35 Common Scholarship Interview Questions (with Answers) – 2024
May 24, 2024
If you鈥檙e applying to college, you undoubtedly know that tuition prices have only been rising in recent years. Between moving, room and board, and student fees, attending college can cost a small fortune![i] As such, scholarships are one way that you can mitigate some of the costs of attending college.[ii] There are several types of scholarships that you can find, including merit-based scholarships, fellowships, leadership scholarships, community and local scholarships, identity-based scholarships, professional scholarships, and competitive scholarships.[iii] Each will have different requirements and strategies for qualification: some are automatically granted by financial need, test scores, or place of residence. Some will require scholarship essays, recommendation letters, or lengthy application forms. And finally, many of the most competitive scholarships require an additional step: an interview. These will include many common scholarship interview questions, and in this article, we鈥檒l detail how you can best prepare to answer these questions.
Preparing for How to Answer Scholarship Interview Questions
There is no single correct way to answer scholarship interview questions, but before you begin, make sure you鈥檙e following these five guidelines:
Have confidence in yourself
If you鈥檝e made it to an interview, it means that the scholarship decisions committee has already decided you are a promising candidate for the award, and that your application has beat out other applicants鈥 submissions. Studies have actually shown that interviewees who self-promote tend to perform better in interviews.[iv] But even if you鈥檙e not naturally self-assured, take heart! The following tips on how to answer scholarship interview questions can provide a general framework for success and help you practice before your upcoming interviews.[v]
Practice makes perfect
With a parent, friend, school or application counselor, or other trusted advisor, spend time going over these scholarship interview questions and your potential responses. Remember that you want your responses to seem natural (not like you鈥檝e memorized them or are performing them!).[vi]
Do your research
Learn everything you can about the scholarship to which you鈥檝e applied. Does the scholarship have a particular mission statement? Who are some previous scholarship winners and what made them stand out? What precise amounts are being given away by this scholarship? This is also a good moment to think about 鈥渇it.鈥 Specifically, based on the criteria for this scholarship鈥檚 winners, why are you the best candidate to receive this grant?
Common Scholarship Interview Questions (Continued)
Be concise
Your interview time may be very short, and you want to provide as much information about yourself as possible with the timeframe you have. During rehearsals, try the 鈥淏ottom Line Up Front鈥 () strategy as you craft your responses to all of these scholarship interview questions.
Don鈥檛 panic 鈥 pivot
You may be wondering, 鈥淲hat happens if I can鈥檛 answer a question or haven鈥檛 practiced it?鈥 Never fear! The good news is that most scholarship interview questions can be sorted into general categories by similar topics, with comparable strategies on how to answer each question within a category. For instance, if you practiced answering, 鈥淭ell us about one of your personal achievements,鈥 but the interviewer asks, 鈥淲hat are some of your biggest accomplishments?鈥 you should be able to pivot fairly quickly and answer the actual question with the same strategy you practiced for a different question. Below, we鈥檝e split the top 35 common scholarship interview questions into eight categories for just this reason!
For each category of scholarship interview questions below, we鈥檝e provided a few strategies for brainstorming robust answers. Make sure you can provide answers and examples for each individual question, but even more importantly, remember the successful moves that accompany each question category. Good luck!
Category 1: Very Open 鈥淎bout Me鈥 Scholarship Interview Questions
1) Tell us about yourself.
2) Describe yourself in three words. / How would you describe yourself?
3) What is something unique about you? / What is something about you that no one else knows?
4) Tell us a few things about yourself that didn鈥檛 appear in your application materials.
You鈥檙e almost guaranteed to get one of these hyper-general interview questions as your interviewer begins questioning you. These questions may take the longest to prepare for because they are so open-ended. As you prepare, remember the three C鈥檚: concision, color, and confidence.
- Concision: It can be soooo tempting to keep on answering this type of question for hours. Don鈥檛! Instead, have some particular examples or biographical details ironed out, polished, and ready to list quickly and concisely. These can be facts about your work or school experience, your cultural background, and any passions or extracurriculars that are important to you. Another quick way to think of a list might be 鈥減ast, present, and future.鈥 Where have you been? What are you up to now? And where would you like to see yourself in the future?
