Scholarships

Scholarships

Make a Difference in your Community!

The ITEA Scholarship Program, administered by the local chapters, is designed to foster interest and education in technical fields that may benefit the test and evaluation profession. Consider donating to this great cause!

How do Chapters Earn Scholarship Dollars?

They host major technical workshops, conferences, and symposia! Volunteer to support the planning and execution of these events!  Check out our STEAM competitions where we have awarded 10K in the past 2 years.

2023

2024

Recognizing our recipients

 

Congratulations to Rachelle McMullin, Researcher, Western Governors University, recipient of an ITEA Scholarship to attend and address the 2024 Cybersecurity Workshop attendees with a presentation on TSA’s Cyber Resilience Approach

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ITEA is working smart to keep the Future T&E Workforce at the front of our mission by celebrating High School Successes! 

 

 

Meet Miller Lindsley from Destin, Florida USA, who received an academic scholarship from the Emerald Coast Chapter to attend [GTRI] Georgia Institute of Technology.

“This is part of the beauty of testing and evaluating. It creates data and determines solvency. It indicates where time and effort are needed and where they are wasted. Testing and evaluating variables was the heart of each of these projects. Without these steps, there is no experiment.”

 

 

 

 

 

Meet Rylee Daniels from Auburn, Alabama USA, who received an academic scholarship from the Emerald Coast Chapter of ITEA to attend Auburn University! 

“Overall, Test and Evaluation is necessary to keep the public safe and stimulate improvement by communicating areas of fault to companies.”

 

 

 

 

 

Meet Ava Floro from Niceville, Florida USA who received an academic scholarship from the Emerald Coast Chapter to attend Baylor University.

“Test results are evaluated, adjustments are made, and more tests conducted… These principles of specialized Test and Evaluation got me back on the mat competing in 12 weeks— much quicker than a typical surgical recovery.”