Author: Moscardelli, Vincent

Seven UConn Students Earn Fulbright Awards

Fulbright US Student Program 2019-20 Semifinalists & Finalists, with Fulbright Program Advisor LuAnn Saunders-Kanabay, at ONSF’s Celebration of Nominees breakfast, April 23, 2019.  Pictured from left to right are Chriss Sneed, Sahil Laul, Angela Kang, Dhruv Shah, LuAnn Saunders-Kanabay, Omar Taweh, Brianna McClure, and Kim Sawicki

 

Operating in over 160 countries worldwide, the Fulbright Program is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the U.S. government and is designed to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries.  The primary source of funding for the Fulbright Program is an annual appropriation made by the U.S. Congress to the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.  Participating governments, host institutions, corporations, and foundations in foreign countries and in the United States also provide direct and indirect support. Recipients of Fulbright grants are selected on the basis of academic or professional achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership potential in their fields. 

The Fulbright U.S. Student Program provides grants for individually designed study/research projects or for English Teaching Assistantships. During their grants, Fulbrighters will meet, work, live with and learn from the people of the host country, sharing daily experiences. Through engagement in the community, the individual will interact with their hosts on a one-to-one basis in an atmosphere of openness, academic integrity, and intellectual freedom, thereby promoting mutual understanding.

Congratulations to UConn’s 7 Fulbright Student awardees:

Alexander Holmgren (CLAS ’18) Recipient of a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant Grant to South Korea. Alexander will spend a year teaching English to Korean secondary school students and hopes to share with them his love of literature. He also hopes to fulfill a long time dream of seeing the haenyeo or ‘sea women’ while in Korea.  Alexander will begin law school upon returning to the United States.

Josue Lopez (Ph.D. Candidate, Curriculum and Instruction) Recipient of a Fulbright research grant to Guatemala. Josue will conduct ethnographic research in a Mayan Ki-che village to better understand policy and practice relevant to multicultural education. He will partner with community organizing groups and USAID to advocate for educational access and share his research findings with these advocacy groups. Upon his return, he will complete his dissertation, seek a teaching position at an R-1 university and build a teacher exchange program.

Christopher Manoharan (Ph.D. Candidate, Anthropology) Recipient of a Fulbright grant to Turkey. Christopher is a doctoral student in Anthropology interested in studying contemporary Sufism. His project will focus on an ethnographic analysis of Sufi rituals and an experimental assessment of the dhikr ritual utilizing heart rate sensors and accelerometers. In addition to his academic pursuits, Christopher is also a musician and looks forward to performing Turkish music on the fiddle in street performances. Upon his return, he will complete his dissertation and pursue a career in diplomacy.

Kim Sawicki (CAHNR ’19) Recipient of a Fulbright grant to the European Union. With a dual-degree in pathobiology and allied health sciences, Kim’s undergraduate work prepared her for a future career in epidemiology, studying the One Health Initiative. Collaborating with St. Andrew’s University (Scotland) and the Marine Institute (Republic of Ireland), her work explores current successful efforts in the EU which preserve cultural coastal fishing communities. The results will be shared with domestic fisheries partners and marine conservation experts who seek to expand sustainable fishing practices.

Dhruv Shah (CLAS ’19): Recipient of a Fulbright grant to India. Dhruv studies molecular and cell biology, English, and creative writing. He hopes his time as an English Teaching Assistant will help him experience the unique stories, color, customs, and different ways of life India has to offer. He will use his experiences to improve himself as an academic physician, an author, and as an informed citizen of the world.

Chriss Sneed (Ph.D. Candidate, Sociology). Recipient of a Fulbright Research grant to Brazil. Throughout the 2018-2019 academic year, Chriss has been a Research Associate in Residence at the Five College Women’s Studies Research Center (South Hadley, MA) and Visiting Instructor of African American Studies at Wesleyan University during the Spring 2019 semester. Their dissertation analyzes how constructions of identity shape individuals’ understandings and involvement in social justice organizations and practices. Specifically, they examine the role of identity in Black/Afro-descendent activist engagements within the United States and Brazil, with a special focus on work which sits at the intersection of race, gender, and sexuality.

