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Planning, practice and storytelling: preparing for Chevening Interviews

At a recent Q&A organised by the Birkbeck International team, Current Chevening Scholars shared their experiences of preparing for the all-important interview step in the selection process for the prestigious UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office scholarship.  

Maria Annaliza Fraser, Guyana, MSc International Relations 

When did you learn you had been selected for a Chevening interview? 

I got my notice on Valentine’s Day last year! There were several dates across March to select from. I remember selecting the 20 or the 21 of March, so I could have a month to prepare. 

How did you choose your time-slot?  

When I found out I had an interview, I called a previous Chevener who is a friend – he was more excited than I was at that point – and he advised I took a few days to decide on an interview slot that worked with my schedule.  

I took a slot at 8am, as if you know Georgetown, you know how miserable parking is! 

What tips you can share with future applicants?  

Practice with mock interviews with friends. I reached out to a previous scholar, who supported me throughout the journey. 

Go back to your essays, as the panel will refer to your answers about leadership, networking, education and career plans.  

This next tip might seem overwhelming, but I decided “I’m going to answer very confidently, very boldly, and be truthful and honest”. And I did that. It’s worth doing!  

Don’t hold back from talking about your motivation. For example, I was a bit nervous because my background is Marine Sciences and this is my second Master’s, so I explained this path isn’t about making a complete switch, it’s just about merging a gap. 

When it came to providing examples of facing resistance or difficulties, draw on both personal and professional examples. I drew on my experience working on the gas energy project in Guyana, and bringing stakeholders from opposite sides together – which also covered networking!  

I would also say, make sure you have a question you can ask at the end, when the panel invite you to. I asked about the Chevening alumni community and how I could get involved with it after the scholarship. 

Fabiola Andrea Leon, El Salvador, MSc Public Policy and Management 

When did you learn you had been selected for a Chevening interview? 

I think it was three weeks before the interview, I booked it right away and got a place on the second day of interviews. I prioritised booking at the beginning of the day, as I feared the panel can be tired after seeing many people. But I think, even if you are interviewed at the end of the day, you can also make an impact. If you come in with a good story, I think the panel is going to be captivated anyway. 

How did you prepare for the interview?   

Based on my application essays I prepared to tell my story and structured this as a pyramid. I wrote down what I have done at the bottom and what I want to achieve at the top. I was genuinely proud of different projects that I was working so I wanted to incorporate it into this story.  

I practiced a lot. I had mock interviews with people that I knew. I got feedback about things like speaking too fast,  

I joined applicant groups on Facebook and LinkedIn, watched videos on YouTube. I also connected with a previous Birkbeck scholar, Marko, and gained a lot from his experience and advice. 

I also prepared for general questions, such as challenges I have faced. My answer was divided into two; projects led at work, and my experience studying in China at 18 and how I adapted to living in a different country and learning a new language. I highly suggest for applicants to think about the challenges that they have faced in life, as well as professionally.  

Sekulu Nyekha, India, MSc Social Research 

When did you learn you had been selected for the interview? 

I got the e-mail in the night. It was on Valentine’s Day too, like Maria. I remember being really excited, but I didn’t want to rush booking the slot. However, when I went to book an interview from the selection available, the earlier dates were the only dates which were left. I picked March 4, which was one of the earliest dates of interviews! 

Was your interview online or in person?  

It was online for me. I think it’s because India is so diverse and big, so it made sense for it to be done online. 

How did you prepare?   

I’d always been confident about interviews, but right before the Chevening interview, I messed one up really badly and that taught me a lesson. I decided I was not going to be overconfident this time – I would seriously prepare. I had mock interviews with as many people were willing to help.  

I also practiced timing my responses, speaking for two, three or five minutes. This came very handy during the interview as I was told I had two minutes to answer each question. At that point I knew exactly how to structure my answers within the time allocated. 

What tips you can share with future applicants?  

Focus on what you wrote in your application essay, but don’t let that be your only focus! I saw my interview as a continuation of my essay. I referred to it, but I added more details, mentioned additional leadership positions and new projects I’d worked on since I originally applying. 

I also wanted both my essay and interview to come under one theme, seeing all my answers as part of one trajectory. Something like this can help a lot with memorability and coherency!  

For the networking question I mentioned how many people I worked directly with. I also mentioned my relation with Sishu, a previous Birkbeck Chevening scholar and friend, who I had been in touch with for insight. I think it also showed that I am excited to be part of the Chevening community. 

Tholang Mathopa, South Africa, MA AI, Ethics and Society 

How many times did you apply to Chevening before you got selected?  

I actually applied twice. In 2024, I had admission to a university I hadn’t listed on my application. This time around I made sure my listed universities matched and I gave it another shot. And it shows you shouldn’t ever give up on yourself. You must always try and try and try and try again until you get it right. 

Was your interview online or in person?  

It was online. At the beginning of the interview I was told I had about two minutes per question. The allocated interview slot was forty-five minutes, but we didn’t use it all.  

What tips you can share with future applicants?  

You should already be building on your trajectory, start working on the goals you actually want to achieve. It makes applying for the Chevening and answering interview questions so much easier.  

Make sure you document what you work on, your achievements, no matter how small you think this is. Don’t hesitate to share these on social media. It doesn’t have to be perfect, in fact the grittier it is, the better. We get to see the humanity behind what you’re doing. 

You need to be able to elaborate on your career plan after Chevening, mid and long term. This is where your real story comes to play. For example, you may have been working on a plan for some time- and Chevening is going to enable you to achieve this. You should be able to say this is what I’m going to do from year one after finishing, all the way up to year ten. The panel wants to know your vision and how the scholarship is going to help you reach your objectives. 

