Vol.29 No. 32 - May 5, 2025

Features

  • Students Honored for Outstanding Academic Achievement

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    The annual list of outstanding students has been released. The recipients are determined by their respective departments.

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Anthropology
    Hattie Berke

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Art
    Octavian Grey Dean Stickann

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Art: Design
    Michaela Joann Raveill

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Art: Studio Art
    Evelyn Lane Jones

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Classics
    Elaina Michelle Gorton

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Communication
    Colleen Elizabeth O’Reilly

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Creative Writing
    Zoe Jennifer Aldrich

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Criminal Justice Studies
    Chloe M. Atkins

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in English

    Alex Potter

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in History
    Micaela Rose Reiss

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Interdisciplinary Studies

    Olivia Zerega

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Linguistics
    Emmanuelle Wilson

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Modern Language
    Molly Ellen Laiben

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Music: Emphasis Groups
    Carson Merical

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Music: General
    Ford Mirowski

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Music: Liberal Arts
    Yiwen Tan

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Music: Pre-Certification
    Quinten Winkeler

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Philosophy

    Andrew C. Struckhoff

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Political Science & International Relations
    Evan Timothy Holway

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Religion
    Andrew Fruend

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Sociology
    Dalton Lyle Lodge

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Theatre
    Kayla Clarice Cotter

    Outstanding Graduate Student in English
    Jesse Daniel Carter

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Music
    Harper Rose Golden

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Accounting
    Jackson David Dumler

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Business Administration: Finance
    Justin Thomas Olwig

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Business Administration: International Business
    Katherine Isabelle Whiteford

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Business Administration: Management
    Emma Bulman

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Business Administration: Marketing
    Kaitlyn Jade Patke

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Communication Disorders
    Elise Corinne Duncan

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Economics
    Matthew Alexander Kruse

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Exercise Science
    Brooklyn Jesstina Smyser

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Military Science - General George C. Marshall ROTC Award
    Hunter Lee Hobbs

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Nursing
    Elana Mae Hamner

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Psychology
    Nyssia James Louise Crandall

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Accounting
    Kyle Dwight Seabaugh

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Athletic Training
    Jaylynn Rae Martin

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Communication Disorders
    Riley Wibberg

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Counseling: Mental Health Counseling
    Paige Lauren Kammeyer

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Counseling: School Counseling
    Justin David Moeller

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Elementary Education
    Lillian Dawn Conger

    Outstanding Graduate Student in K-12 Education
    Lilianne Marie Winston

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Leadership
    Clarence Shearer III

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Secondary Education
    Eric Benjamin Allison

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Special Education
    Maura Ploesser

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Agricultural Science
    Sophia Christine Seibert

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
    Emma Christine Thompson

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Biology
    Spencer J. Duffendack

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Chemistry
    Zoe Vetter

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Computer Science
    Mohammadhossein Momeni

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Health Science
    Madisen Bromfman

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Mathematics
    Luciana LaVon Scuderi

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Physics
    Nathan Charles Shaw

    Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Statistics
    Dane Winterboer

    Outstanding Graduate Student in Data Science and Analytic Storytelling
    Sylvia Modesitt
  • Kambli Caps Busy Year with Howard Fellowship

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    “Muma, Me and Bab’s Shadow” by Priya Kambli
     
    Priya Kambli, professor of art, has been awarded a 2025 Howard Fellowship in the field of Object Art and Installation.
     
    The George A. and Eliza Gardner Howard Foundation is an independent foundation administered at Brown University. The Howard Foundation awards a limited number of fellowships each year for independent projects in selected fields, targeting its support specifically to early mid-career individuals who have completed at least one major project and demonstrate potential to be future leaders in their fields. This highly competitive fellowship comes in the amount of $40,000.
     
    For the Howard Foundation fellowship, Kambli proposed to create and document ephemeral installations in the American landscape using her mother’s object of worship in a new body of work titled, “The idea of home follows me wherever I go.” This work connects her matriarchal archive with the American landscape, drawing new lines of belonging and visually considering the question how she, as an immigrant, belongs to her adopted land.
     
    “My photographic approach is grounded in interventions with my family inheritance – a personal archive of photographs and heirlooms – and has required time, effort and constant making and remaking,” Kambli said. “I am glad to see that artistic effort being recognized on a platform such as Howard Foundation can provide. And the financial support provided by this grant is essential, as it allows for me to actualize my desires for the work, such as publication, exhibition and other forms of dissemination.”
     
