The School of Social Work offers scholarships for both Fall and Spring semesters depending on available funding.
Please check your student email on a regular basis for scholarship announcements.

For other scholarship information, please contact the Financial Aid Office.

Prior to applying for scholarships, review the detailed information about each scholarship located below.

Benefactors

Santos H. Hernández, PhD, was Dean of the UT Arlington School of Social Work from 1998 to 2008. Dr. Hernández established this scholarship fund as a tribute to his wife Carolyn C. Hernández, who as a single parent of a two-year-old, went back to school and completed her undergraduate and then her master’s degree while working full-time to support her daughter and assist her aging parents, all the while being the only member of her immediate family to attend college.

Basic Requirements

BSW, MSW, and PhD Students

Preferred Qualifications

Preference given to full-time or part-time Social Work students who

  • Are first generation college students,
  • Are single parents, or
  • Have overcome personal obstacles in pursuit of their educational goals.
  • Consideration also given to students who had an interruption in their educational careers.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for Fall and Spring semester.

To apply for the Hernandez Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Benefactors

Dr. M. Coleen Shannon was an expert on biofeedback in stress reduction and management, and operated a biofeedback laboratory in GSSW facilities. This scholarship was established in 2002 to honor and recognize Dr. Shannon for her positive influence on UT Arlington social work students and contributions to the profession of social work, and to provide financial assistance for social work students at UT Arlington.

Basic Requirements

BSW and MSW students

Preferred Qualifications

Undergrad or graduate students whose major field of study is Social Work
Students must apply in writing to compete for this scholarship
One or more of the following:

  • Demonstrated financial need
  • Evidence of academic potential

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for Fall and Spring semester

To apply for the Shannon Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Financial support to students earning a Bachelor's of Social Work degree with a minor in Mexican American Studies or minor in Diversity Studies.

This scholarship is for a full-time BSW student with a declared Mexican American Studies (MAS) minor or a declared Diversity Studies (DIVR) minor. Student must have completed at least one required MAS or one required DIVR course with a B or higher and have a minimum GPA of 2.5. Scholarship recipients may reapply provided they remain in good standing in the School of Social Work and the Center for Mexican American Studies. No students shall hold this scholarship for more than two years.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding

To apply for this scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Financial support to students earning a Bachelor's of Social Work degree with a minor in African American studies or a minor in Diversity Studies.

This scholarship is for a full time BSW student with a declared African American studies (AAST) minor or a declared Diversity Studies (DIVR) minor. Student must have completed at least one required AAST course or one required DIVR course with a B or higher and have a minimum GPA of 2.5. Scholarship recipients may reapply provided they remain in good standing in the School of Social Work and the Center for African American Studies. No students shall hold this scholarship for more than two years.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding

To apply for this scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

May Apply At Any Time:

Provides 2% interest loans to non-degree seeking, associate, and undergraduate degree in the maximum amount of $12,000; masters maximum of $15,000; and doctoral-level degrees maximum of $20,000.

Educational Loan Fund

Benefactors

Dr. Souflée was an alumnus of the UT Arlington PhD program and joined the School of Social Work faculty after a distinguished career in Child Welfare. He served on the School of Social Work faculty from 1981 until his death in 1998. He was Associate Professor of Administration and Community Practice. He helped establish a dual degree Social Work PhD program between U Arlington and the Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon (UANL) in Monterrey, Mexico, and served as its first coordinator. At the time of its founding, this program was the only Social Work PhD program in Mexico.

Dr. Souflée is remembered as a gifted scholar and teacher, an activist in the Chicano movement of the 1970s, a Child Welfare program innovator, and as a pioneer and leader in advancing social work education with an emphasis on work with Chicanos and other Mexican-Americans.

Basic requirements

BSW and MSW students

Preferred Qualifications

Student whose major field of study is Social Work MSW students or students in their senior year of the BSW program Student must apply in writing to compete for this scholarship

History of involvement with the Mexican-American community and one or more of the following:

  • Demonstrated financial need
  • Evidence of a solid academic record
  • Satisfactory progress toward a degree, as determined by the Scholarship Selection Committee
  • Recipients may continue to receive this assistance for subsequent years.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for the Spring semester

To apply for the Souflée Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Benefactors

Glen W. Rollins was a dedicated social worker who gained both regional and national recognition throughout his thirty-four-year career in the field of mental illness. A mental health consultant for the National Institute of Mental Health during the last 17 years of his career, Mr. Rollins served as a board member of the Texas Mental Health Association following his retirement. He was also active on the Advisory Board of the Community Services Development Center of the Graduate School of Social Work at UT Arlington and on the Advisory Board of Home Health Services Inc., in Dallas.

