Be sure to check all funding options at UNT Financial Aid and Scholarships, student employment opportunities at UNT Career Center, and graduate student assistance at Toulouse Graduate School.
Scholarships awarded by the College eligible for competitive scholarship waiver.
All engineering scholarships listed below, unless explicitly stated, should be applied through the Engineering Scholarship Application Form.
The College of Engineering Dean’s Scholarship is awarded to the highest-performing students. This scholarship is awarded by the College of Engineering Scholarship Committee and all students enrolled in degrees in the college are eligible.
This scholarship is awarded to current College of Engineering students when funds are available but two deadlines are implemented-March 1st and October 1st each year for the committee to review applicants and make awards. Please provide the information below to be considered when funds become available.
January 15, March 1, August 1, October 1
Students pursuing a dual degree from UNT and TWU may apply for a $5,000 Siemens PLM Software scholarship.
Application Requirements:
For Freshmen:
For Current Students:
For Transfer Students:
All documentation must be received by March 1. Applications should be submitted to:
Dr. Nandika D'Souza (Dr. Stephanie Ludi starting June 1, 2024)
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
College of Engineering
1155 Union Circle #310440
Denton, TX 76203-5017
Zina (Ashby) Townley (BS, Computer Science 1987) and her husband Brent Townley endowed the Ashby-Browning Family Scholarship in Engineering to honor four generations of Zina’s family who attended UNT. The scholarship honors a family motto of “Never Stop Learning.” Zina’s employer, L3Harris, provided a generous matching gift to each gift she and her husband made as they built up the endowment fund for this scholarship.
Zina’s father Clint Ashby grew up in a farming family and did not aspire to higher education. But after an honorable discharge from the U. S. Army in the era of the Korean Conflict he was encouraged by his old high school principal to apply to North Texas State College and use his GI Bill benefits to pay for it. After earning a BS degree in Industrial Arts Education in 1961, Clint taught at several area high schools, including Decatur and Denton. In 1976 Clint earned an MS in Vocational Technical Education.
Zina’s mother / Clint’s wife, Jessie (Thomas) Ashby has a long family history at UNT. Jessie’s grandfather Thomas Alexander Browning attended North Texas State Normal College in the 1910s. Her mother Buena Browning Thomas attended North Texas State Teacher’s College in the 1920s. Three Browning uncles graduated and at least one earned a master’s degree. Among Jessie’s uncles Leslie Browning earned a BS in Education in 1934 and coached and taught at schools all over Texas. During World War II he served over 30 months overseas and saw combat action in the Italian Campaign.
Zina was a pioneer in the automation of ski resorts and has worked in information technology or software engineering most of her adult life. In 2023 when the endowment was completed she was leading a software engineering “team of teams” in the defense contracting industry. She was motivated to attend UNT and pursue a computer science degree at what was then North Texas State University by her loving and devoted father. Her sister Sherla Ashby also graduated from UNT with a degree in Hospitality Management.
The Ashby-Browning Family Scholarship in Engineering is open to all engineering students with preference given to students who graduated from either rural public high schools or Title I public high schools in North Texas, including Denton ISD, Sanger ISD, Krum ISD, Northwest ISD, Cooke County, Wise County and Montague County. If there is no qualified student meeting that preference, preference may then be given to award the scholarship as a “finishing scholarship” to a student in their final year or semester of undergraduate engineering study who has exhausted all other financial aid is at risk of dropping out due to financial need.
March 1
To be eligible for consideration, an applicant must meet the following criteria:
Mina Kapadia was born Mina Colaco in January 12, 1937. She married B. A. Prakash in 1963 and had two children Sunil Prakash (deceased 2011) and Nandika (Prakash) D’Souza (faculty in the College of Engineering). She was widowed in 1973 and married Mukesh Kapadia in 1979. She passed away July 28, 2019. She began work as an administrative assistant in 1953 and worked in a number of companies till 2002.
