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Scholarships
The CCC Foundation raises funds each year to provide up to $1,000,000 in scholarship awards to new and returning students. Students planning to attend CCC to pursue a degree or certificate can apply during the open application periods. To apply there is
a requirement for the student to take at least six credits each term and maintain a 2.0 GPA or above. On average, one in three applicants received a scholarship!
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Feb 11 2026To Mar 11
In-person Scholarship Support Sessions
Join a scholarship support session designed to help you make real progress on your application!
Each in-person support session is held on a Wednesday from 10-11 a.m. in the Wacheno Start Lab (WC151).
In-person session dates: Feb. 11 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 25 | Mar. 4 | Mar. 11
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Apr 7 2026To Apr 14
Zoom Scholarship Support Sessions
Join a scholarship support session designed to help you make real progress on your application!
Each Zoom support session is held on a Tuesday from 6-8 p.m.
How to Apply
There is just one simple electronic application to fill out. When the application is completed, the student will automatically be considered for any scholarships where they meet the criteria, based on the information provided. See below for resources to complete your application successfully. Information sessions will be scheduled in March or April each year and posted on this site when information is available.
Below is more information about the scholarship application deadlines, award notice dates and disbursement details:
| Application | Application Opens | Application Deadline | Application Review | Notice of Award | Funds Split Between Terms Next Academic Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Round 1 | Feb. 4, 2026 | April 15, 2026 | May 2026 | May-June 2026 | Fall 2026, Winter 2027 and Spring 2027 |
| Round 2 | Aug. 5, 2026 | Oct. 14, 2026 | Oct./Nov. 2026 | Nov. 2026 | Winter 2027 and Spring 2027 |
Hear from past scholarship recipients
Some of the scholarship options at CCC
- Academic honor
- First in family to attend college
- Members of military families
- Single parents
- Transfer students
- Career Technical students
- Training for specific careers
- Financial need
- Students formerly attended a district high school
CONTACT: scholarships@clackamas.edu | 503-594-6082 | Oregon City campus, Wacheno Welcome Center
View the complete list of CCC Foundation Scholarships.
External scholarship opportunities
- Office of Student Access and Completion - coordinates scholarships directed at Oregon residents
- FastWeb - a great resource for thousands of scholarship offerings
Scholarship resources
Scholarship Application Tips and Myths
- Get yourself organized. Do you know where you can go to find your most recent high
school GPA? If you are a current student at CCC, do you know where to find your college
grades?
- High school transcripts are readily available from the high school that you graduated from. Feel free to use your final report card after graduation to verify information like your GPA. You do not need to submit your high school transcripts to the Foundation, but having those transcripts can be helpful for some of the questions on the application, including the short responses/essay questions.
- Self-Service, the system that you use to register for classes at CCC, has the most up-to-date grades from your courses.
- If you obtained your GED, check your score report on GED.com for your scores. If you need assistance translating your GED score to a GPA, check out the Foundation's Scholarships website or email scholarships@clackamas.edu for guidance.
- If you went to high school in another country, you are eligible for scholarships as well. Use your most recent grade report/transcript for your GPA.
- Brainstorm your short-answer responses. Write these notes down in a place you can
easily access. Keep in mind that your responses can be used for non-CCC Foundation
scholarship applications. These notes can take on any form, but make sure that they are
useful for you!
- Think about your own experiences that have led you to this point. Did you have an event that inspired you to seek out a certain goal?
- What are your short-term and long-term goals? Do you have a resource at Clackamas Community College that has helped you realize these goals? If you are unsure about your long-term goals, think about resources that can assist you figure out those goals. It could be an instructor, a friend, a tutor, or a contact from a department at the college.
- Think about different moments in your life where you were challenged. How did you overcome those challenges? Did someone help you? Did you utilize a resource to overcome those challenges? How do these challenges connect with your long-term goals?
- Think about your community. How have you helped your community? What are some of the characteristics of your community? How have you served it?
