Intellectual Property Institute of Canada (IPIC) · National
Intellectual Property Institute of Canada (IPIC)
About this award
Apply by August 1 for a foundation award supporting Indigenous students in their 4th year of STEM, Business, or AI studies.
The provider doesn't post a fixed dollar amount — contact Intellectual Property Institute of Canada (IPIC) (the professional association for patent and trademark agents and lawyers) to confirm the value for your specific award before you apply. This is for you if you are an Indigenous student in your final stages of study who has a strong interest in intellectual property and a history of helping your community. You must apply by August 1. No notification timeline is posted publicly — when you apply, ask how and when you'll hear back via email, portal, or phone. Selection criteria aren't published beyond the focus on financial need and academic merit — ask IPIC how winners are chosen and roughly how many applicants they typically receive so you can judge your odds. Ask IPIC during your application how the money will reach you — some awards pay students directly, others apply funds to tuition. Confirm this so you can plan your cash flow. Renewal conditions aren't listed — if you're counting on this for multiple years, confirm with IPIC whether it's one-time or renewable and what you need to maintain.
Can you get it?
- Indigenous — citizenship requirement
- Undergraduate — study level
- Studying STEM, Industrial Design, Business, AI — field of study
How to apply
Review eligibility and gather your documents~1 hour
Read the official award page end-to-end. Confirm you meet every requirement before you start.
Request your official transcript1–2 weeks
Order through your school registrar — allow 1–2 weeks.
Draft and revise your essays~10 hours
Use the STAR framework. Be specific, show impact, proofread twice.
Submit by No deadline~1 hour
Double-check every field, save a copy, and submit at least 24 hours early.
More details
The biggest mistake is providing a vague statement about needing money.
Winners instead provide a clear budget showing exactly how the funds bridge the gap between their savings and tuition costs.
List your specific monthly expenses to prove your need.
The biggest mistake is listing a series of clubs you joined without explaining your impact.
Winners instead describe a specific problem in their community they helped solve.
Use a concrete example of a project you led or a person you mentored.