About the Program

Create your future in computer science at Columbus State University. With four concentrations to choose from, Columbus State makes customizing your MS in applied computer science degree simple.

To keep pace with the rapid growth of technology, every industry needs professionals who are highly skilled in cybersecurity, software development, machine learning, and more.

Today’s computing environment is highly competitive. From designing algorithms to identifying cyber threats, industry leaders are seeking a creative workforce. Your program focuses on new technologies and emphasizes applications. With four tracks to choose from and a 100% online option, it’s easy to customize your computer science degree to fit your interests and career goals.

Columbus State’s Master of Science in Applied Computer Science will prepare you for a thriving career in the discipline of your choice. Each track is designed to encourage creative problem-solving, foster innovation, and develop hands-on skills.

As part of the TSYS School of Computer Science, you’ll have a unique educational advantage. Our partnerships inspire collaboration with regional businesses and industries to understand their needs and create a responsive, state-of-the-art learning environment. Build your creative muscles and meet the workforce needs at organizations of all sizes. Every program and major is current, providing you with a firm foundation in the technologies of today and preparing you for the technologies of tomorrow.

We’re purpose-built for your success.

Applying for State Scholarships

To apply for the Georgia HOPE and Zell Miller Scholarships, you can complete an online HOPE application or the FAFSA.

Applying for Federal Student Aid

Complete your Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) as soon as possible – our federal school code is 001561.

The FAFSA becomes available October 1st for the upcoming aid year! The earlier you complete it, the better.

If this is your first time signing in to complete the FAFSA, please create a Federal Student Aid (FSA) User ID. In addition to FAFSA, your FSA User ID login (username/password) is also used to login to the Federal Student Aid website.

Check out the myStudentAid app in the Apple App Store and Google Play Store!

Applying for Tuition Assistance for Active Duty Service Members

Active Duty Service Members may utilize their Tuition Assistance benefits to help with tuition. For more information on how to apply to use Tuition Assistance benefits or to find out your Service’s Educational Portal, visit our Military Tuition Assistance page.

READ MORE HERE FIRST BEFORE APPLYING

New Jersey City University’s graduate programs are preparing a new generation of leaders within the arts & sciences, business, education, health and professional studies. Choose from 28 master’s degree programs, 2 doctoral programs, and a growing list of certificate programs to advance your professional and personal goals.

About Scholarships

Committed to making a college education possible for all students, regardless of means, NJCU maintains the lowest tuition of any four-year, public college or university in New Jersey. In addition to its affordability, each year, NJCU provides more than $20 million in financial aid, including scholarships, grants, and loans.

Scholarships

NJCU Endowed and Annual Scholarships for Continuing Students
The University Scholarship Committee annually awards more than 300 scholarships made available by the NJCU Foundation through gifts from friends, corporations, and alumni. These scholarships are awarded to continuing students based on financial need, academic achievement, and/or other merit. For the 2021-2022 academic year the University Scholarship Committee will consider all continuing students that meet the criteria for a specific award. Awards are on-going and selected recipients will receive notification.

NOTE: READ MORE HERE FIRST BEFORE APPLYING

Applications are invited for the RACE.ED Stuart Hall Foundation Fellowship from postdoctoral scholars working in any area of the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences in 2025-26, although we especially welcome applications that contribute to our 2025-26 theme, Making A Nation by focusing on post-imperial national identities. While applicants are not required to be limited solely to focusing on the work of Stuart Hall, the proposal should display a meaningful engagement with his wide-ranging repertoire, either in theory, method or topic.

RACE.ED is a cross-university network concerned with race, racialization and decolonial studies from a multidisciplinary perspective. Working across different traditions of thought, research, and teaching commitments, RACE.ED is made up of more than one hundred colleagues across the three colleges of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, and Science and Engineering at the University of Edinburgh.

The Stuart Hall Foundation is a charity committed to public education and addressing urgent questions of race and inequality in culture and society. It works collaboratively to forge create partnerships with universities and arts organisations in order to build a network of scholars, fellows and artists-in-residence.

IASH provides an enviable location in one of the world’s most intellectually inspiring cities, together with a dynamic network of international connections. Home to the Scottish Enlightenment, Edinburgh has a rich cultural heritage of scholarship and creativity that continues to the present day. In this haven of libraries and archives, galleries and music venues – all set amid iconic architecture – IASH helps scholars to take the humanities beyond campus to engage the public and work with organisations in a variety of sectors.

