The Prizes and Honors Program at UC Berkeley (prizes@berkeley.edu) is an important forum for rewarding creative expression and scholarly achievement by Berkeley’s finest students. Winners receive both recognition and a cash prize, which is coordinated with the winner’s financial aid package.
Below you will find the different categories in which you can participate. Please note that each competition has its own criteria for entering, so please be sure to read carefully.
Distinguished Honors
Honors at Berkeley are conferred upon qualified students for academic achievement or outstanding service.
The University Medal and Departmental Citations carry this distinction.
The University Medal
A medal and $2,500 are awarded to the most distinguished graduating senior on the UC Berkeley campus. Three to five finalists each receive a Certificate of Distinction and $500. Prize awards are coordinated with the winner’s financial aid package when necessary.*
If you believe you meet the qualifications to apply for the University Medal, but you are not contacted by the Prizes Office by February 1, email prizes@berkeley.edu. Acceptance of the University Medal constitutes an agreement with the university to deliver the student graduation speech at commencement.
History of the Medal and Award
The University Medal was established in 1871 by Henry Huntly Haight, Governor of California (who, on March 23, 1868, signed the Organic Act establishing the university) and other friends of the university. During the early years, an optional senior class examination was offered and the student with the highest score was awarded the Medal. This was soon deemed unsatisfactory, and the selection task passed to various Academic Senate committees—ultimately the Committee on Prizes.
In 1881, the first of many frustrated committees attempted to abandon the Medal altogether and instead award a number of “certificates of eminent scholarship.” This was rejected by the President of the University, and the awarding of the Medal continued. In 1955, President Sproul approved the Committee on Prizes’ suggestion to award “Distinguished Graduate” to selected candidates considered for the Medal. “Certificates of Distinction” were created in 1976.
The University Medal Criteria
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The initial pool of candidates consists of the undergraduates with Berkeley grade point averages (GPAs) of at least 3.96 by the end of the semester preceding the student's graduation date. Candidates graduating in fall will be considered along with those graduating the following spring; candidates graduating in summer will be considered along with those graduating the preceding spring.
Application Process
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Those who wish to be considered will provide the following:
A personal essay.
The essay should be double-spaced with 1-inch margins, Times New Roman 12-point font, and not exceed 3 pages in length. It should highlight aspects of your character or achievements and describe UC Berkeley’s influence on your intellectual, artistic, athletic, or other attainments. Please include your name in the top righthand corner of every page in your essay.
Two or three letters of reference maximum.
The best letters are from instructors, supervisors, or others who know you well and can speak in detail about your work or other activities that qualify you as a Berkeley Medalist.
A resume.
Please include in the resume any accomplishments or activities that lend distinction to your University record or that contribute to the wider community. These may include research, other creative work, prizes won, campus or non-campus service, and extracurricular involvements. You may also submit an abstract of any published work. A copy of the work itself should be submitted only if it is no more than 3 pages in length.
Applications must be submitted through our online submission form:
The applications are evaluated by the Committee on Prizes. The most outstanding candidates are selected as finalists and are interviewed. The Committee refers to guidelines initiated under University Presidents Robert Sproul and Clark Kerr. It takes into consideration the following, though it is not required that every one of these be reflected in a candidate's record for him or her to be considered:
An academically well-rounded transcript.
Independent scholarly work completed by the candidate outside of regular classwork; e.g., publications or unpublished projects judged worthy by his/her instructors.
Outstanding extracurricular contributions to the University.
Evidence of qualities of judgment, ingenuity, initiative, and broad interest.
Participation or interest in public service.
Any other evidence of "distinction" in the opinion of the Committee on Prizes.
The Medalist is an exemplar of the university's highest ideals.
Media Relations Requirements
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UC Berkeley’s top graduating senior is a news story
Each year, the University Medalist is announced in the form of an in-depth profile, photos and a brief video on the UC Berkeley website, which may lead to coverage in local print and broadcast news. Here’s how it works:
If you are chosen as the University Medalist, your transcripts and application essay are shared confidentially with a writer on the campus’ Media Relations team. That writer will quickly arrange an in-depth interview with you, as well as a shorter video interview, which will be posted on the UC Berkeley website and promoted via the campus’ Facebook and Twitter platforms. It will also be sent out to local media as a press release.