    The Howard Fellowship is the most recent recognition Kambli has earned in a very productive year. She is the winner of the 2025 Leica Women Foto Project Award, which serves to empower the female perspective and its impact on today’s visual stories. The selected winners from each of the regions also receive a Leica SL3 camera, a Vario-Elmarit-SL 24-70mm f/2.8 ASPH lens and a $10,000 cash prize.
     
    Later this year, Kambli will be an artist-in-residence at MacDowell in Peterborough, New Hampshire. MacDowell’s mission is to nurture the arts by offering talented individuals an inspiring residential environment in which to produce enduring works of the creative imagination. Kambli is one of 201 artists-in-residence selected this year from a pool of more than 2,200 applicants.  
     
    “At MacDowell, three chief-made meals are delivered to your doorstop in beautiful baskets. I can’t wait to experience this phenomenon and eating these delicious meals,” she said. “Also, I’m looking forward to being part off and engaging with an amazing artist community that MacDowell provides.”
     
    Kambli is also in exclusive company as one of six people selected to be an artist fellow at the Kala Art Institute in Berkely, California. With a mission to help artists sustain their creative work, the Kala Art Institute Fellowship program has a long history of inviting and supporting artists experimenting across media, disciplines and new media genres. Kambli will be onsite at Berkely at a time to be determined.
     
    This year also saw Kambli’s work on display as a solo exhibition for Nilaya Anthology in Mumbai, India. The space’s programming includes art, design showcases and interactive sessions that aim to provide visitors with design inspiration. Perhaps most importantly, it gave Kambli’s family in India a chance to finally see her work in person.
     
    “I think my family was a bit overwhelmed,” she said. “The opening was rather grand. My family wasn’t expecting that, and neither was I. There were celebrities in attendance – movie stars, cricketers, etc. My sister got to say hello to Shabana Azmi – an Indian actress of film, television and theatre who attended the opening – so overall it was an experience, they would haven’t necessarily ever had, and of course they got to see my art in person.”
     
    This fall, Kambli will be teaching two photography courses at Truman, as well as a Self and Society class for art majors.
  • Esports Recruitment Efforts Display Program Growth

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    Truman esports recently conducted its first-ever signing ceremony for future Bulldog athletes. Pictured (from left): Jared Young, Truman esports director, along with Ethan Rote, Hunter Morsbach and their high school coach Tom Morsbach.

    Truman esports continues to grow at rapid pace, proof of which can be seen in the first high school athletes recruited and signed to the program this spring.

    Esports began at Truman in fall 2022, competing in “League of Legends” and “Rocket League.” By its second year, the team added “Super Smash Bros.” and Truman teams have earned multiple divisional championships through the National Association for Collegiate Esports (NACE).

    Truman offers varsity and junior varsity esports teams. Participation is open to all students, and open tryouts are conducted each semester. While extracurriculars of all kinds are a draw for prospective students, the program has begun actively recruiting high school athletes specifically to play for Truman esports.

    “This signifies the next evolutionary step for Truman esports,” said Jared Young, director of academic affairs operations and director of Truman’s team. “Our athletes train, practice and compete, same as all other sports. We compete nationally against other colleges and universities, and our athletes and recruits are scholarship eligible. Rather than passively filling our ranks from our student population to fill positions on teams, we are now able to actively seek out talent.”

    Ethan Rote and Hunter Morsbach, graduating seniors from Clinton County R-III in Plattsburg, Missouri, are the first athletes to commit to the University on an esports scholarship. They will compete for Truman’s “Super Smash Bros.” team starting in the fall.

    “Recruiting high school students has always been part of the plan,” Young said. “We began by hosting a few school field trips and became an optional stop for prospective students visiting campus. Now we’re looking to build relationships with high schools and their esports programs in order to bring more talent to Truman.”

    Rote and Morsbach recently participated in Truman’s first-ever esports signing ceremony at their high school with Young and their coach, Tom Morsbach.

    More information about Truman esports is available on the team website, esports.truman.edu. Up-to-date information can also be found on the team’s Instagram @TrumanEsports. During the school year, competitions are available to stream on the team’s Twitch.
  • Kincaid Receives Gyo Obata Fellowship

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    Robin Kincaid has received a Gyo Obata Fellowship for the summer.