As a staff member, she epitomized the qualities of facilitative support of needs, high organizational efficiency, clear communication and engagement of all stakeholders.
In her personal life she exhibited the qualities of resilience, gratitude, personal faith and open heartedness. She loved bringing people together and recognizing people for all they do to enable others.
Nominations requested by March 1.
To be eligible for consideration, an applicant for the Scholarship must meet the following criteria:
Mina Kapadia was born Mina Colaco in January 12, 1937. She married B. A. Prakash in 1963 and had two children Sunil Prakash (deceased 2011) and Nandika (Prakash) D’Souza (faculty in the College of Engineering). She was widowed in 1973 and married Mukesh Kapadia in 1979. She passed away July 28, 2019. She began work as an administrative assistant in 1953 and worked in a number of companies till 2002.
As a staff member, she epitomized the qualities of facilitative support of needs, high organizational efficiency, clear communication and engagement of all stakeholders.
In her personal life she exhibited the qualities of resilience, gratitude, personal faith and open heartedness. She loved bringing people together and recognizing people for all they do to enable others.
Nominations requested by March 1.
Leonor García was born in 1913 in the township of Güines of the Habana province in Cuba. She married in 1934 to Oscar Vicente Garcia and was the mother of Dr. Oscar N. García, Founding Dean of the College of Engineering at the UNT.
Her whole life was dedicated in one way or another to the pursuit of educational activities and involvement with those she could help. She strove unrelentingly to complete her own education in her native Cuba.
Though she graduated from high school after several interruptions as a teenager, it was not until years later as an adult that she completed the Juris Doctorate from the University of Havana, Cuba in 1943 - an era when few women studied at the University, and even fewer became lawyers. She was employed as a lawyer in Cuba. But before graduating from law school and while a law student, her first teaching job was home schooling their son before he entered grammar school at an advanced grade.
She and her husband immigrated to the United States in 1961. Though he was not a teacher and did not have higher education, her husband recognized the value of education and vigorously supported all of her, and later their son’s, educational endeavors.
Her professional life in this country also centered on teaching! She was the consummate outstanding teacher. Her enthusiasm glowed in sharing the knowledge of government and civics in the realm of the United States culture that she imparted to her adult student in the Program of English as a Second Language. She worked in this program some five years in College Park, Md.
A family move changed the focus of her energies from the adult arena to high school. She taught Advanced Placement Spanish Courses for American high school students. Again, her enthusiasm for the subject matter of classical Spanish writers enthralled high school students! She was involved in this program for another five years. She died in Denton, TX, at the age of 92.
She was respected and endeared by many students at various stages of their lives as she aided them in pursuing their educational goals and afterwards.
It is with great honor, respect and enthusiasm that we recognize her contributions to education with this scholarship. With the awarding of this year’s scholarship, we wish recognize whenever possible qualified ethnic minority women in her image demonstrating financial need while studying in the field of engineering.
March 1
To be eligible for consideration, an applicant for the Scholarship must meet the following criteria:
The scholarship is named for the late UNT alumnus Gene Henry Fuhrman (March 27. 1964 to November 25, 2003) Gene graduated from UNT in 1986 with a BBA in Business Computer Information Systems with Cum Laude Honors. He was the son of Alvin and Grace Fuhrman, owners and operators of Nortex Communications, previously known as Muenster Telephone. Gene was considered by family members and co-workers to be a computer whiz, and he played a leading role in developing the company as a provider of internet services to small communities across Cooke County. Gene was killed tragically by a drunk driver in Sanger, Texas, in 2003, leaving behind his wife Kaylynn and a not yet born son, Conner, who arrived four months after his father's death. Gene worked most of his adult life for the family business and was Chief Operating Officer at the time of his death. He was responsible with his father, Alvin, for ensuring that Nortex Communications was an early adopter of many advanced telecommunications technologies which ensured outstanding service to their customers. Nortex service has a reputation as the very best available in rural Texas, and on par with the very best service available in urban areas.