- Color: Provide rich details that make you stand out as a unique candidate. 鈥淚 really like debate,鈥 isn鈥檛 nearly as vivid as, 鈥淚鈥檝e been the president of my high school debate team for two years, and I believe this experience has fostered within me the desire to study pre-law.鈥
- Confidence: General opening questions aren鈥檛 a great moment to paint yourself in a negative light. Unless you鈥檝e overcome a major trauma or are part of a marginalized community (more on this below), focus on achievements, milestones, and big-picture aspirations.
Category 2: More Specific 鈥淎bout Me鈥 Scholarship Interview Questions
5) Who has been a role model for you? Who do you look up to?
6) What is your favorite book and why?
7) What subject is your favorite in school?
8) What is a meaningful experience or class you鈥檝e had in school?
9) What is something important you鈥檇 like us to know about your background?
These questions are moments to focus on the details. Again, prepare by making lists of facts about yourself that are memorable, flattering, and well-considered. As you brainstorm for this category, remember: make connections and choose special examples.
Choose examples that can make connections
For instance, your ultimate favorite book of all time might actually be Twilight. And if that鈥檚 a crucial part of your core identity, we won鈥檛 tell you to lie about it. But if Jane Eyre is in your top five and you plan on minoring in gender studies, Jane Eyre might be the better example to provide connections between who you are as a person and who you hope to be, once you鈥檝e been granted this scholarship.
Choose special examples
These examples should be unique to you and should make you a memorable candidate. Don鈥檛 just say that Amelia Earhart is your role model. Say that Amelia Earhart is your role model because you want to be an aerospace engineer and you got your pilot鈥檚 license as soon as you turned seventeen.
Category 3: Scholarship-Specific Scholarship Interview Questions
10) Why do you deserve this scholarship?
11) Why did you choose this school or program?
12) Why did you choose to apply for this scholarship?
13) Why should you be the one to receive this scholarship?
You will most likely receive a question about the scholarship itself and why you deserve it. This is the moment to do your research! Make sure you know the exact amount of the scholarship, the selection criteria for recipients, previous winners and their accolades (if possible), and the mission of the scholarship. After learning all of this, prepare for these questions by focusing on fit and promise.
First, fit
What about this scholarship aligns with you as a candidate, in terms of your past, present, and / or future? It鈥檚 okay to use direct language from the scholarship description to describe why you are a perfect match. For instance, if you鈥檙e applying for an Ignatian scholarship from a foundation whose motto is 鈥淢en and women for others,鈥 this could be an excellent moment to explain how you鈥檝e been a 鈥渕an or woman for others鈥 in your specific public service, work, volunteerism, etc.
Next, promise
Tell the interviewer how you will put their scholarship to use in the best way possible. Think about the future here. Why are you the best candidate for this grant, based on your future goals and aspirations?
Category 4: Positive Scholarship Interview Questions
14) What is your greatest strength?
15) What activities are you involved in?
16) Tell us about one of your personal achievements.
17) What are your biggest accomplishments?
18) When have you demonstrated leadership skills? / Tell me about your leadership experience.
This is your moment to shine! For positive questions like these, prepare your answers with lists, details, expansion, and passion.
- First, lists. Similar to the general 鈥渁bout me鈥 questions above, it鈥檚 good to have a ready-made list of extracurriculars and achievements that you can quickly and concisely rattle off to the interviewer.
- Second, details. Choose a short story or deeper example of your accomplishments that you can use to illustrate your answer to one or more of these questions.
- Next, expansion. Are there items on your CV or r茅sum茅 that you鈥檇 like to explain more fully? This is your opportunity to do so!
- Finally, passion. Choose examples that you鈥檙e genuinely proud of, particularly those that align with the mission of the scholarship.
Category 5: Challenge and Adversity Scholarship Interview Questions
19) What is your greatest weakness?
20) Tell us about a mistake you鈥檝e made in the past.
21) Tell us about your biggest regret.
22) What does 鈥渇ailure鈥 mean to you?
23) Tell us about an experience wherein you overcame adversity.
As you prepare to answer 鈥渃hallenge and adversity鈥 questions, two important words to remember are growth and emotion.
