Established through the Will of Cecil John Rhodes of the diamond company De Beers in 1902, the Rhodes Scholarship was a very progressive project in the new century. 120+ years later, the Rhodes Scholarships are the oldest and most respected international scholarship programme anywhere, enabling talented young people around the world to undertake full-time postgraduate study at Oxford Uni.
The reputation as the world's most famous academic scholarship rests not on the life of founder Cecil Rhodes, but on the enormous contributions scholarship-holders later made to the world. Thus the ideal personal and academic qualities (listed below) remain as important as ever. Not surprisingly, Oxford scored first in the Times Higher Education rankings each year from 2016-24 .
One of the founding aims of the Scholarship was to identify young leaders from around the world who, through being educated together at Oxford, would create long term links of mutual understanding and fellowship for the betterment of the world.
The following criteria were used to select Rhodes Scholars:
1.literary and scholastic excellence, intellectual distinction;
2.energy to fully use one's talents where teamwork is involved by mastery in areas like sports, music, debate, dance, theatre and arts;
3.courage, devotion to duty, protection of the weak, unselfishness and focus on public service; and
4.moral instincts to lead fellow humans.
When students from around the world came together in a shared spirit, the excitement began. The Rhodes Scholarship was a life-changing opportunity, starting when applications (aged only from 18-24) for each Rhodes Scholarship open early in each northern academic year. Today 100 scholarships a year cover all fees and a stipend for 2-3 years, with 300+ scholars in residence in Oxford at one time.
Each year, 9 Rhodes Scholarships are available for outstanding Australians to study at Oxford, each state offering one scholarship, awarded by a formal selection committee. Rhodes Scholars here have achieved distinction as politicians, academics, scientists and doctors, authors, entrepreneurs and Nobel Prize winners. Australia’s most famous winner was Howard Florey (1898-1968) received his medical training at the University of Adelaide and at Oxford as a Rhodes scholar. This pharmacologist won a Nobel Prize for Physiology/Medicine in 1945 for isolating and purifying penicillin, shared with Alexander Fleming and German biochemist Ernst Boris Chain. Other Rhodes scholars became heads of state or heads of government, including Prime Ministers Tony Abbott, Bob Hawke and Malcolm Turnbull, and Deputy Prime Minister Kim Beazley.
Now for a more detailed look at a specific scholarship winner. After finishing San Mateo High School Cal in 1954, Kris Kristofferson (1936–2024) enrolled at Pomona College Cal, hoping to become a writer. He studied writing under Dr Frederick Sontag, who encouraged him to apply for a Rhodes scholarship. He graduated in 1958 and was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship, allowing him to study British literature at Oxford earning a Masters. I am not surprised that he wrote stories and examined the works of William Blake. But I had no idea he began writing songs during his time in Oxford. At the same time he began his performing career and he was also awarded a University Blue for boxing and played rugby.
Me and Bobby McGee (1970)
(Written by Kristofferson and sung by Janis Joplin)
Freedom is just another word for nothin' left to lose
Nothin', don't mean nothin' hon' if it ain't free, no-no
And feelin' good was easy, Lord, when he sang the blues
You know feelin' good was good enough for me
Good enough for me and my Bobby McGee.
18 comments:
I have a vague memory of learning about Rhodes Scholarships, but never paid much attention, knowing I would never have one.
To show that top sportsmen could win a Rhodes Scholarship, I thought Mike Fitzpatrick was brilliant in 1975. After retiring from AFL football he worked in investment banking, far from a dumb footballer who used more brawn than brain.
Interesting to learn about Kris Kristofferson. Some people have so many talents.
That was interesting to learn about Kristofferson. I've never heard how well our former PM's performed at Oxford, just that they attended. Thanks for not posting a photo of The Abbott.
Dear Helen, it's interesting to learn about the Rhodes Scholarship. I've never heard about it before.
River
women weren't allowed to apply to 1977, so I am guessing your parents (and mine) wouldn't have even thought about us leaving home and going to Oxford. Our brothers, perhaps.
Joe
the Scholarship panel were spot on, when they chose Mike Fitzpatrick. When he left the UK, he worked for international investment banks Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse First Boston, established a superannuation funds company
and became a director of Rio Tinto.
And being a great sportsman and mentor to younger footballers was highly desirable for the Scholarship panel, rather than a concern. Sport was the second criterion they actively sought.
jabblog
We would not have been surprised at all when:
US Astronomer Edwin Hubble won his scholarship in 1910.
Australian pharmacologist Lord Howard Florey won his in 1921
Australian plasma physicist Louis Davies won his in 1950.
But I described Kris Kristofferson's success in detail because most people would have been very surprised. He was a creative undergrad student, an excellent boxer and was keen to study literature at the post-grad level.
Andrew
In 1980 Tony Abbott got a very low second class honour for his moral and political philosophy exam in Oxford, but higher second class honours for his political institutions and theory of politics. But it probably didn't matter back then. Only in 2013 did we see him as prime minister.
Irina
The British statesman Cecil Rhodes established the Rhodes Scholarship in 1902, specifically to create unity among English-speaking nations. Thus for a long time, applicants were welcomed across the British Empire - India, Pakistan, Canada, South Africa, Rhodesia, Australia, New Zealand etc. Soon the USA was included.
But families in Russia, Poland, Egypt, Argentina, Brasil etc would not have been aware of the scholarship scheme until much later.
My high school friend actually won Rhode scholarship to Cambridge. So is our blogger friend Liam
The Rhodes Scholarship, rings a distant bell in my head must have heard or read about it at some point but I can't remember at the moment. Anyway I found the post interesting but now I have the song Me and Bobby McGee stuck in my head
That's interesting about the scholarships. I had a high school friend who might have won one. If not she won some other big and famous scholarship, but I didn't know much about them other than the name.
Jo-Anne
That is really surprising :) I remember the words of Me and Bobby McGee well because Janis Joplin was such an important part of my young life. But I would have had no idea whatsoever why Kris Kristofferson became a famous Rhodes scholar. Thank goodness for blogging.
My favourite winner was Naomi Wolf who was born in California to a Jewish Romanian family of scholars and linguists. No wonder she was a great writer - she did English Literature in Yale and her doctorate in Oxford also in English Literature (1985-7). What I did not know was that she later became the consultant to Clinton and Gore regarding feminisim.
roentare
there was no Rhodes Scholarship for postgraduate study at Cambridge... only at Oxford. But your friend may well have won a different scholarship.
Liam of "Jeeves Hat" blogging fame? I am rapt!
Erika
If you find she did win a Rhodes Scholarship, please invite her to this blogging world .. as soon as possible :)
By the way, what are her areas of expertise?
Deb
I read Naomi Wolf's advocacy of feminism and progressive politics, thinking she was personally writing for me :) I read The Beauty Myth of course, but without knowing she was a Rhodes scholar.
The family bought me Facing the Beast: Courage, Faith, and Resistance in a New Dark Age for my birthday last week :) Perfect.
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