Otago Daphne Purves Awards
Scholarship details
Value | Up to $4,000 |
---|---|
Gender | Female |
Length | Not specified. |
Close date | Thursday, 15 February 2024 |
About the scholarship
Otago Daphne Purves Awards were established to celebrate the life of Dame Daphne Purves (1908- 2008). Members of the Graduate Women Otago (GWO) or Independent members of Graduate Women New Zealand (GWNZ) resident in Otago or Southland can apply.Applications close each year on 15 February and 15 July. Read all the material supplied in this Application Pack so that you are conversant with both the ethos and the procedures associated with Otago Daphne Purves Awards. If you decide to apply for this Award, allow yourself plenty of time to assemble material and complete your application. Submit each page of your application on a separate sheet of A4 paper.The following items are included in this Application Pack: Introductory page (this page) Notes about Dame Daphne Purves for whom the Awards are named (1 page) Otago Daphne Purves Awards Description and Criteria for Eligibility (2 pages) The prescribed form for Otago Daphne Purves Award Application (4 pages) Who can apply for an Otago Daphne Purves Award? } Guidelines for making an Otago Daphne Purves Award application }(1 page) 2 March 2023 Notes about Dame Daphne Purves for whom the Awards are named.Daphne Helen Purves D.B.E., M.A. Daphne was born in Dunedin on 8 November 1908 as the eldest child of Irvine Watson Cowie and Helen Cowie (nee Crawford). Both parents had a high regard for education. Daphne attended Anderson’s Bay Primary School and Otago Girls’ High School and studied at Otago University from 1927 to 1930 graduating in 1931 with 1st class Honours in English and French. Admired and respected as a teacher all her life, she first taught at Waitaki and Otago Girls’ High Schools. In 1939 she married Herbert Dudley (“Dick”) Purves, an endocrinologist at the Otago Medical School who was destined to have an illustrious career in medical research, achieving international recognition and the award of an honorary degree from the University of Otago and a C.M.G. The birth of children (Hilary in 1941, Elizabeth in 1943 and Robert in 1947) brought Daphne’s teaching career to a temporary close but she became active in broadcasting and the Otago Branch of the Federation of University Women (becoming President in 1951) and was able to return to teaching in 1957 as the only woman staff member (at that time) at Otago Boys’ High School. This was followed by three years as an advisor to university students on Department of Education bursaries and in 1966 she was appointed senior lecturer in French at Dunedin Teachers’ College where she set up and headed the first language department until her retirement in 1973. In 1962 she became President of the NZFUW and in 1965 commenced her involvement with the IFUW (International Federation of University Women, now Graduate Women International [GWI]), first as a member of its Cultural Relations Committee and then as its Convener. From there she moved onto the Board of the IFUW serving as 3rd and 1st Vice-Presidents (1971-1977) and finally becoming President in 1977, the first woman from the Southern Hemisphere to do so. Her work for the IFUW took her to some 40 different countries, attending conferences and encouraging and advising national Federations. She was an indefatigable traveller and a champion of the rights of women everywhere. At the same time, she served on the New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO for 4 years from 1964 and on its sub-committee for education for a further 10 years. Wishing to be involved as well in a specifically New Zealand project she spent some years (1978-82) working for the New Zealand National Commission for the Year of the Child. In 1979 her achievements were crowned by the award of Dame Commander of the British Empire. The award specified “for services to the community” but it is certain that being President of the IFUW played a major role. In her retirement from public life, Daphne dedicated her energies to her family, to playing bridge and croquet (becoming an umpire) and attending University Extension classes. She retained her love of travelling well into her nineties and attended an IFUW Conference in Graz in 1998. She died on 15 October 2008, a few weeks short of her hundredth birthday.
Entry requirements
Otago Daphne Purves Awards celebrate Dame Daphne Purves (1908-2008). Dame Daphne was President of IFUW (International Federation of University Women; now GWI, Graduate Women International) from 1977-1980. She was a member of, the then, NZFGW (Otago Branch) and valued education for girls and women. The Awards were established by, the then, NZFGW (Otago Branch) in 2009 to celebrate Dame Daphne’s life by acknowledging contributions of experience and research made by women who, in their personal or professional practice, also support GWO, GWNZ and GWI goals. Up to four Otago Daphne Purves Awards may be made each year to GWO members or Independent members of GWNZ resident in Otago or Southland regardless of their age, career prospects, or occupation. They are offered to enable women to participate in conferences, meetings, courses, workshops, or events, in New Zealand or overseas, to contribute material from their experience or research and to gain expertise, ideas or professional development that will benefit their communities of interest. Application for an Otago Daphne Purves Award may be made several times in a member’s life. While GWO will wish to exercise discretion and fairness in granting subsequent awards, it may choose to respond to events, societal or personal, that have affected a candidate’s circumstances. Examples include limited opportunities for promotion; limited opportunities for employer support; outcomes of decisions about additional commitments in caring situations; acceptance of changes in career, employment, social relationships, or income. Preference is given to women who do not have easy access to other sources of funding and who have an income insufficient to support such activities. Each award is a maximum of $4000.The closing dates for applications are 15 February and 15 July. Applicants must be fully paid up financial members of either Graduate Women Otago or Independent members of Graduate Women New Zealand who are resident in Otago or Southland for at least the six months immediately prior to the relevant application closing date. Awards are available only to current residents of Otago or Southland. Awards cannot be granted retrospectively. 4 March 2023 Recipients of a Travel Award, or of an Otago Daphne Purves Award, or of a GWO, or a GWNZ or a GWI award with a value greater than $1000 will not be eligible to apply for a first or subsequent Otago Daphne Purves Award for at least four years after accepting the previous award. No awards will be made if there are no suitable applicants. This Award is not available for Ph.D. or Masters candidates. Applicants must apply on the prescribed application form (currently dated March, 2023) to which no changes may be made in formatting or length. If additional material is appended to the Application it must not exceed, in length or content, the limits set in the Guidelines for making an Otago Daphne Purves Award application (currently dated March, 2023). If these requirements are disregarded the application will be considered invalid. Information supplied by the applicant and obtained from referees will be confidential to this Award’s Selection Panel except as agreed in the Privacy Statement submitted with the Application and signed by the applicant. Notification may take up to eight weeks after closing date. Awards will not be paid out until evidence of the planned project has been received, namely, a copy of travel tickets and copies of acceptance of event registration(s) and formal contribution(s), and/or copies of other receipts relevant to the project. Award recipients are required to submit a 200-300 word report within a month of the completion of their project, and to be willing to speak about it publicly if requested.Awards are made by the Branch Committee on recommendations received from this Award’s Selection Panel. Branch Committee decisions are final. If further correspondence and/or communications are received they will be circulated to all members of the Selection Panel and the relevant subcommittees of the Branch Committee and brought to the attention of the Branch Committee.