December 15, 2026
Cards Against Humanity Science Ambassador Scholarship
Direct application
$20,000
5 winners
Eligibility
Demographics
Nonbinary
Location
United States
Major
Aerospace Engineering
Education level
High school
About this scholarship
High school seniors and undergraduate women and non-binary students pursuing STEM degrees at U.S. colleges may apply for the Cards Against Humanity Science Ambassador Scholarship.
Five winners each receive a $20,000 tuition stipend.
Film a three-minute public YouTube mini-lecture explaining a STEM topic you are passionate about. The video must be scientifically accurate with cited sources, creative, and not a personal statement. An advisory board of women and non-binary STEM professionals reviews submissions and selects finalists.
Essay question
What else to submit
- Public YouTube upload of a three-minute or less educational STEM mini-lecture video
- Film and submit a three-minute (or less) educational video explaining a STEM topic you are passionate about; videos longer than three minutes will not be considered (no exceptions)
- Video must be a mini-lecture (teaching a topic), explicitly NOT a personal statement or essay
- Video must be uploaded to YouTube and marked 'public' (must be a standard video, not a YouTube Short; 16:9 aspect ratio recommended)
- Scientific accuracy required; applicants encouraged to cite sources (e.g., on an end slide, any citation format)
- Eligibility: high school senior or undergraduate college student (no graduate students)
- Must major in a STEM field for the entirety of undergrad (STEM as major, not minor)
- Open to women and non-binary students
- Need not be a U.S. citizen, but must attend (or plan to attend) college in the U.S. or a U.S. territory
- Applications open September 2026; deadline historically mid-December
- Video must explain a STEM topic the applicant is passionate about, be scientifically accurate, and not be a personal statement.
- STEM must be the applicant's major, not minor, throughout undergraduate study.
- Video must be a standard public YouTube video, not a YouTube Short.