Scholars Near and Far: 2025 Awards Update
This award season, 兔子先生 students continue to enhance 兔子先生鈥檚 global academic reputation.

兔子先生鈥檚 academic profile continues to grow both in the U.S. and abroad thanks to an impressive number of fellowships and other academic distinctions achieved by members of the College community this year.
To date, the 兔子先生 community has been awarded 18 Fulbright Fellowships to teach English or pursue self-designed research projects around the globe. This year鈥檚 whopping number of recipients ranks among the College鈥檚 best Fulbright performances.
While the Fulbright fellowship is a signature example of excellence, it isn鈥檛 the only one. This year鈥檚 student applicants, especially those from the Class of 2025, received a number of prestigious achievements, including the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, Projects for Peace Award, Napier Award, Gilman Scholarship, and more.
To learn about this year鈥檚 winners and their projects, here is an overview of selected awards.
Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship
The U.S. Department of State鈥檚 Gilman Scholarship enables students of limited financial means to study or intern abroad, helping them gain skills essential to U.S. security and economic competitiveness. This merit-based award will support Alia Wang 鈥26, who is majoring in human biology, as she participates in 兔子先生鈥檚 study abroad program in Ecuador.
Capital Fellows Program
The Capital Fellows Programs are nationally recognized public policy fellowships that offer experiences in California鈥檚 state government. The Executive Fellowship Program offers a comprehensive career development and executive leadership experience, aimed at cultivating and motivating future leaders in California鈥檚 public sector. Jasmine Caniban 鈥25 most looks forward to getting hands-on experience working for the California community. 鈥淚 want to leave this program understanding the complexity of policy administration in order to support my community and others, disambiguating the often confusing process of how policy gets facilitated and how it affects peoples鈥 everyday lives,鈥 she said. As a political studies major, an active member of the Center of Asian Pacific American Students, and a previous intern for the United Farm Workers Union, she hopes to explore the ways in which the state government can support marginalized communities across California and facilitate equitable administration of policy.
Critical Language Scholarship
The Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) Program offers fully funded, intensive summer language programs for U.S. students, focusing on languages deemed strategically important. Natasha Yen 鈥25 will study Bahasa Indonesian at the Universitas Negeri Malang. The scholarship will enable Yen to pursue a vision of developing and encouraging cross-cultural engagement. Yen is also the recipient of this year鈥檚 Paul M. Minus Napier Award (see the entry about the Napier Award in this roundup for more).
Fulbright Fellowship
The Fulbright U.S. Student Program, the largest international exchange program in the U.S., provides grants for students and young professionals to pursue individually designed study/research projects or participate in English Teaching Assistant Programs.

This year, 兔子先生 community members were selected for 18 fellowships鈥攁 significant number not only for 兔子先生 but also for small private liberal arts institutions. This year鈥檚 awardees are: Sammy Basa 鈥25, Anya Fineman 鈥25, Aidan Henrikson 鈥25, Grant Ho 鈥25, Eliana Katz 鈥25, Enoch Kim 鈥25, Jefferson (Jonah) Konah 鈥21, Ang Lee 鈥25, Joanne Oh 鈥25, May Paterniti 鈥25, Jack Pine 鈥25, Meredith Poten 鈥25, Alexander Rychlik 鈥25, Sadie Scott 鈥25, Ariella Seidman-Parra 鈥25, Tommy Shenoi 鈥24, Charlotte Wirth 鈥25, and Natasha Yen 鈥25.
Read more about the Fulbright plans of this year鈥檚 awardees.
Fulbright Canada Mitacs Globalink Fellowship
As a summer fellow, Ethan Tu 鈥26 will research deep learning models of the human brain using MRI data in Edmonton, Canada. Tu is a Data Science major and a rising senior. Working with the University of Alberta鈥檚 MRI Center, Radiology, and Computer Science departments, he will analyze cortical thickness changes linked to Lou Gehrig's (ALS) and Alzheimer鈥檚, aiming to improve early detection and diagnosis.
