|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
May
Five students at Illinois win Boren
Scholarships for study abroad
Melissa Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
5/14/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Five students at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have
earned National Security Education
Program (NSEP) Boren Undergraduate Scholarships for study abroad
during the 2004-05 academic year.
“This represents our best showing ever in this competition, and
it speaks to the quality of the international education at Illinois,”
said David Schug, who heads the campus’s Scholarships
for International Study Office. “I am extremely pleased with
both the quality and quantity of our applicants this year, he said,
noting that a record number of students – 22 – applied for
the scholarships. “From that strong pool, seven were named finalists
in the national competition, including the five awardees and two alternates.
The scholarship recipients: Rene Bangert and Jason Outlaw, Chicago;
Matthew Donahoe, St. Charles, Ill.; Cayse Llorens, Urbana, Ill; and
a student who requested anonymity.
The merit-based scholarships are awarded to U.S. citizens for study
in Asia, Africa, Central and Eastern Europe, Latin America or the Middle
East. The Illinois students are among 181 recipients from a national
applicant pool of more than 860. Each scholarship winner will receive
between $6,000 and $20,000 to support his or her studies, depending
on the cost of the selected study-abroad program and financial need.
Scholarship recipients enter into a service agreement that requires
them to seek employment in a paid position with the federal government
in the broadly defined area of national security within eight years
of returning to the United States. They also receive priority-hiring
status.
Bangert, a sophomore majoring in international
studies, plans to spend a year in Ecuador, where she will participate
in a U. of I. program at the Universidad San Francisco de Quito. She
is interested in international development issues and hopes to join
the Peace Corps. After receiving a graduate degree, she plans to pursue
a career with the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Outlaw, a senior pursuing dual degrees in sociology
and urban and regional planning,
will study for a year in the Intensive Arabic Language Program at the
American University in Cairo. His previous study-abroad experience includes
a semester in Sheffield, England, and a summer term in Bangkok. Upon
his return from Egypt, Outlaw plans to enroll in a master’s degree
program in international development planning to prepare for a career
with USAID.
Donahoe, a sophomore majoring in history
and economics, plans to
continue coursework in those areas and study Arabic while studying for
a year at the American University in Cairo. After graduating from Illinois,
Donahoe intends to pursue graduate studies in Middle Eastern and African
history, and aspires to work in the U.S. Foreign Service, or as a political
analyst in the U.S. intelligence community.
Llorens, a senior pursuing dual degrees in Spanish
and computer engineering, is
delaying his graduation for a year in order to take advantage of the
opportunity to study for a year in Mexico. The senior, who previously
studied for a year in Granada, Spain, will participate in a U. of I.
exchange program at the Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara.
There, he plans to enroll in computer engineering courses taught in
Spanish. After acquiring an advanced degree in electrical engineering
at Illinois, he hopes to work as a cryptanalyst with the National Security
Agency.
More information on the NSEP Boren undergraduate scholarship program
is available by contacting Schug.
|
 |
 |
|