How Act Six Works

Tacoma-Seattle Act Six Scholars

Act Six is a leadership and scholarship program that connects local faith-based community affiliates with faith- and social justice-based colleges to equip emerging urban and community leaders to engage the college campus and their communities at home through a simple but powerful four-part strategy:

How It Works: 4 Steps

1 Recruit and Select

Calling Diverse Emerging Leaders Who Love Their Community

Act Six brings together diverse, multicultural cadres of young people who want to use their college education to make a difference on campus and in their communities at home. Scholars are actively recruited from across the region and chosen through a rigorous, three-phase selection process.

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IMPORTANT: Due to FAFSA delays, final decisions will be sent on a rolling basis. Our 2024 scholars will be confirmed and announced in May.

Eligibility

Students are eligible to apply now if they:

While ethnicity and family income are considered as factors in selecting an intentionally diverse group of scholars, there are no income restrictions, and students from all racial and ethnic backgrounds are encouraged to apply.

There is no minimum GPA requirement and admissions standards vary across our partner colleges. In general, applicants with a GPA below 3.0 will need to demonstrate their readiness for academic success in college through their recommendations, essays and/or test scores.

Application Process

Act Six utilizes Common App to make the application process more efficient for applicants and the recommenders who support them. The information provided to Act Six through Common App can also be used to apply to more than 900 colleges across the country.

The process to apply for Act Six is as follows:

  1. Complete the Act Six Interest form. If you are eligible, we’ll email you a link to add Act Six to your Common App.
  2. Use the personalized link in your email to create a Common App account and add Act Six to your “My Colleges” list. If you have already started your Common App, the button will add Act Six to your existing application.

Applicants selected to advance to Phase II will be asked to submit additional information, including a video, additional essay and financial information, along with Common App recommendations from a teacher and community member by December 11.

Selection Timeline

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Act Six scholars are chosen through a rigorous, highly competitive, three-phase selection process that spans four months.

IMPORTANT: Due to FAFSA delays, final decisions will be sent on a rolling basis. Our 2024 scholars will be confirmed and announced in May.

Phase I: Common App

Applicants apply to Act Six by submitting the Common App by November 28, including the personally essay and the high school report and transcript from their counselor. After an initial screening of Common App materials, applicants are notified whether they will advance by email on November 30.

Phase II: Additional Materials

Candidates will be given one week to provide additional materials by December 11, including an individual video, an additional essay, financial information, and preferred rankings of Act Six partner colleges.

A local community committee considers candidates to name 15-25 semifinalists for each partner college. Decisions are emailed on January 15.

Phase III: Campus Visit

Semifinalists travel to the college for which they were selected for a two- or three-day on-campus event between January 29 – February 16. Phase III allows students to experience campus life as they participate in a four-part evaluation process that includes a personal interview, an on-site writing task, academic seminar discussions, and group problem-solving activities. A parent or guardian is invited to participate in a portion of the visit. Depending on local conditions, an alternative virtual event may also be offered. Partner colleges select finalists and decisions are emails on February 21.

Final Decision and Announcement

Finalists are given one week to decide and commit to the Act Six program by February 29, agreeing to participate fully in the six-month training program. Applicants may withdraw from the process at any time prior to this commitment. The new class of Act Six scholars are formally announced to the public on March 21.

Selection Criteria

E very year Act Six recruits diverse, multicultural cadres of a region’s most promising emerging urban and community leaders. We seek young people who want to use their college education to make a difference on campus and in their communities at home.

Act Six scholars must be:

The selection process also places high value on applicants’ teamwork, critical thinking, communication skills and academic potential.

Selecting Act Six scholars is a complex and multi-faceted process that considers many factors. The selection committees use the following questions to guide their evaluation of Act Six applicants. These questions best summarize what we are looking for in Act Six scholars.

What does it mean to be an Act Six scholar?

2 Train and Prepare

Premier College Success and Leadership Training

Once selected, Act Six scholars participate in six months of intensive training with their cadre, equipping them to support each other, succeed academically and grow as service-minded leaders and agents of transformation. After training, Act Six scholars begin college ready to engage the campus and community with a built-in support system and a sense of purpose.

