THE KEEGAN TRAVELING FELLOWSHIP

UNPACKED

The Michael B. Keegan Traveling Fellowship enhances the development of future leaders through world travel and experiential learning. The concept of the fellowship is simple: give a graduating senior the opportunity of a lifetime by equipping them with resources to travel the world, learning everything they can about a topic of their choosing. With few to no strings attached, this immersive experience is designed to build upon the Fellow’s undergraduate education and offer a pathway to global education, citizenship, and leadership.

The Fellowship is proud to announce its expansion to include a Summer Keegan Traveling Fellowship: a shorter version of the Keegan that will allow more students to participate in the incredible Keegan experience, launching Summer 2024. You can learn more about that opportunity here.

Currently, the post-graduate Fellowship award is $25,000/student each year. The student’s project proposal must involve travel to multiple countries (typically this includes numerous countries on at least three continents). Although the Fellows’ travel is largely self-designed, the Office of Undergraduate Education and Fellowship alumni offer experience, global networks, and advice throughout the planning process.

New experiences have the power to change the way we think about and understand our place in the world. By interacting with new cultures, people, and situations, we are able to open our minds to other perspectives and ways of life. In doing so, we grow as both leaders and human beings in remarkable, unprecedented ways.

By the end of our journeys, we step into our future communities, organizations, and institutions as more confident, authentic, and compassionate individuals. 

Rob Whiting riding on the back of a motorcycle in a Southeast Asian country
 

Make a donation.

100% of every donation goes directly to supporting the travels of future Fellows. Thank you so much for your support!

Cows and a fogged over Chinese mountainside

“The Fellowship taught me that life isn’t always about bullet points on a resume, doing something in a formulaic order to get from point A to point B. There can and should be detours — that’s what makes the journey interesting and rich.”

— Rob Whiting, 2009-10