With an acceptance rate of approximately 6.3%, the Churchill Scholarship is less selective than the Marshall, Rhodes, Gates Cambridge and Mitchell scholarships (acceptance rates 3.3%, 3.7%, 1.6%, and 4% respectively), however, significantly fewer institutions are allowed to nominate candidates for the Churchill Scholarship (presently 138 institutions as compared to at least 240 institutions for the Marshall, over 320 institutions for the Rhodes, and at least 415 institutions for the Mitchell). Furthermore, each institution may nominate only two candidates to the Churchill Scholarship, so the endorsed candidate pool is initially very selective. By comparison, the Marshall scholarship typically receives 915-980 endorsed applicants In contrast to the
Gates Cambridge Scholarship, applying to the Churchill, Marshall, Rhodes, or Mitchell scholarships all require the endorsement of an approved U.S. undergraduate institution. As such, the actual acceptance rates for these scholarships are significantly lower than the official acceptance rate of endorsed applicants (e.g., approximately 1.2% for the Rhodes in 2016). (in 2016 all winners had a GPA above 3.95). From 2014 to 2017, 69% of the winning Churchill Scholars had previously received a
Goldwater Scholarship.
Eligibility Applicants for the Churchill Scholarship must be: • A U.S. citizen • A senior enrolled at one of the institutions participating in the scholarship program or have graduated within the past year • Hold a bachelor's degree or an equivalent, and may not have attained a doctorate
Selection criteria Applicants are chosen on the basis of: • Outstanding academic achievement, especially in the chosen major • Proven capacity for original, creative research as demonstrated by awards and letters of reference • Outstanding personal qualities outside of academic pursuits Each participating institution may nominate only two candidates for the Churchill Scholarship, and each sets its own criteria for nomination. == Recipients ==