It Does Grow on Trees:
A Scholarship Resource Guide
Focus your search. Although there is merit to competing for general
scholarships, it's to your advantage to tailor your search to what
makes you unique. Check out these opportunities.
CalCPA member donations annually fuel more than
$300,000 toward future scholarships for California college and
university students. View local CalCPA chapter scholarship opportunities.
CalCPA Accounting Education Scholarship The scholarship fund administered at the state level is for students pursuing a Masters degree in Accountancy or Taxation. Applicants are not eligible if they are already licensed as a CPA in any state OR have completed all the educational requirements for Pathway 2 licensure in California.
Download application and program guidelines. 
Deadline: October 31, 2012
Doctoral Scholarship Program The California
Society of CPAs has re-established this program for individuals
pursuing a Ph.D. in Accounting. The scholarship is being made available
to help address the current and projected shortfall in Accounting
Department faculty at California colleges and universities. One
requirement of the scholarship recipient will be to join the faculty of
a four-year college or university located in California for a period of
at least three years.
The scholarship will be awarded to three doctoral candidates per year to receive a maximum of up to $10,000 per
year with a possible renewal of three years total. If the requirement
of teaching in a California school is not met, the amount of
scholarship received will convert to a loan for repayment. Download the application and program guidelines.
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Deadline: April 15, 2012.
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
The AICPA offers the following scholarships for students interested in accounting and business:
- AICPA/Accountemps Student Scholarship
– a joint program with Accountemps, awarding five $2,500 scholarships
to students pursuing a degree in accounting, finance or information
systems. Deadline: April 1, 2012
- John L. Carey Scholarship
– $5,000 scholarships for a minimum of 10 liberal arts or other
non-business related degree holders preparing to enter a graduate
accounting program. Deadline: April 1, 2012
- AICPA Scholarship for Minority Accounting Students – Financial awards of up to $5,000 for undergraduate and graduate minority accounting students. Deadline: April 1, 2012
- AICPA Fellowship for Minority Doctoral Students
– Up to $12,000 for nearly 20 full-time minority doctoral students to
increase the number of accounting educators who are also CPAs. Deadline: April 1, 2012
Business and Accounting Majors
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants offers several scholarships of its own, and a substantial list of scholarships sponsored by other organizations.
Beta Alpha Psi scholarships range from $250 to $1,000, with an extensive list of other available scholarships.
The National Society of Accountants awards dozens of scholarships each year.
The Government Finance Officers Association offers scholarships ranging from $2,000 to $10,000.
The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners annually awards 15 scholarships of $1,000 each.
Minorities
Millions of scholarship dollars are available to ethnic minorities
annually, and many are geared toward students majoring in business or
accounting.
AICPA scholarships for minority accounting students offer awards ranging from $1,500 to $5,000.
The National Association of Black Accountants has offered more than 40 national scholarships annually ranging from $1,000 to $6,000 and offers a special “Scholars Retreat.”
The Association of Latino Professionals in Finance and Accounting
grants awards based on academic achievement, financial need and
community involvement and has a total of $150,000 in scholarships
available. Individual awards range from $1,250 to $5,000.
The Latino Business Professionals group has a scholarship program in place for high school students looking to attend school in northern California.
Women
During the past 50 years, women have changed the face of accounting.
Today, approximately 60 percent of new accounting graduates are women.
This represents a dramatic increase compared with 1950, when there were
only 600 female CPAs nationwide. Several scholarship opportunities
await women interested in pursuing a career in accounting.
The American Society of Women Accountants
awards several need-based scholarships for accounting students at a
regional level. Call (800) 326-2163 to find the chapter nearest you.
ASWA’s Educational Foundation for Women in Accounting grants awards ranging from $1,000 to $16,000. For details, call (610) 407-9229.
Scholarship Searches
The following are sites that will help you search for general
scholarship opportunities at no cost. While they are not as focused as
some of the above scholarship listings, they draw on large databases
with large amounts of money to offer.
Collegeboard.com
is a search engine pulling from a database of 2,300 sources of college
funding, totaling nearly $3 billion in aid. The site will require you
to fill out a questionnaire to find the scholarship that matches your
needs. The more information you can provide, the better.
Collegeanswer.com
boasts a scholarship database that contains more than 2.4 million
scholarships worth more than $15 billion. The service lets you store
your information on the site so you can return to your search at any
time.
Educationcorner.com provides a comprehensive directory of scholarships, grants and fellowships offered by educational institutions, nonprofit organizations, foundations and interest groups from throughout the nation.
Scholarships.com
is associated with the National Scholarship Providers Association,
http://scholarshipproviders.org, and allows you to sort your results by
deadline, dollar amount or relevancy. The site’s scholarship database
is 3,000 sources strong, offering a total of $3 billion.
Other free, scholarship-focused internet search services include:
Scholarship opportunities come and go. Many scholarships are not
offered every year and, in fact, may be offered only once. So, it’s
best to go to the people in the know: your high school counselor,
college or university’s financial aid office or department adviser for
your major. Tapping into these resources first will give you an edge on
accurate scholarship information—as well as direct you to those
scholarships that you’re most likely to be interested in. Good luck!