Scholarship programmes represent a significant proportion of philanthropic giving — from small community awards to large national programmes worth millions annually. Managing them well requires attention to every stage: application design, selection, payment administration, recipient support, and impact measurement. This guide covers the key elements of an effective scholarship programme.
Scholarships vary significantly in scope and design:
Many scholarships combine criteria — a need-based scholarship that also considers community involvement, for example. Design choices about criteria flow through every subsequent stage of programme management.
Before launching a scholarship programme, funders need to answer several design questions.
Who are we trying to support?
Clear eligibility criteria serve two purposes: they help the right people apply, and they help you make consistent decisions. Be specific about:
- Study level (secondary, undergraduate, postgraduate)
- Field of study (unrestricted, or specific disciplines)
- Institutional eligibility (any institution, or specific providers)
- Geographic criteria (national, regional, community)
- Identity or background criteria (if the scholarship targets specific groups)
What is the value of the scholarship?
This affects who applies. A $1,000 scholarship helps with textbooks. A $10,000 scholarship can materially affect whether someone can study. Calibrate the award value to the impact you want to have.
What are the selection criteria?
Merit-based selection requires clear, observable criteria. Academic achievement is the most common, but scholarships increasingly incorporate:
- Community contribution and leadership
- Demonstrated resilience or overcoming adversity
- Alignment with the funder's values or mission
- Career intentions and potential impact
Document your criteria clearly and ensure assessors apply them consistently.
How many scholarships will you award?
A single large scholarship has more impact per recipient but a smaller footprint. Multiple smaller scholarships reach more people. Some programmes award both — a primary scholarship and runner-up awards.
Application form
Application forms for scholarships should collect what you need to assess — no more. Common elements:
- Personal statement or covering letter
- Academic transcript or results
- Financial information (for need-based scholarships)
- References (usually one or two)
- Supporting documentation (evidence of community involvement, etc.)
Keep the form proportionate to the award value. A $1,500 community scholarship shouldn't require a 20-page application.
References
References for scholarship applications typically come from teachers, lecturers, coaches, or community leaders. Guidance to referees should be specific: what are you asking them to address? A vague request for "a character reference" is less useful than asking referees to comment on specific qualities (academic engagement, community contribution, resilience).
Accessibility
Consider who might not apply because the process is difficult. Applications available only in English exclude non-English-speaking communities. Online-only applications exclude people with limited internet access. Long word limits disadvantage applicants who aren't strong writers. Proportionate accessibility measures — shorter applications, plain language guidance, support for applicants — widen the pool.
Shortlisting
For competitive scholarships with many applications, shortlisting usually involves a first-pass review against minimum eligibility criteria, followed by a scoring round to identify the strongest candidates.
Assessment panels
Selection panels should include members with relevant expertise, representatives of communities the scholarship is meant to serve, and an appropriate number of members to balance individual judgment (typically 3-5). Train panel members on the criteria and on managing unconscious bias.
Conflict of interest
Panel members who know applicants personally should declare that conflict and recuse themselves from assessing those applications. A clear conflict of interest policy is essential for maintaining public confidence in the selection process.
Interviews
Some scholarships include interviews in the selection process, particularly where personal qualities (leadership, communication, community orientation) are important criteria. Interviews add to the rigour of selection but also the complexity of administration — and can disadvantage applicants who are less confident in formal settings.
Decision and notification
Make decisions within the timeframe you communicated to applicants. Notify successful applicants first (by phone for high-value scholarships), then notify unsuccessful applicants by email. For significant scholarships, offer brief feedback to unsuccessful applicants who request it.
Scholarship payments require attention to detail to avoid disruption for recipients.
Payment methods
Options include:
- Direct payment to the recipient
- Payment to the educational institution (particularly for tuition fees)
- Instalment payments across the year or across multiple years
For multi-year scholarships, payment in subsequent years is usually conditional on the recipient meeting continued eligibility (remaining enrolled, maintaining grades, etc.).
Verification
Before making payments, verify that recipients have enrolled as stated. Require a copy of enrolment confirmation. For ongoing scholarships, annual re-enrolment verification is standard.
Tax considerations
Scholarship payments may or may not be taxable income for recipients, depending on the payment structure and the recipient's circumstances. Take advice on the tax treatment of your specific scholarship design and communicate clearly to recipients.
High-performing scholarship programmes don't just write cheques — they invest in the success of scholarship recipients.
Welcome and orientation
A welcome event or communication package at the start of scholarship recipients' studies sets the tone. Include: who to contact if they have questions, any additional support available, the funder's interest in their progress.
Check-ins
Annual check-ins with recipients — a brief call or a short progress form — keep the funder informed and signal genuine interest in the recipient's journey. Some scholarships include mentoring or networking opportunities.
Crisis support
Life circumstances change. Recipients who experience financial crisis, health issues, or family disruption mid-scholarship may need flexibility in payment or conditions. Have a clear policy for how to handle exceptional circumstances.
How do you know your scholarship programme is working?
Collect this data systematically — at minimum, through an annual survey and a completion follow-up — and use it to improve the programme over time.
Tahua's grants management platform supports scholarship programme management with configurable application forms, selection panel workflows, multi-year payment tracking, and the reporting tools that help funders measure scholarship impact.