It’s an intense and exciting process, but if you’re not comfortable sharing your biographical details, including your struggles and victories, with wider audiences, you may want to reconsider whether the public aspect of being UC Berkeley’s top graduating senior is for you. Here are links to previous medalist profiles so you know what to expect:
*Federal financial aid regulations require that all awards received by a student cannot exceed their financial aid need as determined by a congressional formula. It is possible, therefore, that the cash award for a prize could reduce some component of a needy student’s package of financial aid awards. In these cases, the Financial Aid and Scholarships Office attempts first to reduce loan or work aid; fellowships, grants, or scholarships are only reduced as a last resort.
Electrical Engineering & Computer Science and Business
2002
Shayna Parekh
Political Science & Interdisciplinary Studies
2001
Christine Ng
Civil and Environmental Engineering
2000
Fadia Rafeedie
History
1999
Vikram Ramnath Rao
Molecular and Cell Biology
1998
Moshiur Mekhail Anwar
Physics
1997
Carl Ryanen-Grant
History
1996
Dana Russell Wagner
Economics & Comparative Literature
1995
Emily Ruth Bender
Linguistics
1994
Michael Alan Brodsky
English
1993
Saumya Snehal Sutaria
Molecular and Cell Biology & Economics
1992
Adam Joaquim Leite
Philosophy
1991
Kara Maria Kockelman
Civil Engineering
1990
Alfred Chung Kuo
Biochemistry
1989
Julian Cummings
Physics
1988
Seana Lee Shiffrin
Philosophy
1987
Sarah Lee Caldwell
Anthropology
1986
Laura Gibbs
Classics & Slavic Languages
1985
Frandics Pak Chan
Electrical Engineering & Computer Science
1984
David Kin Cheung
Nutritional Sciences
1983
Leslie Angnes Brueckner
Political Economy of Industrial Societies
1982
Sheila Li Tien Ling
Biophysics & Medical Physics
1981
Joshua LaBaer
Nutritional Sciences
1980
Joseph Peter Montoya
Marine Biology
1979
Linda Spangler
Conservation & Natural Resources
1978
Farid Askary
Engineering Physics
1977
Peter Dunne Skewes-Cox
Physics & Applied Math
1976
Paul Terry Friedman
Penelope Preovolos
Political Science; Individual: California Environment
English
1975
Eric Ellingson Freedman
Anthropology
1974
Grace Wong Ju
Bacteriology & Immunology
1973
Kenneth Stumpf
Forestry
1972
Jack Jue, Jr.
Physiology
1971
Peter Black Siegel
Engineering Physics
1970
Andrew Meade Miller
Greek & Anthropology
1969
William R. Henderson, Jr.
Bahram Mashoon
Zoology
Physics
1968
Ronald Wai-Chun Yeung
Mechanical Engineering
1967
Robert Edward Bowen
Mathematics
1966
Bruce Allen Wooley
Electrical Engineering
1965
Pat LaMar Gordon
Mark Reutlinger
Electrical Engineering
Speech
1964
Thomas John Sargent
Economics
1963
Glenn Alan Secor
Engineering Science
1962
Thomas Arthur McCready
Mathematics
1961
Bandel Bezzerides
Physics
1960
William Albert Dillon, Jr.
Political Science
1959
(Mr.) Lynn Seaman
Civil Engineering
1958
Daniel Warren Hone
Physics
1957
Henry Lurie
Mechanical Engineering
1956
Brien Edgar O'Neil
Philosophy & Political Science
1955
Ronald Webster Brosemer
Paul Fong
College of Chemistry
Mathematics
1954
Patricia Elaine Pothier
College of Letters & Science
1953
Edward Anthony Grens, II
College of Chemistry
1952
L. Edward Scriven, II
College of Chemistry
1951
John Arnold Baldwin, Jr.