Omar Taweh (CLAS ‘19) Recipient of Fulbright Research grant to Jordan. As a neurobiology & psychology double major minoring in human rights, Omar is interested in the intersection between resource access to refugees and their resultant health outcomes in local and international host countries. Upon his anticipated return to the US, Omar will apply to medical school in hopes of becoming an ER doctor to serve domestic and international populations facing adversity and difficulty accessing basic medical care.

 

To learn more about the Fulbright U.S. Student Program, make an appointment today to meet UConn’s Fulbright Program Advisor Ms. LuAnn Saunders-Kanabay, or visit the Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships and click “Talk to an Advisor.”

UConn Student Receives 2019 Portz Interdisciplinary Fellowship

UConn’s 2019 nominee for the NCHC Portz Interdisciplinary Fellowship, Susan Naseri (CLAS ’20)

 

The National Collegiate Honors Council’s John and Edythe Portz Interdisciplinary Research Fellowship provides students in good standing in honors programs of NCHC member institutions support to conduct creative and innovative research that crosses boundaries. The fellowship program invites applications from individuals who wish to undertake cross-disciplinary research or from a team of two students from different disciplines who propose a single collaborative project. The project will be funded for a period of up to 18 months with the expectation that upon its completion the Fellowship recipient will make a presentation of the research at the annual NCHC conference.

Honors students in good standing from 2-year colleges or 4-year colleges and universities with current Institutional membership in NCHC may apply at any point in their undergraduate studies. In addition to two letters of recommendation from faculty members, an endorsement from the institutional representative named in the NCHC membership is required.  Only ONE PROPOSAL per year from each member institution is permitted.

UConn’s NCHC Portz Nominee is chosen each spring from the pool of University Scholars who are Honors students with a record of engagement with the honors community and service to the Honors Program.

On May 1, the National Collegiate Honors Council informed UConn’s 2019 nominee Susan Naseri (CLAS ’20) that her Portz Interdisciplinary Fellowship application was successful, making her UConn’s first Portz Fellow since 2016.

Hailing from Queens, NY, Susan is pursuing a double major in Political Science and Human Rights. In addition to being a student in the Special Program in Law and the Honors Program, Susan is President of the Middle Eastern Student Association, a member of the 2018 Leadership Legacy cohort, and a recipient of the Cohen Student Leadership Scholarship.  She was also a Finalist for the 2019 Truman Scholarship.  As a Bennett Research Assistant and recipient of the SHARE grant, she documented cases of violence against women and girls across the world for Dr. David Richards, and this research was then cited in his book, Exploring The Consequences Of The Normative Gap In Legal Protections Addressing Violence Against Women. Additionally, Susan served as the Research and Evaluation Intern at the Connecticut Women’s Education and Legal Fund in Spring 2018. As a Holster scholar, Susan conducted qualitative interviews with the administrative heads of four NGOs across CT, to determine if their policies and programs offered to Middle Eastern refugees were focused more on acculturation or assimilation. With a love for learning and travel, Susan was named a Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholar and Fund for Education Abroad Scholar which allowed her to study in France and travel through Europe during the Summer of 2018. In the Fall 2018 semester, she served as the Human Rights Intern at UConn Law’s Asylum and Human Rights Clinic, where she documented country conditions research to corroborate the claims of their clients who were seeking asylum in the United States. Building on this passion to help asylum seekers and refugees, Susan is conducting research through literature reviews and qualitative interviews regarding the lived experiences of Middle Eastern refugee youth in Chicago, San Diego, and Dallas. As a University Scholar, she will be continuing similar research with NGOs and refugees in Amman, Jordan. In addition to research, Susan works as a tutor at the Writing Center, as a Student Programming Assistant for the Honors Department and previously, as a Resident Assistant on campus. In the future, she aims to create her own non-governmental organization dedicated to providing legal aid and helping refugees integrate into society.

 

To learn more about these and other nationally-competitive scholarship and fellowship opportunities, visit the Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships and click “Talk to an Advisor.”

Four UConn Students Named Goldwater Scholars

The University of Connecticut has produced four Goldwater Scholars in 2019 – marking the first time the school has had four winners in a single year. The Goldwater Scholarship is considered the nation’s premier scholarship for undergraduates studying math, natural sciences, and engineering. Schools can nominate a maximum of four students per year.

