The Wesleyan Freeman Asian Scholarship Program provides expenses for a
four-year course of study toward a bachelor’s degree for up to twenty-two
exceptionally able Asian students annually from these countries and regions: the
People’s Republic of China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam.
- Applications must be postmarked or submitted online by January 1, 2009.
- Students are advised to register now for SAT (or ACT) and TOEFL or IELTS.
- Notification by April 1, 2009.
- Japan notification by March 1, 2009.
Wesleyan is now accepting applications for participation in the Wesleyan
Freeman Asian Scholarship Program. The chosen applicants will join 2,800 other
Wesleyan undergraduates from throughout the United States and nearly 50
countries for study with an outstanding teaching and research faculty in the
sciences and mathematics, the arts, the humanities, and the social and
behavioral sciences.
This program is made possible by Wesleyan University and the Freeman
Foundation, which aims to improve understanding and to strengthen ties between
the United States and the countries and regions of the Pacific Rim.
Wesleyan University is located in Middletown, Connecticut, halfway between
New York and Boston in the historic and colorful New England region of the
northeastern United States. It is a private, nonsectarian, liberal arts and
sciences institution founded in 1831. A number of early Wesleyan graduates were
influential educators and ministers in Asian countries, and the modern Wesleyan
has formal ties to several prominent universities in Asia. The campus is home to
a diverse population of 2,800 undergraduate students, equally divided between
men and women, approximately 28 percent of whom are of African, Asian, or
Hispanic descent, and nearly 190 students from foreign countries.
Approximately 200 graduate students, a number of whom are from Asian
countries, are pursuing advanced degrees, principally in the sciences,
mathematics, and music.
Wesleyan provides instruction in 46 major fields of study. Unlike some
university systems abroad, in which students focus on one academic field, most
American universities are based on a curricular tradition of liberal arts and
sciences, in which breadth and depth of study are deemed equally important. At
Wesleyan, the major programs of study involve one-third to one-half of a
student’s course work, with the remaining time devoted to exploration of a
variety of fields through which a student may broaden his or her background and
understanding. More than 900 courses are offered, in which interdisciplinary
pursuits are encouraged and an international perspective is fundamental.
Wesleyan graduates go on in high numbers to the best graduate and
professional schools in the United States and to successful careers in
engineering, business, law, medicine, education, politics, international
relations, social service, and the arts. The primary purpose of study at
Wesleyan, however, is not to provide vocational training in a specific area. The
objectives of a Wesleyan education include the development of self-educating men
and women who have mastered a major field, have learned to think critically, are
cognizant of the variety of human experience, and have acquired the habits of
imaginative and disciplined minds.
The liberal arts at Wesleyan are founded on an atmosphere of freedom, small
college traditions, faculty resources, and student diversity. The University
provides the facilities and opportunities of a research university while
retaining the emphasis on teaching and the intimacy of a small college. The
undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is 9:1, enabling the faculty to provide
direct and particular attention to undergraduate education. Wesleyan’s more than
300 teacher-scholars believe that scholarly research and active teaching are
mutually reinforcing. The University’s curriculum is unusually flexible, and
students work closely with a faculty advisor in planning all programs and
majors.
For further information please visit the official site