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1916 Bursary Fund

Applications for The 1916 Bursary are closed for 2024/25. The assessment process takes a few weeks, so you will not hear about the outcome until late November or early December.

 

About the fund

The 1916 Bursary is a financial award to encourage the participation and success of students from sections of society that are significantly under-represented in higher education.

The 1916 Bursary is co-funded by the Government of Ireland and the European Union through the Department of Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science (DFHERIS) and aims to encourage participation and success by students who are most socio-economically disadvantaged and from groups most under-represented in higher education.

To be eligible for a 1916 Bursary, all applicants must meet, Financial, Priority Group and College Entry eligibility criteria. 

Each participating college has a limited number of bursaries which are awarded to the eligible applicants that present the greatest need.

All the Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) are awarding the Bursaries as regional clusters. The Midlands East & North Dublin (MEND) cluster is made up of four HEIs - Technological University of the Shannon (TUS) - Athlone Campus, Dublin City University (DCU), Dundalk Institute of Technology (IT), and Maynooth University (MU). 

There are three different types of bursaries:

Tier 1 Bursaries: Awardees will receive €5,000 per year for the normal duration of an undergraduate programme and up to a maximum of six years for a part-time programme. The bursary will also be paid as the awardee progresses to postgraduate study.

Tier 2 Bursaries: Awardees will receive €2,000 per year for the normal duration of an undergraduate programme and up to a maximum of six years for a part-time programme. The bursary will also be paid as the awardee progresses to postgraduate study.

Tier 3 Bursaries: Once-Off Bursary (€1,500 payable for 2024/25 academic year only). The number of Tier 3 bursaries to be paid will depend on the amount of remaining funding available to each cluster following the allocation of Tier 1 and 2 bursaries (including for continuing students and students progressing to postgraduate study).

Tier 1 and Tier 2 bursaries will be paid each year of the course up to a maximum of four years for full-time students and six years for part-time students as long as the recipient complies with the bursary guidelines and progresses to the next academic year of their course. Tier 3 bursaries are a once-off to be paid in this academic year only.

You will find additional support under Frequently Asked Questions.