    Kincaid is a senior double majoring in studio art and creative writing. They are a nationally exhibited interdisciplinary artist and writer, particularly interested in painting, drawing, fibers and experimental comics. Additionally, they are an experienced student worker at the University Art Gallery. In summer 2024, they were awarded a TruScholars grant to explore how watercolor painting, transparent fabrics and handmade felt can articulate their lived experience as a trans non-binary person. Kincaid is drawn to the arts as a way to build human connection through authentic, unrestricted expression, particularly when it comes to gender and identity.

    The Gyo Obata Fellowship was created by the Gateway Foundation to offer students direct experiences working in the field of arts administration. Fellows receive a placement at a St. Louis art institution for 10 weeks, personal mentorship and an $8,000 stipend. Kincaid plans to spend their summer working for The Luminary.

Announcements

  • Farewell Fair Set for May 5

    A Farewell Fair will take place from 2-5 p.m. May 5 on the quad. This is a time for students, faculty and staff to take a break on the first day of finals week to enjoy food, games, painting, music, inflatable axe throwing and water balloons.

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  • ROTC Presents Rappel Tower Cookout

    ROTC is hosting a free cookout with the chance for all Truman students to use the rappel tower from 12-4 p.m. May 7. Burgers, hotdogs, chips and drinks will be available.

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  • Snacks Scheduled to Celebrate Finals Week

    Union and Involvement Services will have snacks available to celebrate finals week at 11 a.m. May 5-6 and May 8 in the Student Union Building Hub while supplies last. May 5 will include mac n cheese bites, mini corndogs and pretzel bites. May 6 will include mini tacos, chips and salsa. May 8 will include cookies and lemonade.

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  • Greenhouse Hosts Plant Sale

    The Truman greenhouse will host a plant sale from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. May 7 in Magruder Hall 2034. The sale will feature a wide variety of house plants as well as some annual flowers and herbs. Sale is cash only.

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  • Alumna Judge to Give May Commencement Address

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    Kayla Jackson-Williams will provide the commencement address at the spring graduation, May 10.

    In 2012, Jackson-Williams graduated from Truman with a degree in justice systems before continuing her education at the University of Missouri-School of Law. Her exceptional skills in trial and oral advocacy, as well as brief writing, earned her membership to the Order of Barristers, an honor awarded to only 10 Mizzou Law graduates each year.

    Following law school, Jackson-Williams began her legal career representing families in Boone County, Missouri, ensuring that each individual she assisted not only received a skilled attorney in the courtroom, but also a representative who listened and explained each part of the legal process encountered.

    Jackson-Williams continued her service to her community by serving as a public defender, where she handled hundreds of criminal cases from the date a charge was filed to the final disposition of the case. She viewed her position as a public defender as another avenue to demonstrate excellence, and an opportunity to advance her skills in her advocacy through making oral arguments, preparing witnesses, researching legal issues, preparing motions, and conducting trials. More importantly, she took this opportunity to provide a voice to individuals who often felt overlooked and unheard.

    Looking for a change, Jackson-Williams left the Public Defender’s Office in 2020, and she worked as a senior associate at Rogers | Ehrhardt Attorneys at Law, where she practiced civil litigation. During this time, she also served as an adjunct professor, teaching client interviewing and counseling, at Mizzou Law.

    In 2021, the Supreme Court of Missouri appointed Jackson-Williams as a member of the Commission on Racial and Ethnic Fairness and a member of the Juvenile Justice Subcommittee. In 2022, the Supreme Court of Missouri appointed her to a second committee – this time focused on reforming the juvenile justice system in Missouri.

    On Aug. 2, 2022, Jackson-Williams was elected associate circuit court judge in Boone County where she has served since Jan. 1, 2023.
  • Volunteers Needed for State Special Olympics

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    Kirksville will be the site of the 2025 Special Olympics Missouri State Summer Games, May 30-June 1, and the Truman campus will host all the events.
     
    Volunteers are a crucial component of making the games a special event for athletes, families and spectators. There are more than 300 volunteer opportunities available during the event, from help at the athletic competitions to many of the support efforts. In addition to assistance for swimming, track and field, and powerlifting, volunteers will be needed for the opening ceremony, the Healthy Athletes stations, move in, bingo, crafts, photography and more.
     
