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Click here for Financial Aid available to Graduate Students.

In addition to the Financial Aid available through the UT Dallas Financial Aids Office, the School of Arts and Humanities has two funding opportunities available to students directly through the School:

Bryce and Jonelle Jordan Scholarship Fund


The Bryce and Jonelle Jordan Scholarship Fund was established in 1981 to support undergraduate music students at the University of Texas at Dallas. Bryce Jordan, flutist and musicologist, was the first President of UTD. It has since been extended, with Dr. Jordan’s approval, to provide financial support for undergraduate students in any of the creative and performing arts. Scholarships are awarded in two different ways.

• Bryce and Jonelle Jordan Scholarships for Creative and Performing Arts

The School of Arts and Humanities awards these scholarships in the Art and Performance area, which includes music, theatre, dance, creative writing, and the visual arts. Scholarships are awarded from $500 to $1000 per long semester to students who are or will be full-time students. Preference is given to students who major in Art and Performance, but may also be awarded to students who minor in the arts or can demonstrate the ability to make an outstanding contribution to the arts program. Student must apply for these scholarships. For more information and an application form

Bryce and Jonelle Jordan Awards

Annually at the Spring Arts Festival, the School of Arts and Humanities presents Bryce Jordan Awards to undergraduate students in recognition of extraordinary contributions to the arts during the preceding academic year. Students must be nominated by a member of the Art and Performance faculty, be planning to enroll for the following Fall Semester and be full-time students in good academic standing.
For more information about the awards

 

The Robert Plant Armstrong Fellowship

The privately endowed Armstrong Fellowship Program in the School of Arts & Humanities at UTD permits the graduate program to award a few modest fellowships each academic year. In contrast to teaching assistantships, which involve part-time work for the school and are based solely on students' academic record, these fellowships are based on financial need as well as academic merit. Thus, applicants must provide the fellowship committee information on their incomes as well as estimated expenses. For more information about the fellowships


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