World Bank watch out, the BRICS Bank is a game-changer

Ali Burak GuvenThis post was written by Dr Ali Burak Güven, Lecturer in International Relations & International Political Economy in Birkbeck’s Department of Politics. It was originally published on The Conversation.

The top news from this year’s BRICS summit was the announcement of a New Development Bank. Headquartered in Shanghai, the bank will become operational in 2016 with an initial capital of US$50 billion. Its core mandate is to finance infrastructure projects in the developing world.

The bank, announced at the summit in Fortaleza, Brazil, will also have a monetary twin to provide short-term emergency loans, the Contingency Reserve Arrangement. While the bank will be open to all UN members, the reserve will lend only to the contributing BRICS countries in times of crisis.

This combination of timing, actors, and institutions is noteworthy. It was in July 1944 that the Allied nations gathered at Bretton Woods to form two of the most vital institutions of the post-war era: the International Monetary Fund and what would become the World Bank. Now, 70 years later and only a few years on from the global financial crisis, the leading developing nations of our time have joined forces to forge new institutions of international economic cooperation with mandates identical to the World Bank and the IMF.

This move is born out of a belief that the Bretton Woods twins, despite numerous governance reform initiatives over the past decade, remain set to reflect the policy preferences of their original creators. In creating complementary institutions, the BRICS will be hoping to use these alternative platforms of international economic governance and as leverage to accelerate the reform of existing arrangements.

Game-changing potential

The New Development Bank is currently the more interesting of the “Fortaleza twins”, for it is designed as a freestanding organisation that’s open to all. Yet it has not received a warm welcome in business columns. While the political symbolism of the new institution is widely acknowledged, its immediate economic utility has been challenged – why do the BRICS need a development bank of their own when infrastructure projects are already easily financed through private as well as official channels, especially through the World Bank?

This is a narrow criticism. In the long run, the New Development Bank has the potential to become a game-changer in development financing. In fact, if its evolution even remotely parallels that of the World Bank, it might end up having a formative impact on economic policy-making and overall development strategy in the Global South.

To begin, while there is no shortage of national and regional development banks as well as private financiers of infrastructure projects, there is still a massive gap in development finance, estimated to be as high as US$1 trillion per year. Many developing countries encountered significant financing problems during the global crisis of the late 2000s. This shortfall necessitated a surge in World Bank commitments, from an annual US$25 billion in 2007 to about US$60 billion in 2010.

But commitments declined just as swiftly over the past few years, and as of 2013 stood at about $30 billion. Given these figures, the New Development Bank’s readily available $10 billion in paid-up capital and the extra $40 billion available upon request are not exactly pocket money for development financing.

Yet just as the World Bank was never simply a money lender, so too will the new bank represent far more than a mere pool of funds. The existing geostrategic and policy inclinations of its founding stakeholders imply a bigger role to play for the institution. In the process, it is bound to offer a formidable challenge to the World Bank’s financial prominence and so influence policy in the developing world.

Client-side

The new bank has been long in the making. It is the culmination of nearly two decades of intense South-South cooperation and engagement. In recent years especially, the BRICS and other emerging nations have become donors and investors in both their immediate regions and in less developed areas of the world – with Chinese and Brazilian involvement in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Latin America representing the prime examples.

They have made an effort to establish more equal relationships with their lower-income developing peers and emphasised an attractive narrative of partnership, non-intervention and knowledge transfer, instead of smug, superior Western notions of top-down aid and restrictive conditionality. To the extent that it could keep its rates competitive, the New Development Bank is unlikely to suffer from a dearth of clients from among its fellow developing nations.

Paradoxically, BRICS and other large middle-income countries still remain the most valuable clients of the World Bank. Since the financial crisis, India has been the largest borrower of the World Bank, and has been closely followed by Brazil, China and a few other near-BRICS such as Indonesia, Turkey and Mexico. But, once the new bank fully kicks off, it is possible the World Bank will lose a lot more business from this traditionally lucrative market of large middle-income borrowers who now have a serious alternative.

Political implications

A reduced loan portfolio will ultimately translate into declining policy influence for the World Bank, which has held near-monopoly of development wisdom over the past 70 years. Perhaps in recognition of their waning power, there has already been a slight but steady decline in World Bank loans that emphasise policy and institutional reforms.

Also, a larger portion of the Bank’s resources have been allocated to conventional development projects, such as environment and natural resource management, private sector development, human development, and social protection. These are precisely the types of projects the Bank will encounter fierce competition from the new BRICS-led bank.

Knowledge and power

Consider also that the World Bank has labelled itself as a “knowledge bank” in recent years. Employing thousands of policy specialists, it doubles as one of the biggest think tanks in the world. Yet if it loses considerable financial ground to initiatives such as the New Development Bank, this threatens a decline in the power it has through knowledge.

Crucially, none of the BRICS adhere to the Bank’s standard policy prescriptions, nor do they advocate a different common strategy either. Brazil’s social democratic neo-developmentalism is quite different from China’s state neoliberalism, which in turn differs from established policy paths in others in the group. The only common denominator is a substantially broader role given to the state. But beyond this there is much flexibility and experimentation and little in the way of templates and blueprints like there is with the Western institutions. This policy diversity itself dismisses any idea of superiority of knowledge and expertise.

None of this suggests that the World Bank, as the dominant, Northern-led development agency, is now on an ineluctable path of decline. Cumbersome as they may appear, large organisations often accumulate considerable resilience and adaptive capacity over generations. Yet the World Bank does have a serious contender in the New Development Bank.

While it may not overtake the World Bank in financial prowess and policy influence any time soon, at a minimum it should be able to exert significant pressure over the World Bank to respond more sincerely and effectively to the new balance of power in the global economy.

The Conversation