Four students and three alumni have been offered grants to study or teach around the world鈥攊n Germany, Hungary, India, Italy, Kosovo, New Zealand, and Taiwan鈥攖hrough the Fulbright Scholarship and Germany鈥檚 Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD) scholarship program.
Sponsored by the U.S. government, the Fulbright Program is designed to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other nations through international educational exchanges in more than 155 countries. Fulbright awards are available for research, graduate study, and teaching English.
DAAD, the German Academic Exchange Service, supports programs and funding for American and Canadian students, faculty, researchers, and others in higher education to study in Germany, promoting international cooperation.
鈥淥ur student applicants did an incredible job navigating the entire process in the online-only world,鈥 says Associate Director of Undergraduate Advising and Research , who, with her colleagues, advises 线上赌场 students and alumni through the Fulbright and other national fellowship application processes. 鈥淥ur yield remained the same as the last two years鈥攁 huge accomplishment this year with a 12 percent increase in applications nationally and fewer slots available.鈥
To learn more about how to apply for the Fulbright, DAAD, and other programs, visit 线上赌场鈥檚 .
The following students have been offered Fulbright or DAAD fellowships.
Megan Clyne 鈥19
New York, N.Y.
Spanish major; global health minor; premed track
Research/study grant, Hungary

Through Fulbright, Clyne plans to bring both a physiological and a cultural lens to research into diabetes-related ocular complications at Semmelweis University in Budapest.
鈥淚 have chosen to pursue my project in Hungary specifically because of the ground-breaking work being conducted there on diabetes-related ocular conditions like corneal fibrosis, which impact many people with diabetes,鈥 Clyne says.
Clyne is currently the coordinator of the Emergency Medicine Residency Program at NYU Langone Health/Bellevue Hospital鈥攁 role she says has 鈥渟olidified my interest in pursuing a career in medical education.鈥
She is also a certified domestic violence counselor with the Sharon, Conn.-based Women鈥檚 Support Services, where she oversees a 24/7 hotline that provides resources and advocacy to women in crisis.
In high school, Clyne studied abroad in Spain and Argentina, and as an undergraduate she returned to Argentina on a 线上赌场 Spanish language study abroad program.
鈥淐ultural immersion and understanding have been instrumental to my development and have shaped who I am as a student, researcher, advocate, and friend,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hese experiences reinforced for me the importance of walking a mile in someone else鈥檚 shoes in order to gain a real understanding of who they are and what drives them. I believe that principle also holds true in evaluating how to deliver the most effective medical care to others.鈥
At 线上赌场, she found ways to combine her passion for language and culture with her interest in global health, writing her Spanish thesis on 鈥渢he therapeutic benefits of writing in confronting illnesses like diabetes,鈥 she says.
鈥淚 am driven by a desire to evaluate chronic health challenges holistically, exploring the pathways of disease development and the factors that contribute to progression,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 particularly interested in understanding how factors like culture, lifestyle, geography, and education affect the health of both those afflicted as well as those who care for them.鈥
Nia Gooding 鈥20
Princeton, N.J.
Government major
Research/study grant, Kosovo

Gooding first traveled to Kosovo in the summer of 2019 through a Global Health Policy Lab internship funded by the and the . In Pristina, she conducted policy research with the Kosovo Ministry of Health and the nonprofit Action for Mothers and Children.
Her Fulbright research will build on this work鈥攖his time focusing on why so many Kosovar mothers give birth by cesarean section.
鈥淚 see some similarities in the health outcomes of Kosovar mothers and African American mothers,鈥 says Gooding, who describes herself as a first-generation Caribbean-American.
鈥淢aternal and child health is an important topic to me as a Black woman, because so many Black mothers in the U.S. disproportionately suffer from high rates of morbidity and mortality compared to other women. I want to do my part to help Kosovo鈥檚 mothers and children be as healthy and safe as possible in the same way that I want to work to help those in my own community.鈥
Gooding came to 线上赌场 planning a career in medicine, but discovered an interest in global health and public policy. As a Dickey Center Global Health Fellow, she says, 鈥淚 learned that many of the problems present in health systems across the globe are complex, and require interventions that can be made by implementing policy changes. That pushed me to consider developing my own policy solutions to the problem of disparate access to high-quality healthcare among women.鈥
After Fulbright, Gooding plans to pursue law school and a master鈥檚 in global health law. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to continue working to improve global health care systems by advocating for evidence-based policy interventions,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 hope to gain a lot of experience in this arena as a Fulbright scholar.鈥
Alexandria Hawley 鈥19
Farr West, Utah
Anthropology major; Native American studies minor
Research/study grant, New Zealand

