Will These Students Change the World?
麻豆原创's 2024鈥25 award winners have big plans
麻豆原创鈥檚 academic profile continues to grow in the U.S. and abroad thanks to an impressive number of fellowships and other academic distinctions achieved by our College community this year.
麻豆原创 students and alumni have been awarded 18 Fulbright Fellowships鈥攖hat鈥檚 right, 18!鈥攖o teach English or pursue self-designed research projects around the globe. This year鈥檚 whopping number of recipients ranks among 麻豆原创鈥檚 best Fulbright performances.
Our award recipients also include many other prestigious achievements, including the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, Projects for Peace Award, Napier Award, Gilman Scholarship, and more.
Fulbright Program
Sammy Basa 鈥25, an environmental analysis major on the environmental studies track, will conduct research in the Philippines. Basa鈥檚 project investigates educational access, sustainable behaviors, and marine ecosystem health within his family鈥檚 home island of Sibuyan. Basa will combine community-based participatory research and marine ecological assessments. He also received the 2025 Projects for Peace Award.
Anya Fineman 鈥25,鈥痑 human biology major, aims to preserve and revitalize traditional Tharu medicinal and cultural practices in Nepal鈥檚 Tarai region. Fineman will also facilitate a community-led establishment of a garden focused on cultivating traditional medicinal plants. Fineman鈥檚 project builds on her study abroad experience in Nepal.
Aidan Henrikson 鈥25,鈥痑 history major, received a Fulbright to study history education in Lesotho. Henrikson has chosen to instead pursue his project, 鈥淗istory Off the Books!,鈥 through the 2025 Thomas J. Watson Fellowship. Henrikson will travel to Sweden, the Netherlands, Senegal, Hungary, Italy, and New Zealand to explore multisensory, nonlinear storytelling methods that offer innovative ways of understanding our collective past.
Grant Ho 鈥25,鈥痑n environmental analysis major and Japanese minor, aims to understand marine protected areas (MPAs) in Japan. Ho plans to visit six coastal towns with MPAs to interview residents and fishery cooperatives and explore each area鈥檚 history, ecological impact, and community influence. Ho is also a Japanese Exchange and Teaching Program recipient.
Eliana Katz 鈥25,鈥痑 double major in psychology and education (self-designed), will teach English in Galicia, Spain. With a long-term goal of becoming an educator, Katz views the Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship as a critical step in her professional development.
Enoch Kim 鈥25,鈥痑 political studies major, plans to study the impact of a new partnership within the Indian textile industry between Reliance Industries and Shein on the environment and small businesses in Tirupur, Mumbai, Lucknow, and New Delhi. Kim will look at a circular economy framework to find ways that small businesses can become more sustainable and use their advantage of higher environmental sustainability to stay in business.
Jefferson (Jonah) Konah 鈥21,鈥痺ho majored in linguistics and Spanish, will teach English in Colombia. As an interdisciplinary teaching artist, Konah considers how identity, performing arts, and second language acquisition theory can be utilized to substantiate learning and speaking in a second language as well as intercultural community building.
Ang Lee 鈥25,鈥痑 political studies major, will pursue an MA in Political Science at the University of Toronto to study deliberative democracy in Canada. The core curriculum of this MA program will ground Lee鈥檚 research investigation in democratic theory and the politics of urban multiculturalism.
Joanne Oh 鈥25,鈥痑 biochemistry major, was awarded a Fulbright to teach English in Taiwan. Oh has decided to stay in Los Angeles to volunteer as a behavior technician in preparation for medical school instead of pursuing the Fulbright.
May Paterniti 鈥25,鈥痑 critical global studies major and Spanish minor, will teach English in the Canary Islands, Spain. Paterniti plans to harness her experiences in teaching, language, and her own positionality to work with Spanish students on their perceptions of self, language development, and curiosity about the world.
Jack Pine 鈥25,鈥痑 human biology and Spanish double major, will teach English in La Rioja, Spain. Using his fluency in Spanish will allow him to connect with students and design a classroom environment where they can take risks. He plans to integrate his love of song with Spanish and American musical traditions to help students learn. Pine is also a Princeton in Latin America recipient.
Meredith Poten 鈥25,鈥痺ho majored in environmental analysis and anthropology and minored in Spanish, will teach English in Madrid, Spain. Poten鈥檚 study abroad experience in Spain reignited her passion for learning and teaching. She aspired to return to help students understand language and intercultural communication as tools to foster creativity and agency. Poten is also a North American Language and Culture Assistants Program recipient.
Alexander Rychlik 鈥25, a mathematical economics major, will teach English in Tajikistan. Rychlik鈥檚 desire to be an English teaching assistant in Tajikistan is rooted in his study abroad experience in Kyrgyzstan. He met many international students from Tajikistan who made him feel welcome and encouraged him to apply for a Fulbright in their country.