College of Letters & Science
1950
Kenneth Leslie Babcock
College of Agriculture
1949
Donald Wayne Jones
College of Engineering
1948
Nancy Jean Eaton
College of Letters & Science
1947
Raylene Elizabeth Adams
College of Chemistry
1946
Howard Gilbert Parker
College of Letters & Science
1945
Mary Frances Gardner
College of Letters & Science
1944
Paul Joseph Sanazaro
College of Letters & Science
1943
Edward Louis King
College of Chemistry
1942
Harvey Akio Itano
College of Chemistry
1941
Dale Kenneth Barnes
College of Chemistry
1940
John Hexem
College of Engineering
1939
Donald Thomas Campbell
College of Letters & Science
1938
Newton Willoughby McCready
College of Chemistry
1937
John Roy Whinnery
College of Engineering
1936
Raymond Constance Martinelli
College of Engineering
1935
Florence De Gottardi
College of Commerce
1934
Marjorie Jean Young
College of Chemistry
1933
John Willard Stout, Jr.
College of Chemistry
1932
Jane Anne Russell
College of Letters & Science
1931
Morvyth Joyce Gwendolyn St. Clair McQueen-Williams
College of Letters & Science
1930
Harold Gould Vesper
College of Chemistry
1929
Dorothy May Paschall
Elizabeth Baldridge Stevenson
College of Letters & Science
College of Letters & Science
1928
Ralph Raymond Hultgren
College of Mining
1927
Daniel Silverman
College of Mechanics
1926
Bernard Sutro Greensfelder
College of Chemistry
1925
Milton Joseph Polisser
College of Letters & Science
1924
Joseph Olney Halford
College of Chemistry
1923
Arthur Edward Murphy
College of Letters & Science
1922
Waldo Westwater
College of Chemistry
1921
Georgea Tilton Hine
College of Letters & Science
1920
Milton Leroy Almquist
College of Mechanics
1919
William Ray Dennes
College of Letters & Science
1918
Joseph Louis Zimmerman
College of Letters & Science
1917
George Lawrence Maxwell
College of Letters & Science
1916
Kathleen Harnett
College of Mechanics
1915
Rene Guillou
College of Mechanics
1914
Clotilde Grunsky
College of Social Sciences
1913
John Lowrey Simpson
College of Social Sciences
1912
Lester Seward Ready
College of Mechanics
1911
Walter Colton Little, Jr.
College of Civil Engineering
1910
Clinton C. Conrad
College of Mechanics
1909
Mary Louise Phillips
College of Social Sciences
1908
Arthur Carl Alvarez
College of Civil Engineering
1907
Norman Abraham Eisner
College of Social Sciences
1906
Spencer Cochrane Browne, Jr.
College of Mining
1905
Dorothea Kern Jewett
College of Letters
1904
Max Thelen
College of Letters
1903
Mary Edith McGrew
College of Letters
1902
Bernard Alfred Etcheverry
College of Civil Engineering
1901
Wesley Newcomb Hohfield
College of Letters
1900
James Daniel Mortimer
College of Mechanics
1899
Lily Hohfeld
College of Letters
1898
Rowe Montrose Hathaway
College of Natural Sciences
1897
Charles Allen Elston
College of Social Sciences
1896
Harry Herbert Jirst
College of Civil Engineering
1895
Katherine Conway Felton
(declined)
College of Social Sciences
1894
Harry Manville Wright
College of Letters
1893
Elinor Maude Croudace
College of Letters: Letters & Political Science
1892
Joseph Baldwin Garber
(declined)
College of Letters: Letters & Political Science
1891
Arthur McArthur Seymour
(declined)
College of Letters: Letters & Political Science
1890
Orrin Kip McMurray
College of Letters: Letters & Political Science
1889
Herbert Charles Moffitt
College of Chemistry
1888
James Edgar Beard
College of Letters: Letters & Political Science
1887
Jacob Samuels
College of Letters: Classical Course
1886
Frank Fischer
College of Letters: Classical Course
1885
Claude Bachanan Wakefield
College of Letters: Classical Course
1884
Charles Adolph Ramm
College of Civil Engineering
1883
William White Deamer
College of Letters: Classical Course
1882
David Barcroft
John Joseph Dwyer
Katherine Hermann Hittell
College of Civil Engineering
College of Letters: Classical Course
College of Letters: Classical Course
1881
Alice E. Pratt
Douglas Lindley
College of Letters: Literary Course
College of Mining
1880
Mary A. Hawley
College of Letters: Literary Course
1879
Fremont Morse
College of Civil Engineering
1878
Joseph Hutchinson
College of Mining
1877
Theodore Gray
College of Letters: Classical Course
1876
Fred L. Button
College of Civil Engineering
1875
Dwight B. Huntley
College of Civil Engineering
1874
Thomas F. Barry
College of Letters: Classical Course
1873
Frank Otis
College of Letters: Classical Course
1872
John Mattthews Whitworth
College of Letters
1871
Frederick Harrison Whitworth
College of Letters
Departmental Citations
These awards are given by departments in recognition of distinguished undergraduate work.