The students are: sophomore Berk Alpay ’21 (ENG, CLAS) of Storrs, Connecticut, a computer science and mathematics majors with a statistics minor; and juniors Ariane Garrett ’20 (ENG, CLAS) of Pleasant Valley, New York, a biomedical engineering and Spanish major; Saurabh Kumar ’20 (CLAS), of North Andover, Massachusetts, a physiology and neurobiology major with a minor in statistics; and Sam Markelon ’20 (ENG), of Burlington, Connecticut, a computer science major with a minor in mathematics.

Continue reading at UConn Today . . . .

Eleven Young Scientists from UConn Win NSF Graduate Fellowships

 

Four UConn undergraduates, two graduate students, and five alumni have won National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships (NSF-GRFP).  The oldest graduate fellowship of its kind, the NSF-GRFP recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students in NSF-supported STEM fields who are pursuing research-based master’s and doctoral degrees at accredited institutions in the United States.

Read more at UConn Today . . . .

Wanjiku Gatheru (CAHNR ’20) Receives 2019 Truman Scholarship

Wanjiku Gatheru ’20 (CAHNR) is one of just 62 students nationwide to receive the award, which is presented to undergraduate students who have devoted themselves to public service. (Sean Flynn/UConn Photo)

Wanjiku (Wawa) Gatheru ’20 (CAHNR), a junior majoring in environmental studies with a minor in global studies, has been named a 2019 Truman Scholar by The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. This prestigious award, given to just 62 students nationwide this year, is presented to undergraduate students who have devoted themselves to public service, and involves a rigorous, multi-stage selection process.

“I have never considered a path outside of public service,” Gatheru says. 

Read more at UConn Today . . . .

Meet UConn’s 2019 Goldwater Scholarship Nominees

Berk Alpay (ENG ‘21, CLAS ‘21) from Storrs, CT, is a STEM Scholar majoring in computer science and mathematics, and minoring in statistics. He plans to pursue a Ph.D. and a research career in computer science after graduation. Berk has been interested in artificial intelligence and neural networks since high school, and found an opportunity to apply them in Dr. Emmanouil Anagnostou’s Outage Prediction Model group in the Eversource Energy Center at the beginning of his first year at UConn. His focus has been in developing machine learning techniques to accurately predict power outages in Connecticut caused by storms that are growing in severity under climate change. His first major project was to develop a two-step logistic regression classifier and random forest regressor model that predicts whether an outage is to occur and, if so, to predict how many. Named a Holster Scholar in 2018, as his summer research project Berk formulated a novel modeling framework for forecasting outages from thunderstorms, whose dynamic character has proved a particular challenge for existing models. He has since developed a long short-term memory neural network that takes advantage of this new framework as well as recent advances in NOAA’s weather feature forecasting to predict outages at an hourly, rather than stormwide, temporal resolution. He is now working to finalize the model for publication. Moving forward, he is eager to explore applications of genetic algorithms to his research in meteorological impact forecasting and beyond. Berk received the Dominick A. Pagano Endowed Scholarship in Computer Science & Engineering in 2018. Outside of his research, Berk is an avid reader, amateur guitarist, and science contributor to UConn’s Daily Campus.

 

Ariane Garrett (ENGR,’20, CLAS, ’21) is an honors student and STEM Scholar from Pleasant Valley, NY. She is pursuing a dual degree in Biomedical Engineering and Spanish, with plans to achieve a Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering after graduation. She has been working in the Hoshino Laboratory since the spring of her freshman year on implantable medical devices, specifically a novel cerebral spinal fluid shunt capable of measuring flow in vivo. She has focused on the development of an implantable optical read out system and a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) flow sensor capable of measuring the required flow rates for cerebral spinal fluid. The summer after her freshman year she was named a Holster Scholar and received an IDEA grant for her research. Her work on the implantable optical read out system was patented in Spring 2018, and the following summer she received a SURF award to support her research. Currently, Ariane is leading the device testing and working towards fully integrating the device parts into an implantable capsule. Outside of the lab, Ariane is passionate about expanding access to technology and has worked towards this goal as Vice President of Engineers Without Borders. She is also a Peer Research Ambassador and a tutor in the Engineering Tutoring Center. When she is not busy with school or work, she enjoys hiking, baking, and spending time with friends.