- After brainstorming, check out the short-answer questions. Here they are:
- Describe the education and career goals that you have established for yourself. What efforts have you taken to accomplish these goals? What motivates you to achieve these goals? How can Clackamas Community College help you achieve these goals? (100-500 words)
- Describe a significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to address this challenge. Include whether you turned to anyone in facing that challenge, the role that person played, and what you learned about yourself. This challenge can come from a variety of experiences. Possibilities include financial, social, ethical, familial, circumstantial life challenges and/or the like. (100-300 words)
- Explain what you have done to make your community a better place to live. Give examples of specific projects in which you have been involved over time. You define your “community”. It could include your city, school, family, religious organization, or any other group that you are connected to. (100-300 words)
- While planning your responses, check out the rubric at the bottom of this page to see how our readers will evaluate your response.
- After drafting your responses, share them with someone!
- The CCC Writing Center. Here's the link to make an appointment for a session with them
- Ask a friend or colleague that you know and trust to review your work.
- Come to a scholarship workshop hosted by Adam Wickert, CCC's Scholarship and Student Success Analyst.
- Once you have drafted your response and shared it with someone, take a break from it!
- This will allow you time to think about your answers. Take a day or two to revise your responses.
- Before submission, check the following areas:
- Do you have a minimum of 100 words for each response? Have you answered all of the questions within each response?
- Do you give lots of personal examples for each response? Do these personal examples tie into the different questions? You want to have responses that showcase the uniqueness that is you.
- Have you done your best to make sure that your responses are as polished as possible? The scholarship reviewers won’t score you on grammar, but your case will be easier if the meaning comes through loud and clear.
- Check your short answers against the rubric.
- Take your time for the entire application. Our system allows you to save your responses, so don't rush as you put in your information. Plan to take a minimum of 3 hours to work on your short answers. (That's between brainstorming/planning, drafting, revising, and polishing those responses.) The rest of the application should only take 30 minutes maximum as long as you are organized.
- Work on your application in phases.
- Education and Career Goals
- 3 points: Goals and milestones are stated in clear and extensive detail. The applicant has an academic plan that lines up with their long-term goal. If undecided, the applicant has taken steps to finalize an academic plan and is actively working with college resources such as advisors and counselors. The student clearly understands how Clackamas Community College can aid them as they strive toward their goals. The applicant is strongly motivated to achieve this goal and has laid out their motivation.
- 2 points: A goal has been identified. The applicant has some idea about the milestones needed to reach that goal. If the student is undecided, they have identified a resource at Clackamas Community College that can aid them as they try to identify their long term plans. The motivation and inspiration to achieve this goal is mentioned but lacks extensive detail.
- 1 point: The applicant has a vague idea about a goal but no idea about the steps that they need to take to achieve that goal. Their motivation for achieving that goal is not clear to the reader.
- Dealing with Adversity
- 3 points: Strong determination, flexibility, and perseverance in response to challenges, obvious self-confidence, knowledge of strengths and limits, presence of a strong support person, and strong self-development efforts.
- 2 points: Some determination and perseverance in facing challenges, some self confidence but hesitant, some knowledge of strengths and limits but little evidence of self-development or turning to a support person.
- 1 point: Minor or non-existent flexibility, perseverance or determination dealing with challenges, defensive attitude, no evidence of self-development.
- Community Service
- 3 points: Strong evidence of activity/identification with a community, significant contributions over time. The service is personal and meaningful to the student and they articulate it in their response. The student demonstrates enthusiasm for service to others.
- 2 points: Some contacts, recent or short-term evidence of involvement with a community. The student states why it’s important to them but lacks detail. Their answer expresses some enthusiasm and provides a glimpse of another side of the personally important applicant.
- 1 point: Little or no evidence, no concept of the importance of community service
* A score of 0 should only be assigned if a student does not address the question anywhere in
the application (such as entering “N/A” as a response).
There are several myths about scholarships. Let’s take a look at them:
- Only certain students qualify for scholarships.
- The CCC Foundation offers over 250 scholarships with various qualifications and categories. We offer scholarships to students across all majors as well as different enrollment categories (Full-time, part-time, first-in-family to attend college, returning student, adult students, students in all income levels, etc.).
