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Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

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Page 1: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees

(From Camps to Campus)

A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public

Universities

Page 2: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

The Institute of International Education (IIE) has developed several programs inresponse to the higher education emergency in Syria, providing assistance tomore than 400 Syrian faculty and university students:• Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees in Jordan.• IIE Emergency Student Fund (ESF) for Syrian Students on U.S. Campuses.• IIE Scholar Rescue Fund (IIE-SRF) fellowships for close to 125 Syrian

academics to continue their academic work outside Syria.• Original research focused on increasing Syrian refugee access to higher

education in Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey. • IIE Syria Consortium for Higher Education in Crisis, which engages

universities and other partners around the world to provide scholarships to Syrian students (To date, the Consortium has provided scholarship funding to over 150 Syrian students).

The Institute of International Education’s Response to the Syrian Crisis

Page 3: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

The original idea was to help refugee students access highereducation, to get university degrees, with the following eligibilitycriteria:• Reside within refugee camps in Jordan; hence the name “From

Camps to Campus”.• Students’ higher education has been interrupted, due to the

crisis in their country.• Completed at least two years of study, in Syria or elsewhere.• Studying in fields that are important to refugee response within

camps, and rebuilding Syria.

Original Idea

Page 4: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

• Difficulties in securing exit permits for refugee students to leave the camps.

• Camp students’ lack of documentation (university transcripts, expired passports, lack of passports and IDs).

• Different higher education system in Syrian universities, which negatively affected credit transfer to Jordanian universities.

• Difficulties and delays in communicating with some governmental entities, who were relied on to facilitate the process.

Challenges Faced

Page 5: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

• Due to faced challenges and tremendous need, focus shifted to urban refugee students:– already enrolled in Jordanian public universities – at risk of dropping out – in good academic standing.

• These students are most likely to graduate, because they have already overcome enrollment barriers.

• This new idea is modeled on IIE’s ESF.

New Model

Page 6: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

Qualifications:• Currently enrolled in Jordanian public universities.• Registered as refugees with UNHCR. • Have completed at least three semesters in Syria, Jordan, or another

country.• Plan to major in fields useful to the Syrian refugee community, such

as education, social work, and psychology. • Have a proven track record of community service and committed to

community service upon completion of a university degree.• Demonstrate financial need.

Application

Page 7: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

• Of 140 applicants, 6 students were selected (3 male and 3 female students), who are:– Facing financial hardships, and at risk of dropping out.– With high GPAs. – Very close to graduation (have four or less semesters left).

• As of September 2015, these six students were granted emergency funds/scholarships.

• We plan to offer funds for disadvantaged Jordanian students.

Selection

Page 8: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

• Support the host community.• Need for university support and buy-in. • Need to work closer with partner universities, so they

are aware of the project, support the idea, and offer reduced fees (as opposed to international fees).

• Need for flexibility: mold the idea based on the situation

Best Practices/Lessons Learned

Page 9: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

Next Steps

• Pilot project: testing a model.• Need to expand this model to support more

eligible students, who were declined due to limited funds.

• Easy model for donors to implement (simple and effective).

Page 10: Emergency Student Fund for Syrian Refugees (From Camps to Campus) A Pilot Scholarship Project for Syrian Refugees to Study at Jordanian Public Universities

Q&A / Thank You!

Celine TaminianSpecial Advisor Institute of International Education (IIE)[email protected]