The Departmental Citation Plan was initiated in 1955 by the Committee on Prizes with the approval and support of the Chancellor. It is open to all departments wishing to participate. An individual major program within Undergraduate and Interdisciplinary Studies (UGIS) also may participate as if it were a department, if it has sufficiently excellent undergraduates who are unlikely to be awarded the citation from any one department. Participation is purely voluntary; any department is free to take up or drop the plan at any time. It is the responsibility of the department to select its recipient for the Departmental Citation; the Committee on Prizes acts in an advisory and supervisory capacity.
Departmental Citation Criteria
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In order to establish a reasonable degree of uniformity in the standards that are applied in granting a Departmental Citation, the Committee on Prizes has established the following policies:
Only one nominee shall be selected by each department in order that the prestige of the Departmental Citation may be maintained. In the event that the department cannot decide on a single nominee, the chairman of the department should forward the records of the nominees to the Committee on Prizes. The Committee will then make a selection, on the basis of the evidence submitted. This evidence must be submitted at least two weeks before the deadline. In no event shall the size of the undergraduate enrollment of the department be the reason for the selection of more than one nominee.
Most recipients will no doubt be majors in the department, but the recipient need not be a major if he or she has done a substantial amount of work in the department and the department wishes to honor him or her in this way. Additionally, recipients of the Departmental Citation need not be in senior standing.
Primarily, the citation should indicate excellence in the departmental field of study. Evidence of distinction in work done outside the department may be taken into account, but it should not have decisive weight.
Other activity relating to the work of the department, such as writing, experimentation, or creative work in the field, should receive due consideration.
The foregoing list is not meant to be comprehensive. A department may take into account any qualities or attainments that it finds relevant. The main consideration is that the award should reflect the judgments of the department that the recipient is, because of unusual talents and promise, worthy of being recognized in this fashion.
Recipients need to have maintained a grade point average of 3.5 in the department to be awarded a Departmental Citation.
Relationship of the Citation to Other Awards
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Although there are other awards which, in their particular spheres, have features in common with the Departmental Citation, there are few cases of extensive overlapping. Indeed, there is no reason why this award, together with other awards, cannot be given simultaneously to one person. Superficially, it seems most closely to resemble the award of Highest Honors to graduating seniors, but even in this case there are significant differences. Highest Honors is explicitly attached to the student's general GPA; it is usually awarded to all students who meet this single condition, and it is limited to graduating seniors.
The Departmental Citation, on the other hand, is awarded primarily for excellence in the work of the department; it issues from the department; and it has no necessary relationship to graduation honors, although some recipients of Highest Honors will also receive a Departmental Citation.
Prestigious Prize Competitions
Prize competitions are open to students of any major. Successful, even prominent, artists and poets in our society found that winning an award at Berkeley was a pivotal experience in their artistic careers.
Prizes are administered under the direction of the Academic Senate Committee on Prizes. Copies of the essays and poetry submissions chosen to receive prizes are archived at the Bancroft Library at the end of each year.
Please note that prize contest entries need to be submitted via our online submission form before 4 p.m. on the contest deadline (listed on the chart below). See the General Rules for Competitive Prizes for complete submission information. Please click on the contest names below for specific details about each prize.
For additional information and guidelines on the various contests currently offered, please visit the Competitive Prize Contests page.