 

Saurabh Kumar (CLAS ’20) from North Andover, MA, is a STEM Scholar majoring in Physiology & Neurobiology and minoring in Statistics. He is planning on pursuing an M.D./Ph.D. degree in Neurobiology to investigate effective therapies for patients with central nervous system damage following injury and lesioning. His research career began the summer of 2015 in the Cao Lab at the University Of New England College Of Osteopathic Medicine where he investigated glial cell inflammatory responses to chronic morphine use in a rodent AIDS infection model. This work was published in the Journal of Neuroimmunology. In the Conover Lab at UConn, Saurabh has conducted research characterizing the normal development of the brain’s lateral ventricles and the associated ventricular-subventricular zone (V-SVZ) stem cell niche, which was recently published in the journal: Development. Using this normal control model, Saurabh is currently charactering development of the stem cell niche in fetal-onset hydrocephalus using archival tissue samples and MRI scans in addition to an induced-mutation hydrocephalic mouse model for his University Scholar project which was supported by a SURF grant in 2018. Outside of the laboratory, Saurabh is an avid clarinetist serving as a 1st/Principal Clarinet player in both the UConn Symphonic Band and UConn Chamber Ensemble Club. He is also the Co-President of the UConn KDSAP chapter – a student-run organization that organizes and provides free kidney health screenings to medically under-served populations. Saurabh further enjoys STEM education for children, serving as a mathematics tutor for K-12 students in virtual online classroom and in-person settings.

 

Sam Markelon (ENGR ‘20) from Burlington, CT, is a STEM Scholar pursing a B.S. in computer science and a mathematics minor. He plans on earning his Ph.D. in computer science focusing in cryptography and information security after graduating from UConn. Sam began his time at UConn as a physics major. In his freshman and sophomore year he was heavily involved in nuclear research. During the summer of 2017 he was in Newport News, VA at Jefferson National Laboratory working on simulation software. The following summer he was at L’Institut de physique nucléaire d’Orsay in France working on data analytic tools for accelerator experiments. Since then he has transitioned to being fully invested in computer science. In the Fall of 2017 he began working with Dr. Walter Krawec in the Computer Science and Engineering Department doing novel research involving the analysis of quantum key distribution protocols with evolutionary algorithms. Sam coauthored a paper with Dr. Krawec for the 2018 ACM GECCO conference, and together they are working on a new paper. In the fall of 2018 Sam received an IDEA grant to work on analysis of post-quantum cryptosystems specifically the lattice-based NTRUEncrypt.  He recently wrote an implementation of said cryptosystem in Python that is available on GitHub. Sam’s general research interests are post-quantum cryptography, blockchain protocols, and cryptographic primitives. Aside from research Sam served as an undergraduate teaching assistant the past semester for CSE 2050: Data Structures and Object-Oriented Design. He is also heavily involved with the ACM student chapter, leading the cryptography subgroup. In addition to academic hobbies Sam enjoys athletics, playing intramural sports year round.

 

To learn more about these and other nationally-competitive scholarship and fellowship opportunities, visit the Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships and click “Talk to an Advisor.”

 

Meet UConn’s 2019 Truman Scholarship Nominees

The Truman Scholarship is awarded to college juniors with exceptional leadership potential and commitment to a career in government, the nonprofit or advocacy sectors, education, or elsewhere in public service.  Scholars are awarded up to $30,000 to pursue graduate studies, receive pre-professional/graduate advising from the Foundation and are invited to participate in internships and other programs.  Schools may nominate up to four students each year for the Truman Scholarship.  The campus deadline nomination falls on or around the first of November each year, but interested students are encouraged to reach out to Dr. Vin Moscardelli, Director of ONSF, as early as spring of their sophomore years.