    Individuals and organizations can sign up for multiple volunteer opportunities as long as there is no time conflict between events. A complete list of volunteer needs can be found online.  
     
    Special Olympics Missouri is a year-round program of sports training and athletic competition for children and adults with intellectual disabilities. Thousands of athletes participate in 13 Olympic-type sports throughout the state. Special Olympics Missouri provides people with intellectual disabilities continuing opportunities to develop physical fitness, demonstrate courage and experience joy as they participate in the sharing of gifts and friendship with their fellow athletes, their family and friends, and communities across Missouri.
  • Calling for Commencement Volunteers

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    The University will celebrate and honor spring graduates at 2 p.m. May 10 at Stokes Stadium. Several volunteers are needed to help pass out programs and direct people to the disability and available seating.  

    Volunteers are asked to arrive at the stadium by 12:40 p.m. for directions prior to the doors opening at 1 p.m. Shortly after commencement begins, volunteers are free to leave or stay for the ceremony.
     
    Anyone willing to volunteer, or anyone with questions about volunteering, can contact Nancy Asher at nasher@truman.edu or Kaytee Wood at kwood@truman.edu, or call 660.785.4145. For those who volunteer, more detailed information will be sent via email closer to the actual date along with inclement weather plans.
  • Registration Open for JBA Jr.

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  • Food Packs Available for Students During Summer Break

    The SERVE Center will be available for food packs during the summer. Pre-made pack requests will not be available and workers will not be in the pantry. Students in need of food packs can visit the Union and Involvement office to ask a worker to accompany them to the food pantry to build their own pack.

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  • Student Government Offers Rides to Airport and Train Station

    Student Government will provide students rides to and from the Kirksville Regional Airport and Laplata Train Station May 9-13. They will run these trips twice per day to meet the scheduled flights and trains. Sign up is available here.

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  • Registration Open for Summer Classes

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    Registration for summer classes is now open.

    Summer is a great time for students to focus their attention on a challenging class, or work on boosting their GPA for scholarship renewal or graduate school applications. It is also an opportunity to make a lot of progress toward an additional major or minor without falling behind.

    Courses are available in a variety of options, including online, hybrid and in-person delivery methods. The flexibility of summer courses provides students the opportunity to have a job, take a vacation or socialize with friends back home.

    With six separate terms throughout the summer, students have multiple options to fit their needs. Interim classes run May 10-24. The first round of five-week courses, as well as 10-week courses, begin May 27, while the second round of five-week courses begins June 30. An eight-week session begins June 2. The August interim runs from July 26-Aug. 9. For more information visit summer.truman.edu.
  • Class Offers Service-learning Opportunity Through Special Olympics

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  • Women's Resource Center Now Located in Baldwin Hall

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  • Fulfill Language Requirements Over the Summer

    Students can fulfill language requirements during summer session. Latin 150 and 151 are being offered through asynchronous online.

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  • Faculty and Staff Honored at Service Recognition Celebration

    Approximately, 125 current and retired employees will be honored for their years of service and their commitment to the University with a Service Recognition Celebration, May 14. A list of the 2025 honorees can be found here.

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  • Convenience Fee for Credit Card Payments to Increase May 5

    Beginning May 5, the convenience fee charged to account payments made with a credit card will increase from 2.95% to 3%. International debit/credit card will remain at 4.25% with both having a minimum of a $3 charge.

    Credit card payments on student accounts can be made online only via TruView for students and via mybill.truman.edu for authorized users on the student account.

    To avoid the convenience fee, payments can be made the following ways:

    By e-check, an electronic debit to the checking or savings account, available online at mybill.truman.edu for authorized users or via TruView for students. There is no fee for this option, but if the user runs their debit card as a credit card, they will be charged the convenience fee. For checking or savings account debits, the e-check option can be used to avoid paying the convenience fee.

    By check mailed to; Truman State University Student Account Payment, McClain Hall 100 E Normal, Kirksville, MO. 63501-0754. Checks can also be dropped off in the payment drop box by the Business Office door in McClain Hall 105.

    By cash, check or PIN debit card at the cashier window in McClain Hall 105 (open Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1-3 p.m. Summer hours are Monday-Thursday, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1-3 p.m.)
     
    For additional information or questions related to the convenience fee, visit truman.edu/businessoffice/student-accounts.
  • Finals Week Rec Hours

    May 5
    9 a.m.-9 p.m.

