While you've been focused on college applications, dozens of
scholarship opportunities with December and January deadlines have opened, and some of them require a personal statement.
If you’re in the thick of college application season, you’ve likely already written a personal statement for your college apps, so why start from scratch? The good news: you don't have to. With a few strategic updates, you can
transform your college essay into a winning scholarship personal statement that works for multiple applications.
Below, we’ll detail how to polish your personal statement for scholarships, adapt it for different prompts, and create a toolkit of reusable essays that will save you time while
increasing your chances of winning winter scholarship awards.
Why Winter Scholarship Deadlines Matter
The scholarship search isn’t limited to a specific time of the year. Rather, they’re available year-round. However, lucrative scholarship opportunities, like the Burger King Scholars Program and the Live Mas Scholarship, will come and go, so you need to be aware of winter scholarship deadlines and have your application materials ready.
Many important deadlines fall throughout the winter months, so while you’re hibernating from the cold, use your newfound time at home to
apply for scholarships. This is especially true over the holiday break, as other students may be distracted, so the competition is less intense.
Step-by-Step Guide: How to Polish Your Personal Statement for Scholarships
The personal statement you’ve been using for college applications can be duplicated to use for scholarships. However, you’ll need to make some revisions to put your best application forward.
Step 1: Audit Your Current Personal Statement
First, you need to take stock of what you have.
Read your college essay out loud and identify the strongest anecdotes. Also, list key themes, like resilience, leadership, overcoming challenges, etc.
If there are parts of the essay that feel too college-specific, make note of those areas so you can remove them. Finally, identify any gaps in the writing. Does it showcase your financial situation? Community impact? Specific career goals? If not, make a note to include any or all of these in the final version.
Step 2: Reframe Your Opening for Scholarship Readers
Your opening could be considered the most important part. Scholarship committees read hundreds of essays; you need to hook them immediately.
Compare the two openings below and see how they differ:
• College Essay: “Competing in the swim nationals for my high school was one of the proudest moments of my life…”
• Scholarship Essay: “Nothing could have prepared me for the moment I stepped onto the block at the Swimming World National Championships, though I had spent years of my life diving into the pool, practicing different strokes, and perfecting my form…”
Writing a winning scholarship essay takes creativity, detail, and a first line that immediately draws the reader into your experience.
Step 3: Strengthen Your "Why This Matters" Section
If your essay calls for a paragraph or two on
your financial circumstances, you need to make it count. At the same time, there is a fine balance between sharing your need without oversharing.
Try to add specific details about your financial need while maintaining your dignity. Be matter-of-fact and don’t beg.
Finally, get specific about your future goals so the scholarship committee feels you’re worth investing in. Connect your past experiences to future goals.
• Essay Example: "After volunteering for 200 hours at the local food bank, I witnessed how nutrition insecurity affects academic performance, and I'm now committed to becoming a dietitian who works with underserved schools."
Step 4: Create Multiple Versions for Different Scholarship Types
If you really want to maximize your personal statements to apply for scholarships easily and quickly, consider writing multiple versions for different scholarship types. Every version will have the same core and strong paragraphs, but you will adjust the emphasis and conclusion to fit the specific essay prompt:
•
Version A: Merit-focused, which emphasizes achievements, leadership, and academics.
•
Version B: Need-based that highlights financial circumstances, resilience, and community support.
•
Version C: Career/major-specific, which connects past experiences to a chosen career field.
•
Version D: Community service/leadership that focuses on your impact to others.
Step 5: Tailor the Ending to Each Scholarship's Mission
If you plan to reuse scholarship essays, it’s paramount that you
update each copy to reflect the scholarship’s mission. It’s very easy for scholarship committees to recognize a dupe essay, so make sure you meticulously research their organization and incorporate their core values into your statement.