 

Wanjiku (Wawa) Gatheru (CAHNR ’20), from Pomfret, CT, is a junior majoring in Environmental Studies with a minor in Global Studies. Prior to arriving at college, Wawa spent a year in Thailand as a KL-YES Scholar of the U.S. State Department, an experience that solidified her commitment to culturally competent conservation. Through internships with the City of Hartford’s Office of Sustainability, CHISPA CT, and the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network, Wawa has worked to uplift the voices of those most adversely impacted by environmental inequities. Passionate about the way food can solve the most pressing ecological problems, she been involved in childhood obesity prevention research as a Bridging the Gap Fellow in Dr. Amy Mobley’s Community Nutrition lab and has led nutritional education lessons to pre-school students in the Greater Hartford area as a coordinator of the Husky Nutrition Program. A UCSC Doris Duke Conservation Scholar and Newman Civic Fellow, Wawa is motivated to connect grassroots movements to institutions of power, as a lead organizer in CT’s first Youth Climate Lobby Day, UN Global Health Fellow, delegate at the 2017 UN Climate Change Discussions, co-founder of the President’s Council on Race and Diversity, and crucial leader in the successful implementation of an environmental literacy general education requirement. On campus, she promotes the collective wellbeing of students as the Vice President of the Undergraduate Student Government (USG), co-chairs the University-wide Metanoia: Youth for Change, mentors students as a teacher’s assistant in the African American Cultural Center, serves as Peer Research Ambassador at the Office of Undergraduate Research, hosts pop up food pantries as co-founder of UCAFE, and promotes campus sustainability as an intern at the Office of Environmental Policy. Wawa ultimately plans to pursue a joint JD/MEM, with the goal of empowering disenfranchised communities of color in the environmental decision-making process. Wawa was nominated for the Truman Scholarship.

Derek Pan (CLAS ‘20), from Cupertino, CA, is an Honors pre-medical student majoring in Molecular Cell Biology and minoring in Psychological Sciences. He has been involved in a colorectal cancer research at UConn Health as a Health Research Program Scholar and is currently conducting research in Prof. Joanne Conover’s Neurobiology lab. Heavily involved in UConn Undergraduate Student Government (USG), Derek serves as the Chairperson of the Student Services Committee, a task force of students that advocates for the quality of student life regarding health, safety, dining, and transportation. Passionate about dismantling mental health stigma, Derek has founded the Mental Health & Wellness Sub-Committee, served as Education & Development Coordinator for Active Minds, coordinated free Mental Health First Aid Certification Courses and Suicide Prevention Trainings, spearheaded campus-wide mental health awareness campaigns, and lobbied Connecticut state legislators to increase mental health literacy at Connecticut post-secondary institutions. Aside from his passion for mental health, Derek is also deeply interested in the field of global health – having coordinated annual medical service trips to Haiti in partnership with the US-Haitian based non-profit Angel Wings International for the past 4 years and founded the service organization Huskies for Haiti. As a proud Eagle Scout who strives to uphold the highest values of service and leadership, Derek aspires to become a physician and public servant in the public health field, with a focus on mental health advocacy both at home and abroad.  Derek was nominated for the Truman Scholarship.

Himaja Nagireddy (CLAS ’20), from Acton, MA, is an junior undergraduate pre-med student at the University of Connecticut pursuing a BA in Sociology (Honors) and a BS in Physiology and Neurobiology with a double minor in Molecular and Cell Biology and Chemistry as a STEM Scholar. Her goal is to one day become an aerospace flight surgeon. She is a Student Life Award recipient of the 2018 Spirer/Dueker Student Humanitarian Achievement Award, a 2019 Leadership Legacy Fellow, and a member of the inaugural (2019-20) class of BOLD Women’s Leadership Network Scholars at UConn. She also serves on the executive boards of TEDxUConn and Peer Allies Through Honors (PATH), a mentoring group the pairs incoming Honors students upperclass Honors students at UConn.  Himaja is an elected representative of the National Council for the United Nations Association of the USA, a civil organization founded by Eleanor Roosevelt, where she works with over 200 chapters to coordinate efforts to support the UN. Last year, she was a UNA-USA representative for the 62nd Commission of the Status of Women (CSW62), and this year she is in charge of planning over 4 parallel events for the CSW63. Himaja is currently a UConn-Eversource Research Fellow where she is conducting research to evaluate the benefits of NGSS-aligned energy conservation education for middle school students living in areas of high eviction rates in CT. She actively volunteers for three non-profit organizations during the semester (Barefoot College, Unite for Sight, and Paper Airplanes) and enjoys volunteering as the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary in Boston during her school breaks. In her free time, Himaja likes to hike, bike, and re-read her favorite books (Sherlock Holmes and Harry Potter!).  Himaja was nominated for the Truman Scholarship.

