study Online Prizes Publications Competitions Financial Aid Conferences ⌄ Call for Papers Conference Programs Abstracts Events ⌄ Trainings Seminars Discussions Meetings Workshops Symposiums Lectures Presentations Contests Festivals Forums Summer Schools Sign Up Sign…

Home Blog Opportunities ⌄…

Award Amount

Aug 15, 2022

deadline passed

2 requirements

Requirements

For United States
HumanitiesSTEMMedicineCommunityDisabilityFew RequirementsWomenHispanicGraduatePhDVerifiedGPA 2.0+
EXPIRED

Robin Irving Memorial Scholarship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is $2000. Plan to apply by April 14, 2026.

116 applicants

$2.000

Award Amount

Apr 14, 2026

deadline passed

2 requirements

Requirements

US-based
EducationSTEMFew RequirementsWomenHigh School SeniorHigh SchoolGPA 3.5+MAMassachusetts
EXPIRED

William L. Engineering Scholarship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is $1500. Plan to apply by April 14, 2026.

156 applicants

$1.500

Award Amount

Apr 14, 2026

deadline passed

2 requirements

Requirements

US-basedFor Italy
EducationSTEMFew RequirementsHigh School SeniorHigh SchoolUndergraduateGraduatePhDGPA 3.5+COOHPAPennsylvania

How this page works

Compare scholarships with the listing tools above

This page helps you review STEM scholarships from the ScholarshipTop catalog. Use filters to narrow results by deadline, award amount, GPA, eligibility, location, and application requirements before opening provider details.

How to increase your chances

Choose applications with a stronger fit

  • Focus first on STEM scholarships where your background matches the listed eligibility requirements.
  • Compare deadlines and required materials before choosing which applications to prioritize.
  • Prepare essays, transcripts, recommendation requests, and proof of enrollment before the final week.
  • Confirm official provider requirements and submission instructions before applying.

Frequently asked questions about STEM scholarships

Who can apply for STEM scholarships?
STEM scholarship eligibility varies by provider. Some awards are open to any student pursuing science, technology, engineering, or math, while others focus on specific majors such as computer science, biology, engineering, data science, physics, or environmental science. Providers may also consider GPA, school level, research experience, financial need, location, identity, or participation in STEM clubs, competitions, internships, or community programs.
How can I make a STEM scholarship application stronger?
A strong STEM application usually connects your technical interests to real work you have done or want to do. Mention projects, research, coursework, internships, robotics, coding, lab experience, tutoring, or community problem-solving when relevant. If an essay is required, avoid only saying you like science or technology; explain what you are building toward and why the provider’s scholarship fits that path.
Are STEM scholarships only for students with very high GPAs?
Not always. Some STEM scholarships have firm GPA minimums, especially those tied to academic departments or professional organizations, but others weigh essays, financial need, service, leadership, first-generation status, or commitment to a specific field. Review the requirements before skipping an opportunity. If your GPA is not the strongest part of your profile, prioritize awards that value projects, persistence, experience, or career goals.