The future is Fulbright at Mount Holyoke
含羞草研究所 students swept up seven Fulbrights this year, along with two Davis Projects for Peace grants and two critical language study awards.
By Keely Savoie
Mount Holyoke students racked up big winnings in the fellowships awards season this year, with seven Fulbright awards (and one alternate), two Davis Projects for Peace awards, and two Critical Language Study awards.
The Fulbright Award is primarily funded through the U.S. State Department and is considered to be one of the most prestigious fellowship programs available to recent college graduates. The Davis Projects for Peace Award seeks visionary students to design summer grassroots projects 鈥 anywhere in the world, including the U.S. 鈥 that promote peace and address the root causes of conflict among communities. The U.S. Critical Language Study Award is part of a federal government effort to expand dramatically the number of Americans studying and mastering critical foreign languages.
The secret to Mount Holyoke students鈥 fellowships winning streak is the 鈥渃ulture of success鈥 that Mount Holyoke provides through education and example, said Ryan Lewis, advisor in the College鈥檚 Fellowships at Mount Holyoke program.
鈥淔rom the day they get here, they have access to all the resources we can offer to help them on their journey,鈥 said Lewis. "Our cocurricular centers, our advising program, our outstanding faculty 鈥 they all have our students鈥 success foremost in their minds.鈥
Working in concert with faculty advisors and through academic centers 鈥 the Weissman Center for Leadership, the Miller-Worley Center for the Environment and the McCulloch Center for Global Initiatives 鈥 Mount Holyoke students have access to the advice, direction and insights of staff and faculty who are all devoted to their success. Starting with their sophomore year, they are encouraged to select their internships and experiences abroad with an eye to their final goals.
鈥淭alking to students before they embark on these experiences really helps them to clarify their goals, and gives us a concrete platform from which we can offer our advice,鈥 said Lewis.
Of 14 endorsed Fulbright applications, Mount Holyoke students were awarded seven, with one alternate, making the success rate at least 50 percent.
Some students got a double-helping of success.
Rosalyn Leban 鈥18, an English major with a Chinese minor and a Nexus concentration in educational policy and practice, was both a finalist for the Fulbright U.S. Student Program in Nicaragua to study contemporary Nicaraguan literature and one of two winners of the Davis Projects for Peace award.
A transfer student from Redmond, Washington, she laid the groundwork for both awards when she went to Nicaragua on an internship funded through the College鈥檚 Lynk Initiative between her sophomore and junior year. In Nicaragua, she worked with Podcasts for Peace, an organization she initially encountered through her Community-Based Learning fellowship at the Valley Opportunity Council and through Mount Holyoke鈥檚 International Internship Program in the McCulloch Center.
She returned to Nicaragua during the spring semester of her junior year, continuing her work there with insights she gained from her work with the Undocumented Immigrants鈥 Alliance. She even kept up her work in Nicaragua from China, where she spent the summer between her junior and senior year.
Leban will use her Davis Projects for Peace Award to continue her work with Podcasts for Peace by expanding their computer literacy program. Over the summer, she will purchase new equipment and train teen computer mentors 鈥 and those mentors will then be empowered to teach other teens and children, kicking off what she hopes will be a sustainable model of imparting computer literacy.
After the summer work ends, she鈥檒l turn her attention to her Fulbright work. Now, with the country in the midst of a very new revolution, she sees her project as more relevant than ever.
鈥淚鈥檒l be analyzing the social, political and cultural climate as reflected in contemporary Nicaraguan literature,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a very important moment in Nicaraguan history with all the protest and resistance. Now more than ever this story needs to be understood and told.鈥
Uswa Iqbal 鈥18 was one of the students to win a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship Award. Iqbal鈥檚 proposal for a community project in Hamtramck, Michigan, was a winner in last year鈥檚 Davis Projects for Peace contest. For her Fulbright English Teaching Assistant Award, Iqbal will go to Taiwan, where she will apply English teaching skills honed in her work with English Language Learners as a tutor in Michigan.
Iqbal鈥檚 English teaching fellowships dovetails with her career goal of practicing medicine. To avail herself of the opportunity she is delaying her entry into a master鈥檚 program in medical anthropology at the University of Oxford and deferring her applications to medical schools 鈥 the Fulbright experience, she said, will provide her with an invaluable skill set for her future career.
鈥淚 want to work in the medical field with immigrant, refugee and minority communities,鈥 said Iqbal, who will graduate with a double major in anthropology and biology. 鈥淗aving this kind of experience, learning how to connect across cultural and language barriers and how to, for example, get over difficulties when people have different belief structures is really important in order to be able to do that work effectively.鈥
Jon Western, vice president for academic affairs and dean of faculty, said that this year鈥檚 spate of awards reflect on Mount Holyoke students鈥 ability and perseverance, but also the faculty鈥檚 scholarly excellence and commitment to student success.
鈥淲hen our students come on to our campus, they find enormous support from faculty for their growth and success,鈥 said Western. 鈥淥ur faculty channel their interests, energy, enthusiasm and intellect to position each student for the greatest possible outcome.鈥
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