Susan Naseri (CLAS ’20), from Queens, NY, is pursuing a double major in Political Science and Human Rights. In addition to being a student in the Special Program in Law and the Honors Program, Susan is President of the Middle Eastern Student Association, a member of the 2018 Leadership Legacy cohort, and a recipient of the Cohen Student Leadership Scholarship. As a Bennett Research Assistant and recipient of the SHARE grant, she documented cases of violence against women and girls across the world for Dr. David Richards, and this research was then cited in his book, Exploring The Consequences Of The Normative Gap In Legal Protections Addressing Violence Against Women. Additionally, Susan served as the Research and Evaluation Intern at the Connecticut Women’s Education and Legal Fund in Spring 2018. As a Holster scholar, Susan conducted qualitative interviews with the administrative heads of four NGOs across CT, to determine if their policies and programs offered to Middle Eastern refugees were focused more on acculturation or assimilation. With a love for learning and travel, Susan was named a Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholar and Fund for Education Abroad Scholar which allowed her to study in France and travel through Europe during the Summer of 2018. In the Fall 2018 semester, she served as the Human Rights Intern at UConn Law’s Asylum and Human Rights Clinic, where she documented country conditions research to corroborate the claims of their clients who were seeking asylum in the United States. Building on this passion to help asylum seekers and refugees, Susan is conducting research through literature reviews and qualitative interviews regarding the lived experiences of Middle Eastern refugee youth in Chicago, San Diego, and Dallas through her IDEA grant. As a University Scholar, she will be continuing similar research with NGOs and refugees in Amman, Jordan. In addition to research, Susan works as a tutor at the Writing Center, as a Student Programming Assistant for the Honors Department and previously, as a Resident Assistant on campus. In the future, she aims to create her own non-governmental organization dedicated to providing legal aid and helping refugees integrate into society.  Susan was nominated for the Truman Scholarship.

 

To learn more about these and other nationally-competitive scholarship and fellowship opportunities, visit the Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships and click “Talk to an Advisor.”

 

Akshayaa Chittibabu named UConn’s fifth Marshall Scholar

Akshayaa Chittibabu ’19 (CLAS) looks to use her Truman scholarship for graduate work in dual medical and public health programs. (Bri Diaz/UConn Photo)
Akshayaa Chittibabu ’19 (CLAS) plans to use her Marshall Scholarship for graduate work at Oxford University.  (Bri Diaz/UConn Photo)

Akshayaa Chittibabu ’19 (CLAS), a biological sciences and sociology major, has been named a 2019 Marshall Scholar by The Marshall Aid Commemoration Commission. The competitive national award, given to just 48 individuals across the U.S., recognizes excellence in scholarship, leadership, and ambassadorial potential.

More  . . . 

 

 

Meet UConn’s Rhodes & Marshall Scholarship Nominees


UConn’s 2018-19 Rhodes and Marshall Scholarship Nominees. From left, Elizabeth Charash (CLAS ’18), Akshayaa Chittibabu (CLAS ’19), Odia Kane (CLAS ’19), and Jessica Weaver (CLAS ’19). 

 

The Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships is pleased to introduce UConn’s 2018-19 nominees for the Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships.  Congratulations (and good luck!) to these outstanding young leaders.

 

Elizabeth Charash (CLAS ’18) is a history major nominated for the Rhodes Scholarship. She is an avid reader, consumer of political satire and tea connoisseur. She is from Newtown, CT, where she is involved with gun violence prevention advocacy following the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary her junior year. She has studied abroad in Cape Town, South Africa where she worked with community members in an area with high levels of gun violence. Her time in Cape Town in combination with her high school activism have shaped the research she is currently conducting on the differences in urban and suburban gun violence prevention policy and activism. Elizabeth has interned in the offices of Congresswoman Elizabeth Esty and Senator Chris Murphy, as well as the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. She is also founder and president of UConn Against Gun Violence, where she seeks to inform her community about the complexities of gun violence.  Winner of the 2016 Newman Civic Fellowship and a 2017 Finalist for the Marshall, Mitchell and Truman Scholarships, Elizabeth is also the recipient of an IDEA grant to continue her ongoing research on the “Faces of the Gun Violence Prevention Movement in Connecticut” with Sociology Professor Mary Bernstein.  She is currently pursuing a MA in Conflict Transformation and Social Justice at Queens University Belfast, with later plans to pursue a joint JD and PhD continuing her work to inform and take action to mitigate gun violence.

