Scholarship preparation doesn't start in SS3 it starts the day you enter secondary school. This post breaks down exactly what Nigerian secondary school students should be doing right now from building their grades and extracurriculars to discovering the right opportunities so they don't arrive at university broke and unprepared.
Source: EduJobs Africa
There was A time in my university hostel in 200 level, watching a coursemate of mine a quiet girl from Katsina named Hauwa pack for Canada. She had just won a full undergraduate scholarship. She was calm. Almost unbothered. While the rest of us were calculating how to survive the semester on ₦15,000, Hauwa was printing out visa documents.
I asked her, “When did you start applying?”
She looked at me and said, “Musa, I started preparing in JSS3.”
That conversation changed how I think about scholarships forever. Most of us don’t miss scholarships at the application stage we miss them years before, when we didn’t know we were supposed to be building our profile.
If you’re a secondary school student in Nigeria, or you’re a parent or teacher reading this on behalf of one, this post is the most important thing you’ll read this year.
Why Secondary School Is the Most Underrated Scholarship Season
Here’s something most education blogs won’t tell you: scholarship committees don’t just look at your WAEC result. They look at who you were before the result. They want to know what you did with your time. They want to see leadership. Community impact. Academic consistency. Awards. Essays that show real thought.
By the time you’re in SS3 furiously looking for scholarships to apply for, most of the work that should have supported your application was supposed to happen two or three years earlier. This is why many brilliant students lose to “less brilliant” ones not because of grades, but because of preparation.
The earlier you understand this, the better your chances.
Step 1: Take Your Grades Seriously From JSS1 Not SS3
I know this sounds basic. But you’d be surprised how many students think they can “redeem” themselves in SS3 alone. Some scholarship bodies especially international ones ask for your full secondary school transcript or your BECE result. Federal Government Scholarship programs in Nigeria, for instance, have grade benchmarks that reflect your overall academic trajectory.
Start strong and stay consistent. Your first term result in JSS1 matters more than you think, because it builds the habit and the record.
If you’re already in SS2 or SS3 and your grades haven’t been great, don’t panic. Focus on bringing them up now and explaining your growth in your scholarship essays. Some committees respect a turnaround story but only if you can tell it honestly.
Step 2: Start Building a “Scholarship CV” Right Now
Most students don’t know what a scholarship CV is until they’re filling a form and the question says, “List all leadership roles, community projects, or achievements.” Then they stare at the screen with nothing to write.
A scholarship CV is simply the record of your activities outside the classroom. It includes things like being the class captain or student union rep, winning a quiz competition even at school level, volunteering at a community event or mosque/church program, starting a small reading club or peer tutoring group, or participating in debate, JETS club, science fairs, or spelling bees.
None of these need to be grand or national. Scholarship committees just want to see that you’re a person with initiative someone who does things beyond memorizing textbooks.
Start today. Join one club. Solve one problem in your school. Document it.
Step 3: Learn About the Types of Scholarships Available to You
Not all scholarships are for university students. Some are specifically designed for SS3 students or even younger. The earlier you know which ones exist, the earlier you can position yourself.
For instance, the Shell Nigeria/SPDC Scholarship targets university students but requires WAEC grades so your secondary school performance feeds directly into your eligibility. The Agbami Medical & Engineering Professional Scholarship is another that’s rooted in WAEC performance. And you’d be surprised some international scholarships like the Mastercard Foundation Scholars Program look at your secondary school community involvement as part of the selection criteria.
Speaking of WAEC your result is literally a passport. I wrote a full post about scholarships you can apply for with only your WAEC result go and bookmark that page right now, because you’ll need it when the time comes.
Step 4: Develop the Habit of Writing Your Essays Will Win or Lose the Scholarship
I’ve reviewed hundreds of scholarship applications over the years. I can tell you with confidence: the essay is where most Nigerian students lose.
Not because they’re not smart. Because they’ve never been taught how to write about themselves. We grow up in a culture that says modesty is a virtue, and so when someone says “Tell us about yourself and why you deserve this scholarship,” we write something vague and humble that says nothing at all.
Scholarship essays reward clarity, honesty, and specificity. The student who writes “I want to study medicine to help my community because I once watched my younger sister nearly die from a preventable illness in a clinic with no drugs” will beat the student who writes “I am passionate about medicine and wish to contribute to national development.” Every single time.
Start writing now. Keep a journal. Practice writing about your experiences, your struggles, your dreams. The muscles you build writing in secondary school will carry you further than you know.
Step 5: Get a Mentor or a Community That Knows This World
I’ve said this before and I’ll keep saying it: information poverty is the biggest scholarship killer in Nigeria. Not lack of talent. Not even lack of money. Information.
There are students right now in Kano who have the grades, the story, and the hunger but nobody around them knows what a “personal statement” is or where to find legitimate scholarship listings. They’ll graduate, apply for five jobs, and never know that a full scholarship to study abroad was available to them.
You need to be in spaces where people share this kind of information. That’s why platforms like this one exist. Read posts. Follow reputable education pages. Join WhatsApp groups for scholars. And if you ever doubt that it’s possible read the story of this student from a poor family in Kano who won a full scholarship to Canada. It is real, and it is possible.
The Honest Truth: Scholarships Are Not for “Special” People
Here’s what nobody tells secondary school students about scholarships in Nigeria: the students who win them are rarely the most brilliant in their class. They are the most prepared. They are the ones who found out about the opportunity six months before the deadline. They are the ones who had someone review their essay. They are the ones who had three extra-curricular activities to list, even small ones.
Scholarship committees are not magic. They are people sitting down with a checklist, and your job is to tick as many boxes as possible. The earlier you understand what those boxes are — and start filling them the better your odds.
This isn’t motivation talk. This is strategy.
Your Practical Action Plan (Start This Week)
- Pull out your last school report card. Check your average and be honest with yourself about where you stand. Set a grade target for next term.
- Join at least one school club or organization this term. It doesn’t have to be glamorous. Science club, debate, press club pick one and show up consistently.
- Open a notebook or Google Doc called “My Scholarship Profile.” Start logging every achievement, role, or project no matter how small.
- Practice writing one paragraph about yourself every week. Just one. What you did, why you did it, and what you learned. This builds your essay voice.
- Bookmark edujobsafrica.com and at least two other scholarship resource platforms. Scholarship listings come out randomly. You need to already be in the ecosystem when they do.
- Talk to one teacher or mentor about your scholarship goals. Not because they’ll hand you a scholarship, but because saying it out loud makes it real and you never know who knows what.
You Have Time But Not as Much as You Think
If you’re in JSS1 right now, you have the most beautiful runway in front of you. Use it wisely and you could be at a world-class university before you’re 20, with someone else footing the bill.
If you’re in SS2 or SS3, you don’t have the luxury of starting from scratch but you still have enough time to strengthen your profile, sharpen your essays, and find the right opportunities. Don’t waste another term.
The students who win scholarships didn’t get lucky. They got ready.
Start getting ready today.