- First, growth. After you detail the challenge or adversity you鈥檝e faced, be sure to describe how you learned from or best dealt with this particular problem (even if the interviewer doesn鈥檛 ask, it鈥檚 important to stay positive!). For instance, 鈥淲hen it comes to my schoolwork I can be controlling. In past group projects, I鈥檝e tended to take over and do most of the work. One way I鈥檝e tried to fix this is by working on clearly delegating responsibilities and seeking specific feedback from group members. These techniques allow me to maintain that sense of control but also necessitate that I鈥檓 interacting with group members, stepping back from their contributions, and not completing projects in ways that they may not want.鈥
- Next, emotion. You don鈥檛 need to cry during your interview, but if you鈥檙e going to share about a legitimate trauma or marginalization you鈥檝e experienced, it鈥檚 okay to provide some detail: this kind of heartfelt illustration can paint a vivid picture for your interviewer and provoke an emotional and empathetic response.
Category 6: Scholarship Interview Questions About Your Personal Philosophies and Behaviors
24) What does your work process look like?
25) What motivates you?
26) What does an ideal college or university look like to you? Why?
27) How do you manage stress?
For this category of scholarship interview questions, focus on language and connections.
- Language can be key. While you shouldn鈥檛 directly copy, it doesn鈥檛 hurt to look up language from the school or scholarship to which you鈥檝e applied to see if any of their philosophies match your own.
- Connections are also a good way to anchor these answers. For questions about motivation, work, and stress management, make connections between strategies (鈥淚鈥檓 diligent in my work, habitually completing small, manageable portions of large tasks every day鈥) and illustrative goals (鈥渁nd that鈥檚 how I wrote my first book and became the youngest-ever winner of the Houston Novelists Competition last September鈥).
Category 7: Scholarship Interview Questions that Look Toward the Future
28) What is your dream job?
29) What are your career goals?
30) How will this scholarship help you reach your goals?
31) Where do you see yourself in 5 years? How about 10?
32) How did you or will you choose your major?
33) How will you utilize this scholarship?
The most important move you can make with this category of question is to answer with specificity.
Use specificity
Especially in terms of the scholarship, school, or program you鈥檙e hoping to win or attend, and the academic and career goals you hold. It鈥檚 not enough to simply say, 鈥淚鈥檒l use this scholarship to attend X university.鈥 Explain your major and minor aspirations, courses you hope to take, internships you鈥檒l apply for, your future career, and what timeline you鈥檇 like set for yourself over the next few years. Providing this specificity will tell your interviewer that you鈥檙e serious about the work you intend to do.
Category 8: Closing Scholarship Interview Questions
34) What questions do you have?
35) Is there anything else you want to add?
There are only a few notes for this type of closing question:
Ask a question
Even if you don鈥檛 really have any questions, it鈥檚 a good idea to ask one or two, as this demonstrates your eagerness about the scholarship. Are there elements of the award process you don鈥檛 understand? Do you have questions about previous winners and their accomplishments? Are you curious about the next steps in the selection process?
Don鈥檛 remain silent
Do you have any information you want the interviewers to know that didn鈥檛 yet come up? Now is the time to share it. Was there a scholarship interview question you prepared for that wasn鈥檛 asked at all? This is also an excellent moment to thank the interviewer for their time, to let them know you are available for further questions, and that you look forward to hearing back from them.
One more question鈥 do you feel ready now? With a little practice, you certainly should! Good luck!
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How to Answer 35 Common Scholarship Interview Questions – Works Cited
[i] Hanson, Melanie. 鈥淐ollege Tuition Inflation Rate,鈥 Education Data Initiative. 13 August 2023.
[ii] Snider, Susannah. 鈥淲ays to Save Money in College,鈥 U.S. News & World Report. 20 August 2019.
[iii] Kerr, Emma and Sarah Atwood. 鈥13 Things to Know About Merit Aid Scholarships.鈥 U.S. News & World Report. 26 April 2023.
[iv] Paulhus, Delroy L., Bryce G. Westlake, Stryker S. Calvez, P.D. Harms. 鈥淪elf-presentation style in job interviews: the role of personality and culture,鈥 Journal of Applied Social Psychology. 10 September 2013.
[v] Carl, Helen. 鈥淣onverbal Communication during the Employment Interview,鈥 the ABCA Bulletin, Vol. 43, Issue 4, December 1980.
[vi] Hansen, Katharine, Gary C. Oliphant, Becky J. Oliphant, Randall S. Hansen. 鈥淏est Practices in Preparing Students for Mock Interviews,鈥 Business and Professional Communication Quarterly, Vol. 72, Issue 3, 20 May, 2009.