Training Activities

Starting in March, new cadres meet together weekly to:

In addition to the weekly meetings, the program includes:

Training Themes and Content

Blending practical college success skills, leadership training, self-discovery and cadre team-building, the Act Six training program revolves around the following seven themes:

Vision
Leadership
Service
Diversity
Community
Preparation
Transformation

The training has been very important to me in that it has provided a means by which I can better myself. It has also introduced me to new ways of thinking about the world. The knowledge I have gained will aid me greatly in bettering myself and the world.
- Act Six Scholar

3 Send and Fund

To College Together with Unbeatable Scholarships

Act Six sends scholars together to college with the built-in support and encouragement of a cadre of fellow leaders who share a common mission. Act Six is the only urban leadership award that offers unparalleled full-tuition, full-need scholarships. Since 2002, 1,092 Act Six scholars have received more than $100 million in grants and scholarships.

Full-Tuition, Full-Need Scholarship

Act Six offers full-tuition, full-need urban leadership scholarship. Act Six works with colleges and other partners to guarantee that full scholarship recipients receive grants that, at minimum, cover full tuition at the college for four years.

Scholars with need beyond tuition (as determined by the FAFSA) will receive additional grants and work-study to fully meet that need. For most scholars, the awards will, therefore, cover some or all of the cost of room and board, books, travel, and personal expenses.

To retain the scholarship, scholars are required to remain active in the program and maintain satisfactory academic progress throughout their undergraduate studies.

Here’s how the full scholarships work:

  1. Each year students must work with their parents to complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) which will determine the family’s Expected Family Contribution (EFC). Students who are unable to complete the FAFSA will complete an alternative form to determine their EFC.
  2. The family’s need is then determined by subtracting their EFC from the total cost of attendance (including tuition, room and board, books, travel, and personal expenses).
  3. Act Six award packages begin with any government student aid or outside scholarships for which students qualify.
  4. After outside grants and scholarships have been applied, the college commits to providing scholarship aid that will meet full tuition for every Act Six scholar.
  5. If the family’s need exceeds the cost of tuition, the college commits to providing additional scholarship aid and work-study to meet full need.
  6. Each family will be responsible for covering their EFC.

Because financial aid policies generally prevent colleges from exceeding need and because Act Six awards meet the full need without a loan, scholars can be assured that they are receiving unsurpassed award packages.

4 Support and Inspire

Connected Leaders Working Together For Positive Change

Getting to college is just the start of the Act Six experience. Bound together by a shared mission and commitments, scholars learn to encourage and challenge each other while they receive ongoing support from their colleges and their affiliate. After five years together, scholars graduate from college connected to each other and ready to lead in the community. Together, they are weaving a fabric of leadership that will shape the future of our cities.

Campus Support

On campus, faculty and staff mentors meet regularly with the cadres and with each individual scholar as needed. Mentors provide social support and connect students with campus resources. This support helps scholars thrive academically, but also empowers them to get involved and step out into leadership roles on campus and in the surrounding community.

Back home, Act Six staff and coaches provide additional support, ongoing leadership development and assistance connecting with internships and career opportunities.

Every two years, Act Six hosts a regional convention that convenes scholars and graduates from across the region for three days of challenging speakers, workshops, and networking, along with a career and graduate school fair.

A Fabric of Leadership

When you consider moments of significant positive change that have happened in your community, you can usually point to a group of connected people who made it happen. Networks of effective leaders working together get things done. The problem is that those leadership networks don’t always look like or represent the full breadth of a community, and as a result, some groups tend to get left behind. For our communities to thrive in the future, we need diverse networks of homegrown leaders who love their home and are committed to building vibrant communities where everyone thrives.

It is precisely this kind of diverse, committed leadership network that Act Six is producing. Now, after two decades and hundreds of Act Six graduates, we are beginning to see the fruits of this fabric of leadership as graduates grow in their responsibility and deepen their connections in the community.