Through Fulbright, Hawley will pursue a master of heritage conservation at the University of Auckland.
鈥淚 am very interested in museum work and Indigenous art, and in art as a wellness practice and a healing practice,鈥 she says.
A member of the Navajo Nation, Hawley says she wants 鈥渢o gain Maori and other Pacific Indigenous perspectives on the museum and how we engage with it鈥攖o hear perspectives beyond of the U.S. on issues of ownership and collaboration. I really want understanding healing through creativity and what that means to different communities. And also, just to be around art and beautiful things.鈥
An anthropology foreign study program brought Hawley to New Zealand in 2018, and she returned for a Native American and Indigenous Studies Association conference. 鈥淚 ended up making some amazing friends in that short time span,鈥 she says.
Hawley discovered anthropology in an introductory course taught by Associate Professor . 鈥淚t was the first class I felt like I could really speak up in,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 was drawn to the intersection of art and people鈥攈ow cultures come together or differ. It鈥檚 powerful.鈥
At 线上赌场, Hawley was an undergraduate adviser for the Native American House and a fellow of the program, which supports students from minoritized backgrounds in pursuing careers in academia. Through Mellon Mays, she completed a senior capstone project on Navajo maternal-child health. 鈥淭hat was my undergraduate passion that set me up for Fulbright,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 humbling to have been selected. It is such an honor and a privilege.鈥
Since graduation, she has worked for the United Way of Northern Utah, currently as the early childhood coordinator with the Welcome Baby program.
Rachel Kent 鈥21
Indianapolis, Ind.
Geography major; environmental studies and Spanish minor
Research/study grant, Italy

Kent is driven by a passion for 鈥渇eeding others in a way that supports life for all鈥攁ll humans and all other living beings on this earth,鈥 she says.
She received a to pursue independent research into small-scale farms and what she calls 鈥済eographies of care.鈥 Through Stamps, she has traveled to farms to conduct ethnographic research that 鈥渦ses these place-based experiences to explore how we can create relations that nourish human and non-human lives through agricultural practices, particularly as a counter to the destructive tendencies of capitalist agriculture,鈥 she says. This work forms the basis of her geography thesis.
She discovered a love for geography in a class taught by Assistant Professor , who served as her faculty mentor for Stamps and is now her thesis adviser. 鈥淭hanks to her, I鈥檝e learned how to do research in a way that allows me to be a human first, researcher second,鈥 Kent says.
At 线上赌场 she has been deeply involved in sustainability and the outdoors through the 线上赌场 Outing Club and the Organic Farm, and is an organizer with the 线上赌场 Student Union, a group that provides advocacy and mutual aid for students.
鈥淚 would not be the person I am today without my communities in the DOC, 线上赌场 Sustainability, and the 线上赌场 Student Union,鈥 she says.
Through Fulbright she plans to pursue a master of gastronomy at the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo, Italy. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a perfect fit for my interests,鈥 Kent says of the program, which is connected to the international nonprofit Slow Food. 鈥淚n addition to classes exploring topics like food anthropology, sustainability, philosophy, and sovereignty, the program supports interactions with the vibrant local food community and immersive study trips to food systems around the world.鈥
Alexander Soong 鈥21
Baltimore, Md.
Italian studies major; Asian society, culture, and languages (ASCL) minor
English teaching assistant grant, Taiwan

