Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program
Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program
Howard University is the proud home of the only Historically Black College or University (HBCU) with a stand-alone Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program.
About MMUF
Established in the 1988/1989 academic year, the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship (MMUF) is committed to broadening the range of scholarly perspectives in the US academy, with a focus on the humanities and the humanistic social sciences. Its name honors Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, the noted African American educator, statesman, minister, former president of Morehouse College, and mentor to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Founded with an initial cohort of eight member institutions, the program has grown to include 47 programs, including three consortia.
To date, the program has produced more than 1,200 PhDs, more than 800 of whom are currently college professors. Numerous others have taken their valuable humanities training into venues ranging from museums and nonprofit organizations to publishing houses and government positions. At any given time, about 800 MMUF fellows are enrolled in PhD programs, while the fellowship supports approximately 500 undergraduate students each year.
Through activities that emphasize mentoring, research support, and student-cohort building, MMUF programs identify and support students of great promise and help them become scholars and professionals of the highest distinction.
MMUF is proud of its legacy of leading scholars whose perspectives greatly enrich research and teaching in their fields.
How the MMUF program works
Each year, new MMUF undergraduate fellows are selected from applicants in the rising junior classes of MMUF member institutions. These fellows join the rising and graduating senior fellows in their institution’s MMUF program, where they are provided with mentoring and financial support as they prepare for entry into PhD programs and eventual careers as scholars and faculty members.
The MMUF program also supports fellows enrolled in PhD programs in eligible fields through a suite of programmatic events and grant opportunities. This support continues beyond graduate school into fellows’ postdoctoral and faculty careers.
For more information about MMUF, please contact Principal Investigator Dr. Michael Ralph, michael.ralph@howard.edu