Glen Rollins began his interest in the field of mental health when he served as the personal assistant to a psychiatrist while in the Army during World War II. In February of 1946, he became a social worker at the Veteran’s Administration Hospital in Waco, Texas. He received a master’s degree in Social Work from The University of Texas at Austin in 1952. In October of 1960, he became the Executive Director of the Dallas Mental Health Association. Mr. Rollins held a life-long interest in building the self-esteem of others and in the use of education to broaden one’s knowledge about self and others.

This scholarship was established to honor the memory of Glen W. Rollins and his wife, Miriam S. Rollins.

Basic Requirements

MSW and PhD

Preferred qualifications

Provides an annual award to a deserving student pursuing graduate study:

  • In the field of mental illness or
  • In public social service

The award is intended for incoming or continuing students in the graduate School of Social Work and may be renewed.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for Fall semester

To apply for the Rollins Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Funds distributed from the endowment shall be used to provide scholarship support to BSW, MSW, and PhD students of Social Work.

Criteria include: students must have a 3.0 GPA or higher and demonstrated financial need.

Basic Requirements

BSW, MSW, and PhD students

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding

To apply for this scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Early Spring Applications:

For full-time graduate degree seeking students who are international students (not from the US or Canada). Must have a full year of course work remaining. Is a need based scholarship. $12,500 award (or less) based on individual need.

International Peace Scholarship

Benefactors

The Jeannette Coburn Scholarship is named for Jeannette Coburn and recognizes her commitment to The University of Texas at Arlington. Jeannette received her undergraduate degree in Psychology in l972 and her Masters in Social Work in 1975. She and her late husband, Tom McMahon, met on the UT Arlington campus and married in 1971. Tom received his undergraduate degree in Business Administration in 1968, served as an officer in the Navy during the Vietnam conflict, then returned to UT Arlington and received his MBA in 1972. Throughout their successful careers, Tom and Jeannette maintained contact with and interest in UT Arlington. They created an Endowed Professorship in Business Ethics in 1990, and sponsored two Ethics colloquiums, one in 1998, the other in 2000. Jeannette also created The Tom McMahon Memorial Endowed Scholarship in Business Administration in his honor.

Basic Requirements

MSW Students

Preferred Qualifications

Incoming or continuing MSW students in need of assistance to attend on a full-time basis.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered in Spring semester

To apply for the Coburn Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Benefactors

This scholarship was established by Professor Rebecca Hegar in 2013, in memory of her parents, Joseph and Lucille. At UT Arlington since 1997, Dr. Hegar teaches social policy, as well as courses in Community and Administrative Practice. She has received Social Work’s Torgerson Teaching Award (2003) and been nominated for the university President’s Award for Teaching Excellence (2012). In 2013 she was inducted into UT Arlington's Academy of Distinguished Teachers.

Basic Requirements

PhD students

Preferred qualifications

PhD students who have successfully defended their dissertation proposals

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for Spring semester

To apply for the Hegar Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

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Benefactors

This scholarship honors the life and work of Judith Granger Birmingham, UT Arlington School of Social Work graduate, Director of Admissions, Graduate Advisor, Assistant Dean and Associate Professor. She devoted her career to the field of child welfare and was co-founder of the School of Social Work Center for Child Welfare.

Basic Requirements

BSW and MSW students

Preferred Qualifications

Full time student pursuing either a BSW or MSW in Social Work and

  • Have completed at least one semester of course work
  • Maintained a minimum GPA of 3.0
  • Demonstrated financial need
  • Scholarship recipients may reapply provided they remain in good standing in the School of Social Work.

No student shall hold this scholarship for more than two years.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for Fall semester

To apply for the Birmingham Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.

Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your Net ID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Benefactors

Lila B. Hagins was the first of seven faculty members assembled to initiate the master’s program for the new Graduate School of Social Work at UT Arlington in 1968. Assistant Professor Hagins was a native Texan with a bachelor’s degree from the University of Oklahoma, an MSSW from UT Austin and experience with the Texas Department of Public Welfare in child welfare services. An experienced social work educator, she had chaired the social welfare policy and services sequence at Florida State University. She later served as Assistant Dean, Graduate Advisor, and Admissions Director before retirement in 1989.