- My grades are not good enough!
- The majority of our scholarships only require students to maintain a 2.0 GPA, with a few requiring a 2.5 or 3.0 GPA. Foundation donors recognize that grades do not represent the entire story of our CCC students and want to support all students, regardless of their grades.
- Scholarships take too long to apply for. I don’t have that time!
- Our CCC Foundation scholarship allows applicants to apply for all of our scholarships with one single application. Our scholarship system will match your application with all opportunities that you qualify for, thus saving you time and energy.
- I have Oregon Promise and student loans. I don’t need a scholarship.
- Scholarships are tax-free money that can be applied to your educational expenses. Unlike loans, your scholarship dollars do not need to be repaid. Think of this as an investment in you! The CCC Foundation is investing in your success. The only expectation of a CCC Scholarship recipient is that they meet the enrollment requirements for their scholarship. In most cases, that is maintaining 6 credit hours per term and a 2.0 GPA.
GED and ESOL Students: Converting Scores to GPA in Application
If you have a GED score, or if you completed your secondary education in another country, use the chart below to calculate your estimated GPA. Use the GPA score to answer the question titled, "Enter High School GPA" on the scholarship application. For help using the chart, email us at scholarships@clackamas.edu.
| GED Completed Score (2002-2013) | GED Completed Score (2014-present) | Completed Secondary Education in Another Country | Estimate GPA to Enter |
|---|---|---|---|
| 701-800 | 186-200 | Very Best Final Grades | 4.0 |
| 601-700 | 174-185 | Outstanding Final Grades | 3.5 |
| 501-600 | 157-171 | Average to Good Final Grades | 3.0 |
| 410-500 | 145-156 | Passed to Below Average Grades | 2.0 |
Frequently Asked Questions about Scholarships
I'm having trouble logging into my scholarship portal, what do I do?
- To log into the scholarship application, you will use your myClackamas login credentials (email and password). Your login is the first part of your myClackamas email address, do not include the @student.clackamas.edu.
- For example: john.smith@student.clackamas.edu would just use smith.john for the login name. Then, use the same password that you use to log into your myClackamas account (if you made changes it won't automatically load from myClackamas, you must enter it on the scholarship log in page and press enter on your keyboard to load it.
I have forgotten my password, what do I do?
- If you have forgotten your myClackamas password, please go through the steps of resetting your myClackamas password first. Once you've successfully logged into your myClackamas, try to log into the scholarship portal again.
- If you end up trying too many times, you may get locked out.This will only last for a few hours, so try again later.
- You can reach out to Registration to get your password reset if you can't do it at your end at registration@clackamas.edu.
- You can also stop by the Financial Aid Resource Lab to get help with the login and with the scholarship application. The lab is located in the Roger Rook building at the Oregon City campus. They are opened Monday-Thursday from 10:00am-1:00pm and 1:30-3:00pm.
Can I do the scholarship application on my phone?
- It is possible to do on your phone, but we recommend using a computer desktop or laptop to complete your application using Firefox or Google Chrome for a browser. Be sure to save and submit your application before the deadline.
Are CCC scholarships available for international students?
CCC scholarships are available for students who will be taking classes to pursue a certificate or degree. International students are eligible to apply as long as they are pursuing a certificate or degree here at CCC and will be taking classes at one of our campuses.
How do I know if I didn’t receive a scholarship for the first round of scholarships? And, do I need to apply again for the second round?
You will be sent an email letting you know that you were chosen or not chosen for a scholarship the first round. However, your application will still be considered for the second round so you do not need to reapply!
Are CCC scholarships transferable to other colleges?
No, scholarships are not transferable. CCC scholarships can only be used here at Clackamas Community College.
If I have scholarships that I received independently from outside CCC, where do I have those sent, and with what information, to make sure they go into my student account?
Please have your donors make their check out to Clackamas Community College.
Mail the check to:
Clackamas Community College
Attn: Office of Financial Aid and Scholarships
19600 Molalla Ave
Oregon City, OR 97045
