The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the nation’s oldest and most selective all-discipline collegiate honor society, today announced the recipients of a 2023 Phi Kappa Phi Dissertation Fellowship. The $10,000 fellowships are designed to support active Society members in the dissertation writing stage of doctoral study.
This year’s class of fellows represents a group of 15 students spanning a number of academic disciplines from science and technology to arts and humanities.
The 2023 Phi Kappa Phi Dissertation Fellows are:
The recipients were selected based on a number of criteria including how the fellowship will contribute to the completion of the dissertation, the significance of original research, and endorsement by the dissertation chair.
Established in 2014, the dissertation fellowships are part of the Society’s robust award and grants portfolio, which gives $1.3 million each year to outstanding students and members through study abroad grants, graduate fellowships, funding for post-baccalaureate development, member and chapter awards, and grants for local, national and international literacy initiatives.
To learn more about the Phi Kappa Phi Dissertation Fellowship Program and this year’s recipients, please visit www.phikappaphi.org/dissertation.
- Petra Banks, Texas State University
- Cassandra Beattie, Kansas State University
- Paige Figanbaum, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
- Justin Z. Goldstein, Texas State University
- Jessica N. Hoyle, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
- Sojung Huh, Texas State University
- Wesley Jeffrey, University of California, Irvine
- Hong-My Nguyen, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
- Dylan O’Hara, University of Maine
- Iqra Pervaiz, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
- Rotana M. Radwan, Virginia Commonwealth University
- Keyur Savla, University of Alabama at Birmingham
- Elliot Varney, University of Mississippi Medical Center
- Rachel Washburn, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
- Emily Wiedenmeyer, Texas State University
The recipients were selected based on a number of criteria including how the fellowship will contribute to the completion of the dissertation, the significance of original research, and endorsement by the dissertation chair.
Established in 2014, the dissertation fellowships are part of the Society’s robust award and grants portfolio, which gives $1.3 million each year to outstanding students and members through study abroad grants, graduate fellowships, funding for post-baccalaureate development, member and chapter awards, and grants for local, national and international literacy initiatives.
To learn more about the Phi Kappa Phi Dissertation Fellowship Program and this year’s recipients, please visit www.phikappaphi.org/dissertation.
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