Basic Requirements

BSW, MSW, PhD Students

Preferred Qualifications

Full time students who:

  • Have been accepted and are enrolled in the School of Social Work
  • Plan to pursue a social service career
  • Have a minimum GPA of 3.0
  • Can demonstrate financial need
  • Provide three letters of recommendation from professors or supervisors who can validate work experience
  • May include a statement regarding any special circumstances which could be considered in the decision to award the scholarship
  • Submit a short essay addressing the question: How will your degree assist you in making a contribution in your chosen method of practice, i.e., direct practice, administrative and community practice.
  • Scholarship recipients may reapply provided they remain in good standing in the School of Social Work. No student shall hold this scholarship for more than two years.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for Fall semester.

To apply for the Hagins Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your Net ID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Benefactors

Peter G. Gaupp, PhD, was a co-founder of the UT Arlington School of Social Work. He also founded and directed the School’s Community Services Development Center from 1980 until his retirement in 1994. He was named Social Worker of the Year in 1992 by the Tarrant County unit of the NASW Texas chapter. He received a Commendation Medal from the Assistant Surgeon General of the United States in 1991. In 1995 he was awarded the title of Professor Emeritus at UT Arlington.

Basic Requirements

MSW Students

Preferred Qualifications

First year graduate students who intend to major in community and administrative practice and give evidence of the following:

  • Interest in the prevention of community problems
  • Interest in large scale or comprehensive approaches to resolving community problems
  • Commitment to discover or develop improved approaches for delivering human services
  • Prevention of social problems
  • Commitment to vulnerable populations
  • Stipends will be awarded to MSW students:

With financial need, who might not otherwise be able to obtain a graduate college education

  • Who have shown they are deserving of such education
  • If a suitable first year graduate student is not found, the award may be given to a qualified second year graduate student.

This endowment will support stipend awards for Master’s students who intend to concentrate in community and administrative practice.

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding

To apply for the Gaupp Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using our NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

You May apply at any time

Grant for women who have experienced a break of at least 24 consecutive months as a non-student during her adult life. This is for technical or degree programs but not a doctoral degree program. Max grant is $3,000 and can be used for education-related expenses.

Program For Continuing Education

Benefactors

This fund was created by The Hillcrest Foundation, founded by Mrs. W. W. Caruth, Sr. The Trustees expressed their friendship, high esteem and respect for Roy Dulak, and for the support of his wife, Betty, through the establishment of this scholarship fund in his honor.

Roy E. Dulak spent thirty years of devoted service as Executive Director of the Community Council of Greater Dallas. Following his retirement in 1979, Mr. Dulak began additional public service as an advisor and consultant to the Trustees of The Hillcrest Foundation. He played a principal role in spearheading the creation of The University of Texas at Arlington School of Social Work. As the Executive Director of the Community Council, he assigned his staff, first Dr. Peter Gaupp and later Ed Protz, to provide the necessary staff services for this effort.

The Community Council of Greater Dallas was the first community fieldwork agency for the new School of Social Work. Subsequently, Mr. Dulak came to the rescue of the new School several times in its early years by helping to organize political and other support for its budget. He served for many years on the Advisory Board of the Community Service Development Center and helped organize ongoing fundraising for the Center.

Basic Requirements

MSW Students

Preferred Qualifications

First and second year Master's students who are entering the field of Community and Administrative Practice. Recipients must give evidence of the following:

  • Interest in prevention of community problems
  • Commitment to developing improved approaches for delivering human services to the less fortunate
  • Interest in the relief of poverty

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding, usually offered for both Fall and Spring semesters

To apply for the Dulak Scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Provides for an annual scholarship of $1,000 to MSW students in Social Work. Criteria includes academic accomplishment and/or financial need (based on a written statement by the applicant as to how he or she will benefit from receiving this award).

Basic Requirement

MSW students

Approximate Award Range

$1000 depending on available funding

To apply for this scholarship, go to the Mav ScholarShop.  Log into the Mav ScholarShop using your NetID and password.

MAV ScholarShop

Title IV-E Stipend Program

The Title IV-E project delivers social work education to undergraduate and graduate students that will prepare them for careers in child welfare by way of delivering professional education to current CBC employees and recruiting BSW and MSW students to work in public child welfare. Through the children, youth and families course offerings, the enhancement seminars, and the practice symposium, students prepare for leadership and work in permanency planning and family preservation with children and their families in child welfare.

Learn More About Title IV-E