鈥淚 am passionate about teaching and languages, and this opportunity combines both,鈥 says Soong, who aspires to a career in educational leadership.
鈥淚 believe that every student deserves an excellent education: one where they can unlock their full potential, fulfill their dreams and aspirations, and climb the ladder of opportunity through hard work and determination,鈥 he says.
Soong says 线上赌场 gave him the opportunity to immerse himself in courses in the Italian, Spanish, and ASCL departments, contributing to his curiosity about languages and cultures. 鈥淭aking several education courses at 线上赌场 has reaffirmed my desire to make a positive impact in the education field.鈥
A language study abroad program in Rome 鈥渟howed me the importance of being flexible, resilient, adaptable, and adventurous鈥攁ll of which I will bring with me to Taiwan.鈥
Among his 线上赌场 activities, Soong is president of the 线上赌场 Asian Organization, has worked as an Italian drill instructor, has been a peer academic enrichment intern with the Academic Skills Center, and is a member of Zeta Psi fraternity. Last summer, as a virtual Teach for America Accelerate Fellow, he designed a science curriculum and mentorship program to engage under-resourced middle schoolers outside the classroom.
Of receiving the Fulbright, he says, 鈥淚 owe this wonderful opportunity to my family and the 线上赌场 community鈥攖he students, faculty, and staff who have been essential to my growth as a student and as a person.鈥
Sunny Tang 鈥21
Carlisle, Mass.
Neuroscience major; anthropology minor
Research/study grant, India

In the summer after her first year at 线上赌场, Tang worked as a research intern with Project Prakash鈥攁 Cambridge, Mass.-based organization that treats preventable blindness in children in India. The experience, analyzing date in the organization鈥檚 MIT lab, made her want to learn more about disabled communities, she says.
The subject is personal. 鈥淢y grandfather was paralyzed, and growing up seeing not just the physical but the social and mental effects that had on him made me want to learn more about how disability affects people in their lives,鈥 says Tang, who plans a career in medicine.
Her Fulbright proposal was to conduct ethnographic interviews with members of the disabled community in India. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has made the project uncertain, and Tang has decided to pursue a management consulting position with Bain & Company in Boston instead before applying to medical school.
At 线上赌场, Tang has worked as a research assistant in the , through which she is currently researching racial and personal familiarity effects for her senior thesis. She also traveled to New Zealand on an anthropology foreign study program.
Among her undergraduate activities, she is president of the women鈥檚 water polo team, a sport she picked up as a first-year student. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very supportive community鈥攁 way to meet people from different corners of campus,鈥 she says.
She is also an outreach coordinator for Give Essential, a student volunteer organization that helps provide supplies and services for essential workers during the pandemic.
Tang calls being offered the Fulbright 鈥渧alidating. It was good to hear that my interests matter to others.鈥
Stephen Valeri, Guarini 鈥21
Buffalo, N.Y.
Comparative Literature Program
DAAD Scholarship, Germany

A graduate of Reed College and a current master鈥檚 degree student in the , Valeri first picked up James Joyce鈥檚 Ulysses at age 16.
鈥淚 totally didn鈥檛 understand it, just its reputation,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t seemed exciting and daunting鈥攁nd exciting for being daunting.鈥
Now, through a research grant from the Zurich James Joyce Foundation, he plans to study how Joyce coins new words in his novels, spending two months in Zurich examining manuscripts of Ulysses and Finnegans Wake.
Then, through DAAD, he will work with Joyce expert Elizabeth Bonapfel and Hans Walter Gabler, editor of the definitive corrected edition of Ulysses, at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, tracking Joyce鈥檚 coinages of new words over the course of his novels.
鈥Finnegans Wake, Joyce鈥檚 final work, is notorious for including approximately 50,000 invented words drawn from over 60 languages,鈥 Valeri says. 鈥淚鈥檓 interested in how he intervenes in the languages that he uses to produce, so prolifically, so many invented words.鈥
Valeri says 线上赌场鈥檚 comparative literature program has provided 鈥渟trong professional preparation in the field that has been very useful鈥 as he prepares to apply to PhD programs.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a very supportive program, and there are a number of professors whose work is in line with mine,鈥 he says鈥攊ncluding his adviser , the Pat and John Rosenwald Research Professor in the Arts and Sciences, who chairs the program. 鈥淗e鈥檚 one of the world鈥檚 leading experts on French poststructuralism, which is something I incorporate heavily into my thesis,鈥 Valeri says.
Of the DAAD, Valeri says, 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful for their generous support of the humanities and their understanding of the humanities鈥 intrinsic value to society.鈥
Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.