The Institute welcomes visiting researchers from across the world. Since 1970, over 1,500 Fellows have stepped through our doors. Up to 30 researchers are in residence at any one time in our amazing – and eclectic – nineteenth-century building just on the edge of the University’s central campus, boasting views of the Meadows. From more than 65 countries, IASH Fellows form a global alumnae/i community, and many career-long connections begin at the Institute.


A webinar was offered on Monday 9 December for postdoctoral scholars interested in applying for IASH Fellowships for academic year 2025-26. The deadline for most applications is 25 April 2025, so this session allowed time to ask questions and prepare an application.

Representatives from some of our partners spoke about the programmes, and IASH staff gave insights into the facilities and funding available, as well as hints and tips for crafting a successful application.

The webinar recording is available here.


What does the RACE.ED Stuart Hall Foundation Fellowship offer?

IASH hosts a lively scholarly community of visiting fellows. It is a supportive environment for postdoctoral researchers, while also offering networking opportunities with successful mid-career and eminent senior scholars. The Institute occupies a historic building with private courtyard and leafy views – perfect for uninterrupted thinking, reading and writing. Yet there is also plenty of opportunity to socialise and share ideas.

In short, a 2025-2026 RACE.ED Stuart Hall Foundation Fellowship provides:

  • Research visit at the University of Edinburgh for three to ten months
  • Bursary of £2,000 per month, plus grants for visa fees if required
  • Dedicated office space at IASH, University e-mail and library access
  • An allocated University mentor from the RACE.ED Network and/or a School within the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences
  • Weekly Fellows’ Lunch to build community
  • Collegial work-in-progress seminar series for testing new ideas
  • Calendar of engaging events at the Institute and College

Who can apply?

We warmly welcome applications from postdoctoral scholars from around the world. Selection will be subject to the immigration rules governing the UK.  Applicants must have a suitable project or study to undertake which engages meaningfully with the works of Stuart Hall, although it does not need to focus solely on Hall’s ideas – for 2025-26, we especially welcome applications that contribute to our 2025-26 theme, Making A Nation by focusing on post-imperial national identities.

Applicants must have been awarded a doctorate at the time of application, and normally within the last seven years (you must be able to produce a transcript, testamur, or a letter of completion/eligibility to graduate as part of your application), or to have published work of doctoral character and quality. You should not have held a previous Fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities. Those who have held temporary and/or short-term appointments are eligible to apply.

Application procedure

The closing date

The closing date for the receipt of the next round of applications (for visits from August 2025 to July 2026) is 17:00 GMT on 25 April 2025. Applications received after that date will not be considered. Decisions will be communicated in July. Please ensure that you supply a valid email address so that you can be contacted quickly after decisions are made.

The application form

The application portal is now open – CLICK HERE TO APPLY.
Any additional supporting documents connected with an application should be emailed to iash@ed.ac.uk.

References

  • In addition to the application form, a minimum of two and a maximum of three confidential references are required.
  • Applicants should ask their referees to email their reference to the Director at iash@ed.ac.uk by 25 April 2025.
  • Referees should comment on the nature and quality of the research proposal, as well as on the qualifications of the applicant. One referee should certify the successful viva (defence) and final examination of the candidate’s PhD thesis.

Notes

  • Consideration will be given to the academic record and the publications of all applicants and their capacity to disseminate their views among a community of like-minded people. Candidates must give evidence of any contact they have made with researchers at the University of Edinburgh, are required to make such contact before submitting their applications, and those who can evidence the relevance of their proposed project to the University of Edinburgh research community will be regarded favourably.  Particular weight will be placed on the quality and timeliness of the project proposed, and we encourage innovative and interdisciplinary topics and approaches.
  • Fellows are expected to participate in RACE.ED’s activities (such as delivering a workshop or seminars on their chosen topic).
  • Fellows are expected to become involved in RACE.ED and to commit to agreed objectives such as contributing to contextual description of collections, a workshop and seminar on the nature of such work and challenges around it, or a series of blog posts. Events could include curating a virtual pop up exhibition. This will form part of the evaluation of candidates.
  • Only fully completed formal applications will be considered. It is the responsibility of each applicant to ensure that all documentation is complete, and that referees submit their reports to IASH by the closing date. Candidates may like to submit a copy of any one article or publication that is thought to be especially relevant to the research proposal and Fellowship submission. It must be emphasised, however, that no such submitted publication will be returned to the candidate.
  • The Institute was established in 1969 by the then Faculty of Arts to promote enquiry of the highest standards in the Humanities, broadly conceived. It began to receive Fellows in 1970, and is now located as an independent institute within the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Science. Inter-departmental and inter-disciplinary study has always been encouraged.
  • Fellows must make the Institute their main place of work for the duration of the Fellowship.  It is expected that Fellows will be in residence throughout the tenure of their Fellowship and will contribute fully to the life of the Institute during that time. Fellows give at least one seminar presentation during their tenure, and submit a report on their research at the end of their Fellowship. No regular teaching is required.
  • For information about the scope of work undertaken at the University of Edinburgh, see Edinburgh Research Explorer, or browse through the staff pages of the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences.
  • Applicants looking for suitable accommodation in Edinburgh may find these links useful.