    May 6
    9 a.m.-9 p.m.

    May 7

    9 a.m.-7 p.m.

    May 8
    9 a.m.-5 p.m.

    May 9
    9 a.m.-5 p.m.

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  • Finals Week Student Union Building Hours

    May 5
    7 a.m.-9 p.m.

    May 6
    7 a.m.-9 p.m.

    May 7
    7 a.m.-9 p.m.

    May 8
    7 a.m.-9 p.m.

    May 9
    7 a.m.-10 p.m.

    May 10
    7:30 a.m.-3 p.m.

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  • Retirement Party for Beverly Peters

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  • Next Issue

    The next issue of the Truman Today will be available May 27.

Notables

  • Hirsch Presents Paper, Lecture

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    Jerrold Hirsch, emeritus professor of history, gave a paper, “I Worked As Long as I Was Able: Slavery, Freedom and Disability in the Federal Writers’ Project Slave Narratives,” at the New Directions in Black Disability Studies conference organized by the Carter G. Woodson Center at the University of Virginia, April 25.
     
    Hurst also gave a guest lecture to the National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute, “The New Deal Era’s Federal Writers’ Project, History, Politics and Legacy.” He served as a consultant in the planning and implementation of the institute, held during July 2021. Hirsch was also a panelist on the Library of Congress webinar on “The Federal Writers’ Project: History, Policy and Legacy of Freedom in Image, Voice and Text.”
  • Pry and Dunn Win Tutoring Awards

    Jillian Pry, accounting major, won the Todd Phillips Excellence in Tutoring and Alison Dunn, chemistry pre-MAE major, won the Excellence in Embedded Tutoring.

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    From left to right, Alison Dunn and Jillian Pry.

Scholarship Opportunities

  • Nationally Competitive Scholarships and Fellowships

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    Each year Truman nominates students who have shown outstanding academic performance and exceptional service accomplishments for national fellowship opportunities. The application process is very rigorous and highly competitive, but the University provides support as students prepare for and then apply to these prestigious scholarships. Many deadlines occur early in the fall semester, so it is important interested students attend the meeting.

    Listed below are several of the major national fellowships and their websites. More information about these fellowships is available at truman.edu/majors-programs/more-learning-opportunities/fellowships.


    Fellowships For Study in the United States
    (campus nomination required)

    Carnegie Endowment
    for undergraduates and graduates
    Awarded to graduating seniors or individuals who have graduated within the past academic year. Applicants must be nominated by the Truman State University nominating official. This fellowship is designed to provide a substantive work experience for students who have a serious career interest in the area of international affairs. Eleven to 13 students will be hired to work at the Carnegie Endowment in Washington, D.C., on a full-time basis for a period of one year. Application deadline is Nov. 17, 2025.

    Goldwater Scholarship
    for undergraduates only
    Awarded to sophomore or junior math or science majors who have one or two full years of undergraduate study remaining. Each scholarship covers tuition, fees, books, and room and board. To be eligible, a student must have at least a 3.0 GPA, be a United States citizen and demonstrate a potential for and commitment to a career in research in mathematics or natural sciences. Deadline to declare intent to apply is Oct. 27, 2025.

    Harry S. Truman Scholarship
    for undergraduates only
    Awarded to outstanding junior students who intend to pursue careers in public service. Each Harry S. Truman Scholarship covers tuition, fees, books, and room and board up to a maximum of $30,000 over a period of up to four years (i.e., one year of college and three years of graduate school). To be eligible, a student must have selected an undergraduate field of study that will permit admission to a graduate program leading to a career in public service. Campus deadline is Nov. 17, 2025.

    Morris K. Udall and Stewart L. Udall Foundation
    for undergraduates only
    The Morris K. Udall Scholarship Program was created to encourage outstanding students to pursue careers related to environmental public policy and to encourage outstanding Native American and Alaska native students to pursue careers related to health care and tribal public policy. Requirements include sophomore or junior standing with at least a 3.0 GPA and ranking in the top quarter of a student’s class. Each scholarship covers eligible expenses for tuition, fees, books, and room and board, up to a maximum of $7,000, and expenses for a Udall Scholars Orientation. Deadline for applications is Jan. 5, 2026.


