
If you’re a student in Jamaica trying to find scholarships, social media is no longer “optional”—it’s where many opportunities are first announced, clarified, and sometimes even deadline-reminded. The key is knowing where to look, how to search, and how to verify before you apply.
This guide shares 10 practical, Jamaica-first methods to use Instagram, Facebook, X (Twitter), Reddit, LinkedIn, YouTube, TikTok, and more to find scholarships and grants for the next academic year—using the same tactics scholarship winners use.
1) Follow the “official source” accounts first (then turn on notifications)
Your fastest way to find scholarships is to follow the organizations that actually post them.
Start with official and reputable scholarship sources that serve Jamaican students:
- MOEY (Tertiary Student Assistance Programme / TSAP) and the scholarship listings portal tsap.moey.gov.jm
- CHASE Fund scholarship announcements and application information chase.org.jm
- UWI Mona Office of Student Financing (OSF) scholarship and bursary updates (often includes intake windows and GPA expectations) Mona Campus
- Ministry of Finance (MOF) scholarships/education grants (including public sector education grants for workers and their children) mof.gov.jm
How to use this:
On Instagram/X/Facebook, follow these pages and turn on post notifications so you don’t miss application windows (some open/close fast, and portals can close once an intake ends). Mona Campus
2) Build a “Scholarship Feed” so your timeline becomes a scholarship search engine
Most people fail at social media scholarship hunting because their feed is cluttered. Fix it by creating a dedicated feed:
- Instagram: create a “scholarships” saved collection and save every legit post you see.
- Facebook: follow pages + join groups (more in tip #6).
- X: create a List called “Scholarships Jamaica” and add official accounts + universities + foundations.
In 7–10 days, your algorithm will start showing you more scholarship-related posts—making it easier to find scholarships without constantly searching.
3) Use X (Twitter) Advanced Search to dig up opportunities by date, keyword, and organization
X is one of the best platforms to find scholarships because organizations post short updates like: “Portal open,” “Deadline extended,” “Documents required,” etc.
Use Advanced Search to filter results and find the most relevant posts. X explains where to access Advanced Search and how to refine searches. Help Center
Search examples (copy/paste in X search):
scholarship Jamaica deadlineTSAP scholarshipCHASE scholarship apply"scholarship portal" Jamaica
Then narrow by date ranges using “since” and “until” (helpful for finding the newest intake). Fedica
4) Use Instagram like a “visual scholarship noticeboard” (but search smarter)
Instagram is huge for scholarship announcements in the Caribbean—universities, foundations, student pages, and scholarship communities frequently post flyers and deadlines.
Do this to find scholarships faster:
- Search hashtags like
#scholarshipjamaica #jamaicascholarships #caricomscholarships #uwischolarships - Use Instagram’s hashtag and place search tools to explore scholarship posts and location-based announcements. Instagram Help Center
Important update: Instagram has been moving toward fewer, more specific hashtags (and recently announced anti-spam measures that include limiting hashtags per post). That means you’ll often get better results searching keywords and accounts, not just hashtags. The Verge
5) Follow universities and student financing offices (they post portals and deadlines)
Many students only check a university website after they’re accepted. Flip that: follow the university and financing office accounts now so you can find scholarships earlier.
Examples of what schools publicly share:
- UWI Mona OSF scholarship/bursary info and application processes Mona Campus+1
- UWI Global Campus scholarships/bursaries eligibility requirements (CARICOM-focused options) UWI Global Campus
Pro move: When an intake closes, don’t stop. Note the pattern of when it opens each year, and prepare your documents early.
6) Use Facebook Groups as a scholarship “intel network” (and search inside the group)
Facebook Groups are still one of the most effective ways to find scholarships—especially in Jamaica where people share flyers, reminders, and application tips.
Join scholarship groups, then use the group search bar to find posts by keyword like:
- “TSAP”
- “UWI bursary”
- “deadline”
- “grant”
- “fully funded”
Example scholarship-focused groups exist specifically for sharing scholarship listings and advice. Facebook
Safety tip: Verify every opportunity through the official website before submitting personal documents.
7) Use LinkedIn to find corporate scholarships, internships, and “education benefits”
LinkedIn is underrated for students in Jamaica—but it’s where employers announce:
- scholarship programs,
- paid internships with education support,
- foundation awards,
- STEM and leadership programs.
Search:
- “scholarship”
- “grant”
- “foundation”
- “student programme”
…and filter by company + location (Jamaica/Caribbean).
Then follow the company and watch their posts weekly.
8) Use Reddit for strategy, not blindly for links
Reddit can help you find scholarships in two ways:
- Scholarship strategy (essay tips, document checklists, scams to avoid)
- International opportunities (especially for U.S.-based and global awards)
Where Reddit helps most: learning what to watch for (eligibility traps, essay red flags, and how winners approach applications). But treat Reddit links as leads—verify via official sites before applying.
9) Use YouTube and TikTok to find scholarship deadlines and “how to apply” walkthroughs
Many scholarship bodies, universities, and career pages post:
- application walkthrough videos,
- “documents required” explainers,
- tips for essays and interviews.
Search TikTok/YouTube using:
- “TSAP Jamaica scholarship”
- “CHASE scholarship how to apply”
- “UWI OSF scholarship portal”
- “ScholarshipJamaica scholarships”
Then save the best videos to a playlist called Find Scholarships Jamaica so you can review steps when applications open.
10) Cross-check opportunities using reputable scholarship databases (then return to social media for updates)
Social media is great for discovering opportunities, but databases help you find scholarships at scale—and then you can use social media to track updates.
Examples of large, legitimate scholarship databases include Fastweb, which describes itself as a free scholarship search platform and directory with extensive listings. Fastweb
How to combine both (best workflow):
- Use databases to find opportunities you qualify for.
- Follow the scholarship sponsor on social media.
- Turn on notifications so you catch deadline reminders, Q&A livestreams, and portal changes.
A quick “Find Scholarships” weekly routine (15 minutes/day)
Monday: Check saved posts + update your scholarship spreadsheet
Tuesday: Search X with “since/until” for new deadlines Help Center
Wednesday: Check MOEY TSAP + CHASE + UWI OSF updates tsap.moey.gov.jm
Thursday: Search Instagram keywords + verify official links Instagram Help Center
Friday: Review Facebook Groups + search within groups Facebook
Weekend: Draft 1 essay + prep documents (TRN, transcripts, IDs, letters)
Final tip: Don’t just “find scholarships”—build a system
Students who consistently find scholarships and win are not lucky—they’re organized. If you build a clean scholarship feed, follow official sources, use advanced search, and verify every opportunity, you’ll start seeing more options than the average student.











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