In order to take full advantage of the seminars and lectures which take place during the semesters and to meet with staff in the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, applicants are encouraged to apply for periods that will include at least part of one of the semesters.

The Stuart Hall Foundation 

Successful applicants to the Fellowship will benefit from working with the Stuart Hall Foundation to develop their career and research profile. Post holders will be able to engage with and contribute to the resources and networks of the Stuart Hall Foundation, including an annual gathering of Stuart Hall Foundation Scholars and Fellows, and privileged access to the work of the Foundation.

Inspired by the life and work of Jamaican-born British public intellectual Stuart Hall, founding figure of British Cultural Studies, key arts supporter, inspirational educator and leading voice for social justice, the Stuart Hall Foundation was established in 2015 to address urgent questions of race, class and intersecting inequalities through a commitment to public education. 

The Stuart Hall Foundation is committed to providing opportunities for students and academics, pursuing themes resonant with the work of Professor Stuart Hall and that of the Foundation. Acutely aware of the obstacles to achievement in higher education faced by young people from culturally diverse and disadvantaged backgrounds – evidenced by admissions data and the lack of diversity among academic staff – the Stuart Hall Foundation is working in partnership with universities in the UK and internationally to continue Professor Stuart Hall’s life-long commitment to teaching.

Learn more about the Stuart Hall Foundation here: www.stuarthallfoundation.org

Learn more about Professor Stuart Hall here: www.stuarthallfoundation.org/stuart-hall

The CERDI offers six three-year PhD fellowships (2025-2028).

These fellowships will start in October 2025 for a period of 3 years and amount to €1,800 net per month (before income tax), to which may be added remuneration for a course service. The cost of annual thesis registration is €391. At the CERDI, each doctoral student benefits from an individual workstation, a financial envelope enabling them to take part in three conferences during their thesis, and access to our documentation resource center and the UCA data mesocenter. The CERDI and the Ecole Doctorale Sciences Economiques, Juridiques, Politiques et de Gestion (doctoral school) offer doctoral students a wide range of services and training. The CERDI promotes professional equality between men and women and the prevention of discrimination. Clermont-Ferrand, where the doctoral students will be based, is regularly ranked in the top-10 best student cities in France.

Apply online and upload all the required documents by Tuesday 29 April 2025. 
The interviews will be held online from Thursday 22 May and Tuesday 3 June 2025, and candidates who have been selected for an interview will be informed in the previous week. 

If you have any questions about the call and/or the application form, contact PhD.cerdi@uca.fr

Download the file below for more information.

Documents to download

READ MORE HERE FIRST BEFORE APPLYING

The MSc environmental hazards and risks management provides skills in risk management, and more particularly in risk modeling, to better predict and manage environmental hazards and risks. The program combines recent research with GIS and remote sensing technologies to train a generation of thinkers capable of anticipating and mitigating a wide range of natural hazards in a multi-disciplinary approach. On completion of the degree, participants will have a comprehensive understandingof risk managementcomponents such as: planning, mitigation, monitoring, scenario modeling and warning systems.

The Nice Côte d’Azur area provides a multitude of field sites that can be investigated to discover monitoring and mitigation strategies that are applicable throughout the world. In addition, there is a wide range of digital data available such as high resolution aerial and satellite imagery, Digital Elevation Models, and raster and vector GIS databases describing land cover, building units, vegetation and stream networks. The context is therefore propitious to modeling hazards and risks both spatially and temporally using GIS and remote sensing.

READ MORE HERE FIRST BEFORE APPLYING

The French Embassy in Ghana is offering needy and qualified Ghanaian students full scholarships for Masters studies.The scholarship will cover two academic years if the scholar is admitted in M1, and one academic year if the scholar is admitted in M2.
NB: Masters Programs in France usually last two years.

