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Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation

In 1949, the Carnegie Corporation granted Princeton $100,000 to extend its fellowship program nationwide. Now called the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Program—in honor of Princeton’s best-known leader and academic innovator—the effort remained small until 1957. In that year the Ford Foundation granted $24.5 million to support 1,000 fellowships each year for five years, and the program became a new independent nonprofit, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. Over the subsequent decade and a half, the Foundation selected and supported more than 15,000 Woodrow Wilson Fellows. These Fellows became intellectual leaders not only within the academy, but also in government, the corporate world, and the nonprofit sector. Today, they include 14 Nobel Laureates, 35 MacArthur Fellows, 16 Pulitzer Prize winners, and hundreds of other distinguished individuals—as well as everyday classroom heroes. As new educational opportunities opened to women and people of color in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation broadened its commitment to opportunities in higher education for the best students from all walks of life. New programs of the era included the Martin Luther King Fellowships, which prepared African-American veterans for public service careers, the Woodrow Wilson Women’s Studies Dissertation Fellowship, the first and still the only national program supporting young scholars in gender studies. In recent years, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation has continued to cultivate talented emerging leaders for both the academy and public service, administering programs like the Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs 2007 Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs FellowsFellowships, the Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships, and the Mellon-Mays Undergraduate Fellows (MMUF) Dissertation Grants and Travel/Research Grants.

Relationships Interlocks Giving Data
Orgs with Common People
Leadership and staff of Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation also have positions in these orgs
OrgCommon People
Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education David Haselkorn
College Board Jessie Woolley-Wilson
Lesley University David Haselkorn
John Reese Matthew Pittinsky
Parchment, Inc. Matthew Pittinsky
Benton & Bowles, Inc. Chester Bowles
Franklin D. Roosevelt Foundation Chester Bowles
High Meadows Institute Carl Ferenbach III
2U John S Katzman
Leapfrog Online Jessie Woolley-Wilson
DreamBox Learning Jessie Woolley-Wilson
Fullbridge Program John S Katzman
National Association of Independent Schools John S Katzman
Renaissance Learning Inc. John S Katzman
StoryCorps Jane Phillips Donaldson
Camelot Schools Jessie Woolley-Wilson
Recruiting New Teachers, Inc. David Haselkorn
iNACOL Jessie Woolley-Wilson
Civil War Trust Walter W Buckley Jr
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards David Haselkorn
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Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation
Updated almost 5 years ago

Basic Info

Types Organization, Philanthropy
Start date 1949
Website http://woodrow.org/about/mission/

Source Links

11 documents :: see all
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