    Fellowships for Experiences Abroad
    (campus nomination required)

    British Marshall Scholarship
    for undergraduates and graduates
    Awarded to exceptional seniors or recent graduates who wish to study for two years in a British university. It is meant to further the education of young people of distinguished intellect and character who can be expected to make a significant contribution to society. To be eligible, applicants must have a 3.7 GPA, be a United States citizen and earn a bachelor’s degree before the scholarship takes effect. Applications must be completed by Aug. 15, 2025.

    Fulbright Grant

    for undergraduates and graduates
    Awarded to seniors and graduate students. Grants range from a full grant – which covers one year of tuition, books and maintenance in one foreign country – to a variety of partial grants, which cover transportation costs only and/or supplement the applicant’s own personal funds. Teaching assistantships in English in selected countries are also available under the Fulbright program. To be eligible for any of the Fulbright grants, an applicant must be a United States citizen at the time of application and hold a bachelor’s degree by the beginning date of the grant. Creative and performing artists are not required to have a bachelor’s degree, but must have four years of relevant training or study. All applicants are required to have sufficient proficiency in the language of the host country to carry out their proposed study or research. Applications must be completed by Sept. 1, 2025.

    Fulbright Grant: U.K. Summer Institute Award
    for undergraduates
    Awarded to freshman or sophomore students from all areas of study with a high level of academic achievement. Each program offers students full immersion in the study of British academia and culture. Students will partake in cultural events, research, collaboration and presentation at one of nine summer institutes. The award will cover the majority of all costs incurred, including flights to and from the U.K., university fees, and room and board at the hosting U.K. university. Applicants must be U.S. citizens who reside anywhere except the U.K., be at least 18 years old and have completed no more than two years of university study. Applications must be completed by Jan. 5, 2026.

    Mitchell Scholarship
    for undergraduates and graduates
    Awarded to seniors or recent graduates who wish to pursue graduate study or research in either the Republic of Ireland or Northern Ireland. Mitchell Scholarships provide tuition and housing, as well as living and travel stipends. Applicants must complete a bachelor’s degree before taking up the award. Applications must be completed by Aug. 15, 2025.

    Boren Scholarship and Fellowship
    for undergraduates and graduates
    NOTE: The graduate fellowship does not require campus nomination.
    Designed to provide U.S. undergraduates and graduates with the resources and encouragement they need to acquire skills and experience in countries and areas of the world critical to the future security of the nation. Boren Scholarships/Fellowships are designed to support students who will make a commitment to federal service. All recipients incur a requirement to enter into an agreement, in order of priority, to work for an agency of the federal government with national security responsibilities or to work in the field of higher education in the area of study for which the scholarship was awarded. Maximum awards are $10,000 for a semester and $20,000 for a full year of study abroad. Campus deadline for scholarships (undergraduate) is Jan. 1, 2026. Campus deadline for fellowships (graduate) is Dec. 29, 2025.

    Rhodes Scholarship
    for undergraduates only
    Awarded to exceptional seniors who wish to pursue two or three years of study at Oxford University. The Rhodes Scholarship covers all tuition costs and provides a maintenance allowance. To be eligible a senior must be under 24 years of age, be a citizen of the United States and complete a bachelor’s degree before Oct. 1. There are only 32 scholarships assigned to the United States and applicants must have proven intellectual and academic achievement of a high standard, integrity of character, interest in and respect for their fellow human beings, the ability to lead and the energy to use their talents to the fullest. The last of these qualities is usually, though not exclusively, demonstrated by participation and success in sports. Rhodes Scholarship applications must be completed by Sept. 1, 2025. Read about Truman’s first Rhodes Scholarship recipient, Andrew McCall, who provides helpful advice for Rhodes Scholar applicants.


    Other Fellowships
    (no campus nomination required)

    The Herbert Scoville Jr. Peace Fellowship
    for college graduates and graduate students
    A highly competitive national program that provides college and graduate school graduates the opportunity to work in Washington, D.C., with one of more than two dozen participating public-interest organizations focusing on international security issues. The program is offered twice yearly, in the spring and fall. It lasts from six to nine months and provides a salary, health insurance and travel costs to Washington.

    The Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs Fellowship
    for undergraduates and graduates
    The Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs Fellowship is designed to attract outstanding individuals from all ethnic, racial and social backgrounds who have an interest in pursuing a foreign service career with the U.S. Department of State. The programs provide academic and professional preparation for outstanding candidates to enter the U.S. Department of State Foreign Service, representing America’s interests abroad.