To Qualify,applicant needs to
• Be a Ghanaian, residing in Ghana
• Be under 30 years
• Hold a Bachelors degree
• Have completed national service
• Have obtained First Class or Second Class Upper (these will be prioritized)
• Be fully committed to take up a course of study in France for the academic year 2025/2026 and 2026/2027


Programs covered by scholarship
STEM, Mathematic, ICST, Health, Environment and Sustainable Development, Archaeology and Heritage studies, Cultural and Creative Industries, Agriculture and Food Industry, French as a foreign language.

Mode of Application
Applicants are required to submit combined soft copies of their application file by email with the format Name-Surname_2025_Master.pdf


Documents required:
• Copy of your international passport data page (valid for a minimum of two years)
• Recommendation letter from your university (not mandatory but strongly recommended)
• Application form to be downloaded and filled (typed) at this link
• Cover letter of the student (maximum of 1 page) detailing the student’s motivation and highlighting how the desired course will support the student’s career development.
• Copies of full Undergraduate transcript (in one or 2 documents maximum)
• Admission letter with a French university for a master’s degree.
• Detailed Curriculum Vitae (3 p. max)
• Documents describing the financial situation of the applicant (certificate of scholarship for studies in progress, pay slips or bank statements of students or parents)

The subject of the message should include Name-Surname-2025-Master of the applicant.
An acknowledgement of receipt will be sent to applicants upon successful submission of email

Complete application(including all required documents) are to be sent via email to scac.accra-amba@diplomatie.gouv.fr

Application Timelines
Deadline for submissions:
Wednesday, April 30,2025
Interviews:
May-June,2025
Visa application
July 2025
Beginning of the 2025/2026 academic year, departure for France.
September/October 2025

The RAY Fellowship Program is a two-year paid fellowship designed to equip recent college graduates relevant skills and experiences they need to become leaders in the conservation and clean energy sectors.


Application Procedure

  1. Complete the application form
  2. Submit responses to the questions below
    a. Dr. Roger Arliner Young, for whom our program is named, was the first Black woman to receive a doctorate degree in zoology. Despite the opposition she faced, there were pivotal moments that shaped Dr.Roger Arliner Young’s life. Her accomplishments came after years of juggling research and teaching while navigating social and personal obstacles as a Black woman. (500 word limit.) What lived experiences do you have that have prepared you for a career in Conservation and Clean Energy? How did those experiences lead you to apply to the RAY Fellowship Program?


b. Imagine the world seven generations from now, when humanity has solved our current environmental crises. What does your vision of this world look like? How is it different from our world today and what might be the same? What are some of the ways you contributed to these solutions, and how did the RAY Fellowship Program help to catalyze your leadership?


Please Note: Applicants are allowed to answer the questions above in whatever way they find convenient. Submissions can be in the form of painting, photo diary, a poem or a short story, a social media post, a video essay or a podcast.
Applicants are to note that there are no wrong or right answers, hence are encouraged to be creative in their responses.


Responses are to be shared as URLs (video, audio, PDF file through Google Drive, YouTube, Vimeo, etc)
• Video or audio responses are to be limited to 2 minutes
• Non-video, audio or visual responses are to be limited to 300 words
• Text submissions are to be limited to 400 words
The statements below can offer some guide
• Where are you in your journey of learning and leadership? How will the RAY Fellowship support your growth in conservation and/or the clean energy field(s)?
• How are you thinking about the different intersections of social and environmental in conservation and/or the clean energy field(s)?
• How do you think about community and how might RAY be an opportunity to build that?
• How do principles of equity, justice, and inclusion relate to your study, work, and leadership?

Application Deadline:
Sunday, March 31, 2025 at 11:59pm PT.
For questions about the application process, visit the FAQ page(https://rayfellowship.org/ray-fellowship-faq)
Other questions can be mailed to ray@elpnet.org.The Subject should include ‘RAY Fellow Application’

Click here to complete application form.

Upcoming Courses

The 2025/26 course year comprises two short courses, SC92 and SC93, as well as the 49th six-month long course, EM49. Further information on the courses and application periods can be found below. In addition to the course descriptions, please also note our hints on application, explanations regarding the application portal and answers to frequently asked questions

► If you have an important question that is not addressed on our website or in the help texts within the application form, please contact us at unep@mailbox.tu-dresden.de. Before reaching out, we ask you to check the resources provided thoroughly.