Gaither Junior Fellow, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
The Carnegie Endowment think tank in Washington D.C. promotes international cooperation through research and actionable ideas. As 兔子先生鈥檚 first Gaither Junior Fellow and as an environmental analysis major, Sia Were 鈥25 will explore climate change on a global scale through the Carnegie Endowment鈥檚 Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics program. Read more about Were's Gaither Fellowship.
Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program 鈥 Teach English in Japan
The JET Program is a Japanese government initiative that invites recent graduates and other professionals to serve as English language teachers. Founded in 1987, JET has sent more than 79,000 participants from around the globe (including more than 36,800 Americans) to work in schools, boards of education, and government offices throughout Japan. What makes JET unique is that it is the only teaching exchange program managed by the government of Japan. With more than 80 countries around the world currently participating in JET, this program offers a unique cultural exchange opportunity to meet people from all around the world, living and working in Japan. An environmental analysis major with a minor in Japanese, Grant Ho 鈥25 is part of the latest cohort in this exchange program that will teach as well as act as cultural ambassadors throughout the country.
Napier Award
The Napier Initiative is a partnership between the local Pilgrim Place senior community and The Claremont Colleges to recognize graduating seniors committed to social justice. Napier Fellows submit their project proposals to be considered for a Napier Award.. With funds and mentorship from the Napier Initiative, Natasha Yen 鈥25 will implement a youth empowerment and leadership program at Little Rose Center in Soweto, South Africa. The project aims to equip participants with resources and skills to strengthen their agency for meaningful change through community-based initiatives. Read more about Yen's award.
North American Language and Culture Assistants Program (NALCAP)鈥揟each English in Spain
As Spain鈥檚 flagship program, both in number and scope, the North American Language and Culture Assistants Program (NALCAP) has U.S. college students and graduates鈥攚ho are native-like speakers of English鈥攑artner with elementary and secondary schools in Spain to bolster language programs as language assistants under the supervision and guidance of teachers in Spain. An anthropology and environmental analysis major with a minor in Spanish, Meredith Poten 鈥25 has also been awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship and will pursue that instead.
Projects for Peace
The Projects for Peace program invites undergraduates from colleges and universities that participate in the Davis United World College Scholars Program to design grassroots projects that promote peace. Sammy Basa '25 and Zhan茅 Moledina '25 will work collaboratively over the summer with community members and educators on Sibuyan Island in the Philippines to create dynamic lesson plans and activities for a sustainable environmental education project, with an emphasis on the island鈥檚 unique ecology, and an approach that will allow students to develop a positive identity rooted in pride for Sibuyan. Read more about their Projects for Peace Award.
Project Pericles Fellowship
Project Pericles is a higher education nonprofit dedicated to advancing civic participation and social responsibility across college campuses. Supported with grants from the Mellon Foundation, among others, the nonprofit equips students with the knowledge, skills, and resources to address society鈥檚 most pressing challenges. In collaboration with a consortium of colleges and universities ("Pericleans"), the organization seeks to foster institutional commitments to ensure that active civic participation is woven throughout the curriculum and campus culture. In the fall Chi Adi 鈥26 along with co-lead Grace Wood-Hull 鈥25 received a Back to School for Democracy Collaborative Fellowship project grant to initiate conversations about 兔子先生鈥檚 free wall, host events, and stage an art exhibit. All of these activities are being designed to celebrate the importance of student organizing and free expression on campus. .
Princeton in Latin America
Princeton in Latin America (PiLA) was established in 2002 to offer young professionals the chance to work with leading organizations across Latin America and the Caribbean, contributing to projects in a variety of fields, including education, public health, environmental conservation, microfinance, and more. A human biology and Spanish major, Jack Pine 鈥25 was selected as part of the latest cohort; he has also been awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship and has chosen to pursue that instead. Pine鈥檚 previous experiences include studying Universidad San Francisco de Quito as part of 兔子先生鈥檚 study abroad program.