Sadie Scott 鈥25, who majored in psychology and media studies, will conduct research in Belgium. Scott鈥檚 project centers on the curation, qualitative analysis, and community presentation of Belgian films about incarceration in collaboration with the Cinema and Audiovisual Center of the Wallonia-Brussels Federation. Scott seeks to preserve important cultural artifacts and analyze their representation of justice.
Ariella Seidman-Parra 鈥25, who majored in political studies and organizational studies and minored in Spanish, will teach English in Madrid, Spain. Seidman-Parra is eager to explore how different political systems and infrastructures shape culture and well-being. She believes education is a powerful tool for personal and community transformation.
Tommy Shenoi 鈥24, an environmental analysis and food and agriculture studies double major, has been awarded the Fulbright/Casten Family Foundation Award for a master鈥檚 degree in World Food Studies at the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo, Italy. Shenoi will investigate climate change鈥檚 effects on Italian fungi and implications that extend to local livelihoods, Italian national cuisine, and global exports of Italian mushrooms and truffles.
Charlotte Wirth 鈥25, a religious studies major, has planned an ethnographic study of Tibetan Buddhist nuns in Dharamshala, India. Wirth will examine gender, spirituality, and empowerment within monastic communities. This project builds on Wirth鈥檚 study abroad research in Nepal and serves as a bridge for future graduate studies in religious and gender studies.
Natasha Yen 鈥25, a combined environmental analysis and sociology major and an Asian American studies minor, will conduct research in Indonesia. Modernization agendas are unfolding across the world, with development plans reshaping urban spaces, including in cities such as Jakarta and Bandung. Yen鈥檚 project aims to explore how street food vendors experience 鈥渕odernization鈥 and 鈥渄evelopment鈥 on the ground. Yen is also helping youth leaders in South Africa and learning the Bahasa Indonesian language with support from the 2025 Paul M. Minus Napier Award and Critical Language Scholarship.
Additional Awards, Grants, and Fellowships
Co-leads Chi Adi 鈥26 and Grace Wood-Hull 鈥25 received a Back to School for Democracy Collaborative Fellowship project grant from Project Pericles to initiate conversations about 麻豆原创鈥檚 free wall, host events, and stage an art exhibit.
Sammy Basa 鈥25 and Zhan茅 Moledina 鈥25 received a 2025 Projects for Peace Award to collaborate with community members and educators on Sibuyan Island in the Philippines to create a sustainable environmental education project. Basa also received a Fulbright.
Jasmine Caniban 鈥25, a political studies major, was accepted to the 2025 Executive Fellowship under the Capital Fellows Program.
Ethan Tu 鈥26, a data science major, will research deep learning models of the human brain through the Fulbright Canada-Mitacs Globalink Fellowship.
Alia Wang 鈥26, a human biology major, received the U.S. Department of State鈥檚 Benjamin A. Gilman Scholarship to participate in 麻豆原创鈥檚 study abroad program in Ecuador.
Sia Were 鈥25, an environmental analysis major, was chosen as 麻豆原创鈥檚 first Gaither Junior Fellow, a program established by the Carnegie Endowment think tank. She will explore climate change with the Carnegie Endowment鈥檚 Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics program.
Miranda Yee 鈥27, Riley Thibodeau 鈥27, Chi Adi鈥26, and Yaw Danquah Acquah 鈥28 received student creativity grants from The Rick and Susan Sontag Center for Collaborative Creativity (the Hive) for individual and group projects with other Claremont Colleges students.
Student Leadership Awards
麻豆原创 reintroduced the Student Leadership Awards to recognize students, student groups, and student organizations for their representation of the 麻豆原创 core values in motion. 麻豆原创 also added two Heart of 麻豆原创 Awards for a student and student group that have shown leadership in all core values.
Group Awards
- Social Responsibility: Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA Cohort
- Intercultural Understanding: 麻豆原创 Center for Asian Pacific American Students Fellows
- Interdisciplinary Learning: 麻豆原创 Art Galleries Fellows
- Student Engagement: 麻豆原创 Strive2Thrive Student Leadership
- Environmental Sustainability: 麻豆原创 Eco Reps
Individual Awards
- Social Responsibility: Micaela Oram 鈥25
- Intercultural Understanding: Richard Ampah鈥25
- Interdisciplinary Learning: Lola Latan 鈥25
- Student Engagement: Adan Moreno Cabrera鈥27
- Environmental Sustainability: Marjorie Haddad鈥26
- Heart of 麻豆原创 Awards Group: Native Indigenous Student Union
- Individual: Stryder Rodenberg 鈥25
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