To be eligible for consideration, an applicant for the scholarship must meet the following criteria:
March 1
The South Texas Section of the Society of Plastics Engineers has awarded the University of North Texas a scholarship. Dependent on available funds, awards will be allocated as $500 for each of the Fall and Spring semester. The scholarship will provide an in-state tuition in our University.
Submit a statement of up to two pages of your experience with polymers, your educational and post-educational goals, as well as your future plans for using polymers. Attach to the statement a list of current funding sources for your academic goals relative to the amount required annually and a statement of need.
January 10, March 1, August 1, November 1
The college scholarship committee will select the awardee based on the following criteria
The application deadline is March 1.
Gene Henry Fuhrman, March 27 1964, to November 25 2003, graduated from UNT in 1986 with a B.B.A. in Business Computer Information Systems with Cum Laude Honors. He was the son of Alvin and Grace Fuhrman, owners and operators of Nortex Communications, previously known as Muenster Telephone. Gene was considered by family members and co-workers to be a computer whiz, and he played a leading role in developing the company as a provider of internet services to small communities across Cooke County. Gene was killed tragically by a drunk driver in Sanger, Texas, in 2003, leaving behind his wife Kaylynn and a not yet born son, Conner, who arrived four months after his father's death. Gene worked most of his adult life for the family business and was Chief Operating Officer at the time of his death. Gene was described by his fellow UNT alum and longtime friend Troy J Wolf (also the donor) as, "a nice person who treated people well, a great friend, and a standout basketball player." I would also like to extend an invitation to all alumni to give back to UNT as well to honor a friend or perhaps to honor your parents who provided financial assistance in order for you to attend college at UNT.
To be eligible for consideration, an applicant for the Scholarship must meet the following criteria:
Troy Jay Wolf is a UNT Engineering alum who earned a B.S. in Industrial Technology in 1986 and a M.S. in Engineering Technology in 1993. He has worked as a Technical Lead in an Engineering Support Group at Lockheed Martin throughout much of his adult life. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed giving back to UNT and I would like to encourage all alumni to give back to UNT as well in order to help students who need financial assistance while attending college at UNT.
March 1
Students applying to any of the following scholarships will be considered.
Troy Wolf Continuing Undergraduate Student Scholarship
Gene Fuhrman Memorial Scholarship in Communication & Electronics
Mina Prakash Kapadia Student Scholarship - Student
March 1
This scholarship is for textbooks and other educational expenses for students in the College of Engineering.
To be eligible for consideration, an applicant for the scholarship must meet the following criteria:
October 1
Biomedical Engineering (graduate)
Computer Science and Engineering (undergraduate & graduate)
Electrical Engineering (graduate)
Materials Science and Engineering (graduate)
Mechanical Engineering (undergraduate & graduate)
How to apply for and access scholarships
Scholarship | Applicant | Deadline |
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UNT Student Financial Aid and Scholarships | ||
Eagle Scholarship Portal | Mar 1 | |
Texas Public Education Grant - International | Int'l student | |
Toulouse Graduate School Scholarships | Graduate | |
UNT Office of Nationally Competitive Scholarships | ||
Kuehne Speaker Series Scholars Program | Mar 1 |
Grant | Applicant | Deadline |
---|---|---|
Financial Aid Application | ||
Emerald Eagle Scholars Program | Undergraduate | Mar 1 |
Fund | Applicant | Deadline |
---|---|---|
College of Engineering Graduate Student Travel Grant | Graduate | |
Toulouse Graduate School Travel Grant | Graduate | Sep 30, Feb 31, May 31 |
Graduate Research Experiences Abroad Travel Grant | Graduate | Mar 4, 2019 |
Undergraduate Student Travel Fund | Undergraduate | |
UNT Raupe Travel Grant | Undergraduate |
Visit our career preparation page.
The scholarships below are not managed by any office in the UNT system.
Deadlines posted here are tentative. Visit the scholarship page for more accurate information.
Guide to receiving support with the essay’s required for your scholarship application