Include the last four digits of your student identification number (SID), found on your UC Berkeley ID card, on every page in the upper-right-hand corner
General Rules
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To be eligible, you need to be enrolled full-time in a degree-granting program for at least one regular semester of the academic year (not including Summer Sessions). Filing for a degree does not constitute enrollment for that academic year. Visiting students are not eligible to apply for prizes.
Submitting your work to a University prize contest in no way limits your subsequent sale and publication of the work. However, work that you have previously published, with the exception of work that has appeared solely in campus publications, is not eligible.
Any prize may be withheld if, in the opinion of the judges, no entrant or submission merits the award.
You may enter more than one contest, but may not submit the same manuscript or portions of the same manuscript to more than one contest. If you submit the same manuscript or portions of the same manuscript to more than one contest, those entries will be disqualified.
In the event that two or more contributions of approximately the same merit are submitted for any prize, the Committee on Prizes reserves the right to apportion the award.
Any specific requirement expressed in connection with any of the prizes prevails over the general rules.
Please Note: Federal financial aid regulations require that all awards received by a student cannot exceed their financial aid need as determined by a congressional formula. It is possible, therefore, that the cash award or value of a prize could reduce some "Need Based" component of a student's package of financial aid awards. In these cases, the Financial Aid and Scholarships Office attempts first to reduce loan or work aid; fellowships, grants, or scholarships are only reduced as a last resort.
Translate a classical English passage into Ciceronian Latin
April 1st, 2023
Thomas G. Rosenmeyer Greek Translation Prize
Greek / Latin Translation
$2,000
Translate an English passage into classical Greek style
April 1st, 2023
Leslie Lipson Program
Humanistic Values
The Leslie Lipson Program at UC Berkeley is intended to encourage undergraduate students to study humanistic values and their practical application for individuals, societies, and states; the program consists of the Lipson Essay Prize. Only prize winners eligible for the Lipson Scholarship and the Lipson Research Grant
Lipson Essay Prize
Humanistic
$10,000
Write an essay on one of four topics selected by the Lipson Committee; applicants must be Freshmen or Sophomores with a minimum Berkeley 3.0 GPA
Jan 16th, 2023
Emily Chamberlain Cook Prizes in Poetry
Poetry
$500-$1,200
Write a poem
Dec 9th, 2022
Ina Coolbrith Memorial Poetry Prize
Poetry
$100 - $500
Write a poem or group of poems; this is a multi-campus contest open to undergraduates only
Dec 2023 date TBD
Roselyn Schneider Eisner Prizes in Poetry
Poetry
$2,000+
Create a collection of poetry
Dec 9th, 2022
Dorothy Rosenberg Memorial Prize in Lyric Poetry
Poetry
$1,000-$3,000
Create a lyric poem
Dec 9th, 2022
Elizabeth Mills Crothers Prize in Literary Composition
Poetry/Prose
$1,000-$3,000
Write a story, poem, or play
Dec 9th, 2022
Philo Sherman Bennett Prize in Political Science
Political Science
$1,000-$3,000
Write an essay encompassing some aspect of politics other than international relations
Feb 3rd, 2023
Florence Mason Palmer Memorial Prize
Political Science
$3,000-$5,000
Write an essay dealing with some aspect of international relations; open to women undergraduates only
Feb 3rd, 2023
Owen D. Young Prize in International Relations
Political Science
$1,300+
Write an essay dealing with some aspect of international relations; open to undergraduates only
Feb 3rd, 2023
Roselyn Schneider Eisner Prizes in Prose
Prose
$2,000+
Create a prose submission consisting of a substantial volume of work
Dec 9th, 2022
Lili Fabilli and Eric Hoffer Essay Prize
Prose
$2,000+
Write an essay (500 words or less) on a topic determined by the Committee on Prizes
Dec 9th, 2022
Nicola De Lorenzo Prize in Music Composition
Music
$1,500+
Create a musical composition
March 1st, 2023
Anne and Benjamin Goor Prize in Jewish Studies
Jewish Studies
Write a research paper on any area of Jewish Studies. Student may win contest a maximum of two times