To do this, look at past winners, mission statements, and founder stories on their website. In the final paragraph of your essay, connect your goals to their mission:
• Essay Example: "The [Scholarship Name]'s commitment to [specific value] aligns perfectly with my goal to [specific future action]. This scholarship would enable me to [concrete outcome], allowing me to give back to communities like mine that face [specific challenge]."
Where to Find Winter Scholarships That Need Personal Statements
In the next few weeks, aggressively
search out winter scholarships with deadlines in December and January. Ask your school counselor, employer, and local organizations, like Kiwanis, Rotary, and professional organizations, about opportunities.
Also, use Fastweb to easily find scholarships with winter deadlines. Check out
our Instagram page every Friday for
Fund Your Future Friday alerts. Finally, apply for any and all awards you qualify for below:
Award Amount: $3,200 - $25,000
Deadline: 11/24/25
Available to: High School Seniors
The National Honor Society Scholarship is awarded to high school seniors who have been inducted into the National Honor Society. You must be nominated through your high school NHS chapter to be eligible for this award.
Award Amount: $2,500
Deadline: 11/25/25
Available to: Undergraduate & Graduate Students
The Future of Connectivity Essay Scholarship is open to undergraduate and graduate students. To be considered for this award, you must be majoring in computer science, cybersecurity, data analytics, IT Management, network systems administration, software application development, business administration, marketing, or a related field.
You must also submit a short bio and a 1,000-word essay that responds to the prompt: "You're living in the year 2035, how have Internet-enabled devices impacted your life or the world around you?"
Award Amount: $1,000
Deadline: 11/30/25
Available to: High School & College Students
November is National Scholarship Month—make it your moment to set new scholarship goals. Tell us how many you'll apply for, and you'll be entered to win $1,000. Be a Fastweb member, answer one quick multiple-choice question, and enter daily through November 30, 2025.
Award Amount: $10,000 - $45,000
Deadline: 12/3/25
Available to: Students in grades K – 12
The Doodle for Google Contest is open to students in grades K through 12. To be considered, you must use your imagination to create a Google Doodle based on the theme "My superpower is..."
Award Amount: $1,000 - $60,000
Deadline: 12/15/25
Available to: High School Seniors
The Burger King Scholars Program is open to graduating high school seniors, Burger King employees, and the spouse/domestic partners, and children of employees in the U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico. You must have a minimum 2.5 GPA to be eligible for this award.
Award Amount: $5,000 - $25,000
Deadline: 1/6/26
Available to: High school, college, and graduate students
The Live Más Scholarship is available to innovators, creators, and dreamers between the ages of 16 and 26. To be considered, you must create and submit a film, animation, or a simple testimonial of up to two minutes in length that tells the story of your life's passion.
Award Amount: $4,000
Deadline: 1/9/26
Available to: College Students
The Go City Education Scholarship is open to currently enrolled students who are studying in the U.S. You must submit a short statement of no more than 280 characters on one of the sponsor's destinations and tell them what attractions you think should be added to their sightseeing passes and why in order to be considered for this award.
Award Amount: $10,000
Deadline: 1/20/26
Available to: College Students
The Elie Wiesel Prize In Ethics Essay Contest is open to full-time undergraduate students attending four-year institutions. To be considered, you must articulate with clarity an ethical issue that you have encountered, and analyze what it has taught you about ethics and yourself.
Award Amount: $5,000
Deadline: 1/31/26
Available to: High School Seniors
The Flavorful Futures Scholarship is available to graduating high school seniors. You must have a minimum 2.5 GPA to be eligible for this award.
Your Personal Statement Is Ready: Time to Apply
You don't need to start from scratch. Your
college personal statement is already a strong foundation. With these strategic updates, you can turn it into a scholarship-winning essay that works for multiple winter scholarship applications.
Here's what to do right now:
• Open your college personal statement.
• Pick one scholarship with an upcoming deadline.
• Spend 30 minutes tailoring your essay using the steps above.
• Submit your application.
You've already done the hard work of writing your story. Now it's time to share it and get rewarded for it. Your winter scholarship applications are calling. Submit your applications now.