The James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation offers Graduate Fellowships to individuals desiring to become outstanding teachers of the American Constitution at the secondary school level (grades 7-12).
The fellowships support graduate study leading to a master's degree. James Madison Fellows may attend any accredited institution of higher education in the United States. Eligible master's degrees (listed in order of the Foundation's preference):
- Master of Arts (MA) in American history, political science, or government
- Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) concentrating on either American Constitutional history (in a history department) or American government, political institutions, and political theory (in a political science department). MAT degrees without required constitutional coursework cannot be approved.
- Master of Education (MEd) or the Master of Arts or Master of Science in Education with a concentration in American history or American government, political institutions, and political theory
Junior fellowships are awarded to college seniors and college graduates without teaching experience who intend to become secondary school teachers of American history, American government, or civics classes where you will teach topics on the Constitution in grades 7-12. Junior Fellows must complete graduate study within 2 academic years of full-time study.
Senior fellowships are awarded to outstanding former or current teachers who are required to complete graduate study within five calendar years of part-time study.
Fellowship applicants compete only against other applicants from the states of their legal residence. As funding permits, the Foundation plans to offer one fellowship per state per year.
Fields of Study:
- Education; American History, Government, Political Science, Political Institutions, or Political Theory