The Woodrow Wilson Teaching Fellowships
![]() |
The launch of the Woodrow Wilson Teaching Fellowships was announced at a December 2007 press conference in Indianapolis. Left to right: Arthur Levine, president of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation; the Honorable Mitch Daniels, Governor of the State of Indiana; Terry King, Provost, Ball State University; and [back to camera] Sara Cobb, the Lilly Endowment. |
The Woodrow Wilson Teaching Fellowship seeks to recruit, prepare and retain effective teachers for the students and schools who need them most. It is open to individuals—college seniors, recent graduates, and career changers—with undergraduate degrees in the arts and sciences. Fellows will attend enriched, school-based master’s-level teacher education programs, complemented by intensive mentoring during the first three years of teaching at high-need urban and rural schools. The Fellowships focus on four goals: transforming teacher education; getting strong teachers into high-need schools; attracting the very best candidates to the teaching profession; and cutting teacher attrition by retaining top teachers.
The Leonore Annenberg Teaching Fellowship
The Woodrow Wilson-Rockefeller Brothers Fund
Fellowships for Aspiring Teachers of Color
The Woodrow Wilson Indiana Teaching Fellowship
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation’s Woodrow Wilson Michigan Teaching Fellowship