92nd UNEP/UNESCO/BMUV International Short Course — Sustainable Mobility: Transforming Urban Spaces (SC92)
Duration: August 17, 2025 – September 21, 20251 (on-site in Dresden)
Application period: February 11, 2025 – March 18, 2025

93rd UNEP/UNESCO/BMUV International Short Course — Navigating Water Challenges: Climate Change and Resource Management (SC93)
Duration: October 05, 2025 – November 09, 20252 (on-site in Dresden)
Application period: February 25, 2025 – April 01, 2025

49th UNEP/UNESCO/BMUV International Postgraduate Course on Environmental Management for Developing Countries (EM49)
Duration: January 08, 2026 – July 24, 20263 (on-site in Dresden)
Application period: March 18, 2025 – April 23, 2025

► Download the description of the upcoming courses here: UNEP-UNESCO_BMUV-Postgraduate-Courses_2025-26.pdf
 

Alumni seminar: Nature-Based Solutions: Enhancing the Water-Food-Biodiversity Nexus
Duration: November 26, 2025 – December 10, 2025 (on-site in Dresden)
Application period: March 11, 2025 – April 14, 2025

READ MORE HERE FIRST BEFORE APPLYING

The COLOCAL project welcomes you to apply to its 2025 scholarship program for the Climate Change & Development MSc. at the Department of Environmental Science and Management, Independent University Bangladesh (IUB). 

What you need to know:

  • The scholarship will cover full tuition fees for the one-year master’s program and research expenses
  • Research focus must be locally-led adaptation in coastal Bangladesh
  • Selected candidates must be willing to take part in national and local workshops as resource persons after thesis completion

Eligibility Criteria:

  • Recent graduate with a 4-year undergraduate degree from any university
  • Early career professionals working in the environment or the development sector (NGOs, government organizations, international organizations, research firms, etc.)
  • Scholarship is for Bangladeshi nationals only
  • Undergraduate CGPA has to be 2.5 or above

APPLY HERE

Free Islamic building photo

BACKGROUND
Muslim communities in many developing countries that are not members
of IsDB generally lag behind in education, especially in technical education
and professional specialization. This is an obstacle that must be overcome
if the communities are to improve their socioeconomic conditions, preserve
their cultural and religious identities and make meaningful contributions to
the development of their countries.
To respond to their development needs, IsDB established the Scholarship
Program for Muslim Communities (SPMC) which was launched in 1983 with
53 students from India, Sri Lanka and Kenya.

ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS
The program is intended to be for academically meritorious but financially needy Muslim students with a strong desire to engage in social services and community development. They must also be able to
meet the following eligibility criteria:
In need of financial assistance without which study may have to stop
Maximum age of 24 years.
Not an IsDB staff member or Executive Director, his/her alternate, and/or staff of any type of appointment (including temporary and consultant) of the IsDB Group nor a close relative by blood or adoption, with the term “close relative” defined as mother, father, sister, half-sister, brother, half-brother, son,
daughter, aunt, uncle, niece, or nephew.
Completed senior secondary education (or the equivalent of approximately 12 years of education) with good grades in major science subjects.
Provided evidence of language proficiency in the university medium of instruction as relevant. The language proficiency must be supported by a document or certificate, e.g., for English, by a recognized language certificate such as TOEFL or IELTS or by having passed the required level test conducted such as by the British Council or equivalent system in French or other languages.
Provided certified English or French translation of all documents in case they are initially in other languages.
Be medically fit and willing to undergo medical examination after selection.
Having secured admission in one of the disciplines covered under the program at a recognized college or university in their own country is desirable.
Not living in a country other than his/her home country.
Not a beneficiary.
NOTES:
The IsDB scholarship may only supplement, and shall not duplicate, any other source of financial support the applicant might have. If the applicant is awarded a scholarship, he/she must inform IsDB at that time if he/she has other sources of scholarship funding.
Sending the application or getting admission by the academic institution does not mean that the applicant has been accepted for a scholarship. Accordingly, the applicant should not take any action concerning his/ her current employment or otherwise until notified by IsDB of having been awarded a
scholarship.
Scholarship Programs
ENGLISH
https://www.isdb.org/scholarships-backup/scholarship-programs

Search
https://www.isdb.org/
scholarships-backup/
scholarship-programs


NOTE: READ MORE HERE FIRST BEFORE APPLYING