Skip to main content
  • (410) 659-9315
  • actionfund@actionfund.org

Main Menu

  • About
  • Programs
  • Resources
  • Donate Now
Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship

Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship

Valued at $12,000, the Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship is the largest scholarship granted in the United States to a legally blind person.* It is given annually to a legally blind student who exemplifies the fruits of Dr. Jernigan's teachings.

Dr. Jernigan changed perceptions regarding the capabilities of the blind in this country and throughout the world. He was active in affairs of the blind for over half a century and taught that, with proper training in the skills of blindness and a proper attitude toward blindness, any blind person can be as successful as a similarly situated sighted person. He also taught that the real barrier to success as a blind person is the public's misconceptions concerning blindness, often shared and even affirmed by the blind themselves.

How to Apply

Applications are available from November 1 to March 31 of the following year. The funding is offered as one of the many available scholarships in the National Federation of the Blind's scholarship program, however the Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship is funded entirely by the American Action Fund for Blind Children and Adults. To apply, please visit nfb.org/scholarships after November 1.

2020 Winner

Precious Perez smiles while holding her ukuleleThe winner of the 2020 Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship was Precious Perez of Massachusetts, an aspiring music educator. Precious looks forward to continuing to give back to others in the blind community. Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship winners have the opportunity to say a few words during the award ceremony. The National Federation of the Blind 2020 scholarship program awards were announced March 8, 2021 during the Washington Seminar Great Gathering-In.

Precious Perez acceptance upon being awarded the 2020 Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship.

*Legal Blindness is defined using the federal statue as follows: [T]he term "blindness" means central visual acuity of 20/200 or less in the better eye with the use of a correcting lens. An eye which is accompanied by a limitation in the fields of vision such that the widest diameter of the visual field subtends an angle no greater than 20 degrees shall be considered for purposes in this paragraph as having a central visual acuity of 20/200 or less. 42 U.S.C. - 416(i)(1)(B) (Supp. IV 1986).[1]

Main menu

  • About
  • Programs
    • Braille Books Program
    • Share Braille
    • Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship
    • Tactile Art Program
    • Braille Book Fair
    • Braille Reading Pals Club
    • Braille Readers Are Leaders
    • Free Slate and Stylus Program
    • Free White Cane Program
    • STEM Initiatives
  • Resources
  • sample webform content
American Action Fund for Blind Children and Adults
1800 Johnson Street
Baltimore, MD 21230
(410) 659-9315
actionfund@actionfund.org

About

  • Leadership
  • Ways to Give
  • Volunteer
  • History
  • Annual Report and Financials
  • Contact

Programs

  • Braille Books Program
  • Share Braille
  • Kenneth Jernigan Scholarship
  • Tactile Art Program
  • Braille Book Fair
  • Braille Reading Pals Club
  • Braille Readers Are Leaders
  • Free Slate and Stylus Program
  • Free White Cane Program
  • STEM Initiatives

Resources

  • Braille Calendars
  • Future Reflections
  • Braille Handbook
  • Oskar and Klaus Books
  • Dragon Masters
  • Pedro and the Octopus
  • Braille Book Resources
  • International Braille and Technology Center for the Blind
  • What Is Braille?
  • Facts about Blindness

© 2020 All Rights Reserved - Copyright 2020 American Action Fund

  • Twitter
  • Facebook