 

Akshayaa Chittibabu (CLAS ’19), from Shrewsbury, MA, is a senior studying biological sciences and sociology at the University of Connecticut as a STEM Scholar.  A 2018 Truman Scholar, Akshayaa is nominated for the Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships.  She has worked on implementing better health education for rural women in South India as a Holster Scholar, assessed barriers in American healthcare as a 2017 Newman Civic Fellow, and studied Korean in Gwangju, South Korea through the U.S. Department of State. Currently, Akshayaa serves as the Vice Chair of the Academic Affairs Committee and Senator for Multiculturalism and Diversity in UConn’s Undergraduate Student Government.  She is an editorial assistant at the peer-reviewed journal Social Science & Medicine and is conducting her thesis research with Prof. Audrey Chapman at UConn School of Medicine’s Department of Community Medicine and Healthcare. On campus, she leads Gita studies for undergraduate Hindus at the UConn Hindu Students Council, and volunteers as a community health educator through the Collegiate Health Service Corps. Her investment in global health has led her to chairing Connecticut’s first student-run global health conference, serving on medical development trips to Panama and Ecuador, and advocating for global malaria and polio programs as a UN Foundation Global Health Fellow. In the future, she aims to build and promote innovative health policies, and pursue a fulfilling career in public service as a physician.

 

Odia Kane (CLAS ’19) is a senior Honors student from New Haven, Connecticut with origins from Guinea, West Africa. She studies Cognitive Science, Political Science, and Public Health, and through these disciplines, aspires to be a politician.  During her time at UConn, she was a Rowe Scholar, a New England Scholar, and served two terms on the Executive Boards of Sisters Inspiring Sisters and the African Students’ Association. When she is not in class or clubs, she works as a third-year tutor at the University Writing Center.  Over the summers, she has interned at the non-profit New Haven Promise, participated in the Summer Health Professions Education Program, and worked as a research intern at the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence. Odia plans to dedicate her life’s work to uplifting and protecting vulnerable populations.  She is nominated for the Marshall Scholarship.

 

Jessica Weaver (CLAS ’19)  is a senior Honors student from Newington, Connecticut studying Political Science, Human Rights, and Business. A Babbidge Scholar and Phi Beta Kappa inductee, Jessica is nominated for the Marshall and Rhodes scholarships. Jessica is dedicated to creating avenues for women to gain more representation in both the economy and political sphere. She has interned for Congressman John Larson as part of the UConn Honors Congressional Internship as well as at the Connecticut State Treasurer’s Office where she worked on UN Principle of Responsible Investment reports and helped create financial literacy initiatives for the State. Her internships inspired her to create policy change regarding financial literacy and led her to create a petition to institute financial literacy courses in all public higher education institutions and secondary schools in Connecticut. She currently serves as President of Partners in Health Engage, where she has lobbied members of Congress to increase global health funding with a particular focus on maternal and child health. Jessica served as an Alan R. Bennett Research Assistant in the political science department, and is currently researching how female representation impacts the legislative success of women’s issues legislation in state legislatures for her honors thesis. In the future, she plans to pursue a JD/PhD and work to empower female representation in organizations like the UN Women.

 

To learn more about these and other nationally-competitive scholarship and fellowship opportunities, visit the Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships and click “Talk to an Advisor.”

 

UConn Junior Wins Prestigious Truman Scholarship

Akshayaa Chittibabu ’19 (CLAS) looks to use her Truman scholarship for graduate work in dual medical and public health programs. (Bri Diaz/UConn Photo)
Akshayaa Chittibabu ’19 (CLAS) looks to use her Truman scholarship for graduate work in dual medical and public health programs. (Bri Diaz/UConn Photo)

Akshayaa Chittibabu ’19 (CLAS), a biological sciences and sociology major, has been named a 2018 Truman Scholar by The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. The competitive national award, given to 59 students across the U.S., selects and supports the next generation of public service leaders.

Read more . . . .