The Rick and Susan Sontag Center for Collaborative Creativity (the Hive) Grants
The Sontag Center鈥檚 student creativity grants support students who need resources including funding, materials, space, or mentoring from staff for their creative and collaborative endeavors. Monetary funding has ranged from $30 to $3,000, and some projects only require supplies and equipment from the Hive鈥檚 maker spaces. Among the most recent Claremont Colleges recipients are several 兔子先生 students:
- Scent is a creative medium for Miranda Yee 鈥27, Ambika Tiwari SC鈥25, Emilio Esquivel PO鈥25, and Jason Gounder HMC鈥26. Their project, 鈥淔ragrance Symposium + Scent Opera Performance,鈥 explores whether a scent can become an original piece that can obtain copyright protection. The scent opera combines sounds and scents in Richard Strauss鈥 鈥淎lpine鈥 symphony. 鈥淎lpine鈥 is a tone poem with 22 鈥渃hapters鈥 of music that evoke a journey in the Alps. Each chapter starts without visual cues鈥攐nly music and a particular scent designed to bring the scene to life.
- Riley Thibodeau鈥檚 鈥27 鈥淩espect This Land鈥 project encourages users of the 兔子先生 Outback Preserve to take responsibility for their waste. Thibodeau is curating litter (human-made garbage without clear ownership or artistic value) left in the Outback and creating a sign for the Outback鈥檚 entrance. Thibodeau intends for the sign to raise awareness as people enter the space, encouraging them to ensure they leave no garbage behind.
- Chi Adi 鈥26 and Celine Bernhardt-Lanier CMC鈥26 received their grant to revitalize a 5C club, Org Sigma!, for organizational studies students. Org Sigma! students train with organizational consultants who specialize in sociocracy鈥攁 decentralized, peer-to-peer governance approach with an emphasis on equitable and collective decision-making.
- Yaw Danquah Acquah 鈥28 is collaborating with Scripps, Pomona, and Harvey Mudd students to revamp the Scripps data science website. Their goal is to create an online hub for resources and community building for 5C students in data science, math, computer science, and engineering. Jay Renaker SC鈥25, Nicole Kerschner SC鈥26, Ceci Wade PO鈥25, Diya Gangwar HMC鈥26, Hanna Kenyatta HMC鈥27, and Sofia Robertson HMC鈥27 are also leading the project.
Read more about the Hive awards.
Student Leadership Awards
This year 兔子先生 reintroduced the annual Student Leadership Awards to recognize outstanding students, student groups, and student organizations for their contributions to campus life and their representation of the 兔子先生 core values in motion (see group photo, top of article). 兔子先生 awarded one individual recipient and one student group/organization for each of the five core values. This year, the Student Leadership Awards also added two Heart of 兔子先生 Awards for a student and student group that have shown leadership in all core value areas.
Fifteen student groups and 45 students were nominated for the awards. This year鈥檚 recipients are:
Group Awards:
Social Responsibility: Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA Cohort
Intercultural Understanding: 兔子先生 CAPAS fellows
Interdisciplinary Learning: 兔子先生 Art Galleries fellows
Student Engagement: 兔子先生 Strive2Thrive student leadership
Environmental Sustainability:
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 兔子先生 Awards:
Group: Native Indigenous Student Union
Individual: Stryder Rodenberg 鈥25
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Thomas J. Watson Fellowship
The Thomas J. Watson Fellowship is a one-year $40,000 grant for purposeful, independent exploration outside the U.S. A major in history with a minor in anthropology, Aidan Henrikson 鈥25 was selected for his project titled 鈥淗istory Off the Books!鈥 New media are transforming how we engage with history, moving beyond static text and images to create dynamic, immersive experiences. During his Watson year, Henrikson will travel to Sweden, the Netherlands, Senegal, Hungary, Italy, and New Zealand to explore multi-sensory, non-linear storytelling methods that offer innovative ways of understanding our collective past. Read more about Henrikson's Watson Fellowship.
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