Jefferson Science Fellowship
Administered by U.S. National Academies · Established 2003
Program overview
Jefferson Science Fellowship is administered by U.S. National Academies and is widely regarded as one of the more selective entry points into the world of STEM & Engineering-aligned international opportunities. The programme operates as a Fellowships for accomplished professionals roughly five to fifteen years into their careers, with placements concentrated in United States and a small number of partner sites.
A US fellowship that sends tenured American scientists and engineers into the U.S. State Department for a year as policy advisors.
A US fellowship that sends tenured American scientists and engineers into the U.S. State Department for a year as policy advisors.
Most editions of Jefferson Science Fellowship run for 1 year. The programme combines an academic or institutional placement with structured cohort activities — orientations, mid-year convenings, and (in many cases) a closing symposium where outgoing fellows present their work to incoming peers. The cohort dimension is, in the words of repeated reader correspondence to FellowshipDesk, the part that ends up mattering most: the year produces a peer network whose value compounds well beyond the duration of the formal award.
Funding under the programme is described by the sponsor as $50,000 stipend, a level that is competitive with comparable Fellowships in the same field and host region. The numerical headline does not always tell the full story: in our experience the value of Jefferson Science Fellowship is most visible in the opportunity cost it removes — recipients are able to take the year as a fully funded one rather than piecing together loans, side work, and partial grants.
Key facts at a glance
- Sponsor
- U.S. National Academies
- Founded
- 2003
- Host
- United States
- Award
- $50,000 stipend
- Duration
- 1 year
- Cycle
- October
How three editorial bureaus map the global landscape of funded postgraduate opportunity, with a focus on cross-border programs like Jefferson Science Fellowship.
Who can apply
Eligibility for Jefferson Science Fellowship is defined by U.S. National Academies and is framed primarily around citizenship, career stage, and field. The programme is open to applicants who hold citizenship of United States, who are within the cohort window for accomplished professionals roughly five to fifteen years into their careers, and whose work or study sits clearly within the editorial scope of STEM & Engineering.
Beyond those formal lines, the selection committee places considerable weight on the applicant's record of demonstrated commitment to the issue area. Successful candidates typically arrive with a clearly articulated long-term project — a research question, a policy intervention, a creative body of work — to which the funded year is a credible next chapter.
- Citizens or long-term residents of United States
- Accomplished professionals roughly five to fifteen years into their careers
- Demonstrated commitment to STEM & Engineering work, evidenced by publications, projects, or professional placements
- Strong academic record at the appropriate level for Mid-Career Professionals applicants
- Language proficiency adequate for the host environment in United States
- Two or three confidential references from academics, employers, or senior collaborators
What the funding covers
What the funding covers under Jefferson Science Fellowship varies modestly from one cohort to the next, but the headline level — $50,000 stipend — is set by U.S. National Academies and has been broadly stable in recent editions. In addition to the headline benefit, the programme typically covers programme-related travel, visa support, and a modest research or activity budget for the duration of the placement.
Recipients are usually responsible for arranging accommodation in the host city, although in many cases the host institution will offer either subsidised housing or a list of pre-vetted options. The programme does not generally fund dependents, although a number of comparable awards in the same family have introduced family supplements in recent years and applicants are encouraged to ask the sponsor directly about the most current schedule.
- $50,000 stipend
- Programme-related international travel to and from the host site
- Visa application costs and immigration support where required
- A research, materials, or activity budget appropriate to the placement
- Health insurance for the duration of the award
- Access to the alumni network and convenings during and after the funded year
A working spreadsheet from the FellowshipDesk research desk showing real take-home values of stipends like the one offered by U.S. National Academies, normalised against city-level living costs.
How to apply
Applications for Jefferson Science Fellowship open annually, with the principal deadline falling around October. The application is administered by U.S. National Academies and is typically submitted through the sponsor's central portal. We recommend beginning preparations at least three to four months before the deadline — the most common reason competitive candidates are unsuccessful is not the merit of their underlying work but the time pressure under which the application materials are assembled.
Applicants should expect to submit a personal statement, a project proposal, an academic CV, and confidential references. Most editions of the programme also require evidence of language proficiency adequate for the host environment, and shortlisted candidates are typically invited to an interview — increasingly conducted by video — in the second half of the cycle.
- Read the most recent official call for applications and confirm eligibility against the published criteria
- Identify and approach two or three referees at least eight weeks before the deadline
- Draft the personal statement and project proposal, taking time for at least two rounds of substantive feedback
- Assemble supporting documents: academic transcripts, language certificates, CV, and any required portfolio
- Submit the complete application via the sponsor's portal before October
- If shortlisted, prepare for the interview by re-reading the proposal aloud and rehearsing answers to the most predictable questions
Selection process
Selection for Jefferson Science Fellowship proceeds in two or three rounds. An initial editorial sift — conducted by programme staff at U.S. National Academies — produces a long list of competitive candidates whose materials are then read by an external panel drawn from the relevant fields. Shortlisted candidates are invited to an interview, after which final awards are made.
Past selectors have written publicly about the qualities they look for. The shortest summary is that the panel is looking for evidence of three things: clarity of intellectual project, demonstrated capacity to carry it out, and a credible account of why the funded year — at this host, in this network — is the right next step. Candidates who can answer the third question crisply are at a meaningful advantage.
About the sponsoring organisation
U.S. National Academies was founded in 2003 and is the organisation responsible for designing, funding, and administering Jefferson Science Fellowship. It operates within the broader ecosystem of internationally-minded Fellowships for STEM & Engineering, and is well-known to graduate offices, scholarship advisors, and alumni networks worldwide.
The organisation publishes annual reports describing the size of the cohort, the geographic distribution of awardees, and the long-term trajectory of past recipients. Readers planning an application are encouraged to read the most recent annual report alongside the formal call: it is often the most candid description available of what the sponsor is looking for in a given cycle.
FellowshipDesk maintains an editorial relationship with the sponsor that is, by policy, at arm's length. We do not accept payment from sponsors to alter listings, and we publish corrections promptly when readers identify factual errors. If you have applied to Jefferson Science Fellowship in a recent cycle and would like to share your experience with readers in confidence, please write to the editorial desk.
How the modern fellowship system — the lineage that includes Jefferson Science Fellowship — was assembled from 1945 onward, told through five generational cohorts.
Editorial notes
FellowshipDesk maintains Jefferson Science Fellowship as part of our editorial directory of 363 international opportunities. The page is curated from the official program documentation, the sponsoring organisation's annual reports, and reader correspondence from past recipients. It is reviewed periodically and updated as application cycles change.
Always confirm the latest deadlines, eligibility, and funding conditions on the official program website before submitting an application — programs occasionally adjust eligibility, host institutions, or geographic scope between editions, and timing can shift by several weeks from one year to the next.
Last reviewed: 2026-04-08. Suggest a correction: contact the editorial desk.