    Amgen Scholars Program
    for undergraduates only
    The Amgen Scholars Program provides hundreds of undergraduate students with the opportunity to engage in a hands-on summer research experience at some of the world’s leading institutions.

    Ford Diversity Fellowships Program

    for seniors and graduates only
    Through its fellowship programs, the Ford Foundation seeks to increase the diversity of the nation’s college and university faculties by increasing their ethnic and racial diversity, to maximize the educational benefits of diversity, and to increase the number of professors who can and will use diversity as a resource for enriching the education of all students.

    NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program
    for graduates only
    The GRFP is a prestigious, nationally competitive fellowship offered by the National Science Foundation that provides three years of financial support for beginning graduate study leading to a research-based degree in the STEM disciplines.

    Gates Cambridge Scholarship
    for undergraduates and graduates
    Awarded to students of exceptional academic achievement and scholarly promise for whom advanced study at Cambridge would be particularly appropriate. Successful applicants will have the ability to make a significant contribution to their discipline while in Cambridge, with a strong aptitude for research, analysis and a creative approach to defining and solving problems. Awarded only to students who gain admission to Cambridge through the regular procedures. Covers the full cost of study at Cambridge for a single person. Applications should be completed by Sept. 12, 2025.

    Mount Vernon Leadership Fellows
    for undergraduates
    The Mount Vernon Leadership Fellows offers rising college juniors opportunities in leadership development programs inspired by the life and legacy of George Washington and today’s foremost leaders. This residential summer fellowship is designed to create the next generation of the nation’s top leaders.

    John Lewis Fellowship

    for undergraduates
    The John Lewis Fellowship honors U.S. Representative John Lewis, an icon of the Civil Rights Movement. The program explores the history of the Civil Rights Movement, diversity and minority rights in the United States, with a particular focus on Atlanta. Key areas of inquiry include race and racism, immigration, national identity, Native American issues and the relationship between civil rights and human rights. The fellowship will also discuss contemporary racial and diversity issues.

    Humanity in Action Fellowship
    for undergraduates
    The Humanity in Action Fellowship brings together international groups of college students and recent graduates to explore national histories of injustice and resistance as they affect different minority groups today.

    Fund for Education Abroad

    for undergraduates
    The Fund for Education Abroad (FEA) addresses the need for an independent study abroad scholarship provider. FEA is expanding access to study abroad by raising awareness of its benefits to the individual and value to the collective, and by granting scholarships of up to $10,000.

    Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship Program
    for undergraduates
    The Gilman International Scholarship Program is a Congressionally funded program sponsored by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) and is administered by the Institute of International Education. The Gilman Scholarship Program offers grants of up to $5,000 to U.S. undergraduate students of high financial need participating in a credit-bearing study abroad program or international internship eligible. Students studying a critical need language could be eligible to receive a grant of up to $8,000. The Gilman Program aims to diversify the kinds of students who study and intern abroad and the countries and regions where they go by supporting U.S. undergraduates who might otherwise not consider these unique and valuable opportunities due to financial constraints.

    U.S. Teaching Assistantship Program in Austria

    The U.S. Teaching Assistantship Program in Austria provides U.S. college and university graduates with opportunities to work at secondary schools throughout Austria as teaching assistants.

    Freeman Awards for Study in Asia (Freeman-ASIA)
    The Freeman Foundation’s generous support for the relaunch of Freeman-ASIA builds on prior grants to IIE that funded more than 4,500 American undergraduates in Asia from 2001 to 2014. The newly available awards will advance the Institute of International Education’s Generation Study Abroad, a five-year initiative aiming to double the number of U.S. students abroad by the end of the decade, by mobilizing resources and commitments across the higher education, philanthropy and corporate sectors.

    Schwarzman Scholars

    Designed to prepare the next generation of global leaders, Schwarzman Scholars is the first scholarship created to respond to the geopolitical landscape of the 21st Century. Whether in politics, business or science, the success of future leaders around the world will depend upon an understanding of China’s role in global trends. Students will live and study together on the campus of Schwarzman College, where all classes are taught in English. Students will pursue master’s degrees in one of three disciplines: public policy, economics and business, or international studies. Applications must be completed by Aug. 15, 2025.