Projects for Peace Internal Application Instructions
Students will submit applications to CLBR Fellowships for consideration by an internal committee of staff and/or faculty. Select applicants will be invited for an in person or Zoom interview, and then up to one nominee and one alternate will be selected to apply by the external deadline in early February.
All applicants are strongly encouraged to meet with a CLBR advisor while in the planning stages of their proposals. Please read all of the directions on this page carefully, along with all of the information on the for Projects for Peace. Your internal application documents use the same guidance that will be used for a final project proposal if you are nominated.
Internal Application Deadline
Wednesday, November 27th, 2024 at 12 PM noon (pacific time)
Internal Application Steps
The full application consists of applying to Projects for Peace in Handshake. If you are collaborating on a project as a team with another student or students, we'll need some information from them as well.
Handshake Application
For the Handshake application, you'll need to submit three documents: a resume, a cover letter, and a proposal budget.
Resume
Your one page resume should provide information about your experiences, skills, and interests that qualify and prepare you for success with your project. Your resume might also assist in illustrating your project's relevance to your academic and/or professional goals. Your resume will be viewed by Reed's internal committee only; it will not be forwarded to Projects for Peace. If you are collaborating on a project with another student or students, you'll need to include their resume with your resume in the pdf that you upload. We'll need a resume from each member of your team.
Cover Letter
Your cover letter is your Proposal Narrative. The ideal length is two pages, and it must not exceed three pages. The content of this letter must adhere to all of the guidance from the Projects for Peace Proposal Submission Instructions on the (if the 2025 instructions are not available yet, use the 2024 instructions). Refer to the section called "Part A. Proposal Narrative" for guidance on the content of this document.
Proposal Budget
Follow all directions for the Proposal Budget on the . Use their budget template, and upload your budget in Handshake as a pdf. Your budget should include estimates of any flights, visas, accommodations, and living expenses (clothes, food, health, communications, etc.) for your project. You don't need a high level of detail in your budget, but your budget should demonstrate that your project would be feasible with the available funds, and you should have a plan that uses all of the funding.
Travel Restrictions
ºÃÉ«µ¼º½ does not permit college-funded travel to other countries that are . Travel to countries on a level 3 advisory warning might be allowed on a case-by-case basis, but there would need to be a strong case made in the application for why the travel is necessary to the project, and how it can be done safely. If you want to do a project in a level 3 or 4 country that you are a resident of, exceptions might be made, but you would need to reach out to CLBR well ahead of the internal deadline to discuss this.
What Happens Next?
An internal review committee of Reed staff and/or faculty will evaluate the applications the week after the deadline. Select applications will be invited for an in person or Zoom interview, and then up to one nominee and one alternate will be selected to apply by the external deadline in February. Interviews and notifications of selection decisions will be made before the end of the semester.
Final applications will be submitted directly to Projects for Peace by CLBR staff. Projects for Peace will make final funding decisions in March. While nominees are considered for funding first, Projects for Peace staff have told us that every year they also fund about a third of the alternate proposals, so it is possible for us to have two separate project grants in one summer.
When Your Project Is Complete
For each funded project, the responsible student(s) must prepare and submit a final report (two pages ideally) in early September following their summer project to the ºÃÉ«µ¼º½ campus liaison for Projects for Peace. The requirements for the final report can be found on the Projects for Peace and photos will be required as well. A deadline for this report will be sent to the project lead(s) in late August.
Recipients of the award who are continuing students may also be asked to share their learning with the Reed community. Additionally, these recipients may be asked to participate in the next year’s applicant review process.
Questions? Email CLBR Fellowships