Record Number Receive Awards Through Fulbright U.S. Student Program
Fourteen 网爆门 students and alumni have been named as 2024 recipients of awards through the Fulbright U.S. Student Program. Five students were also chosen as alternates. This is the largest number of U.S. Student Fulbright recipients that 网爆门 has had in one year.
罢丑别听聽funds a range of awards that include English teaching assistantships (ETA) and study/research grants in over 140 countries.
The 2024 recipients are:
- Caroline Barraco G鈥24, a history master鈥檚 degree student in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, English teaching assistantship (ETA), Spain
- Olivia Budelmann 鈥23 (mathematics; environment, sustainability and policy; and Spanish language, literature and culture in the College of Arts and Sciences), ETA, Andorra
- Jaemon Crosby 鈥24, an acting major in the College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA), study award, United Kingdom鈥擫ondon Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts (LAMDA, classical acting)
- Avital Datskovsky, a Ph.D. student in anthropology in the Maxwell School, research award, India
- Jessica Hogbin, a Ph.D. student in history in the Maxwell School, research award, Italy
- Lindsey Kernen 鈥23 (psychology in A&S and citizenship and civic engagement in the Maxwell School), study award, United Kingdom鈥擴niversity of Strathclyde
- Yasmin Nayrouz 鈥24, an English and textual studies major in A&S, a public relations major in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and a member of the Ren茅e Crown University Honors Program, study award, United Kingdom鈥擴niversity of Sussex
- Anthony Ornelaz G鈥24, a creative writing M.F.A. student in A&S,聽ETA, Poland
- Alec Rovensky 鈥21 (School of Architecture), study award, Germany鈥擳echnische Universit盲t Berlin
- Adriana Rozas Rivera G鈥21 (magazine, news and digital journalism, Newhouse School), ETA, Spain
- Zelikha Shoja G鈥24, an art video student in VPA, research award, Tajikistan
- Julianne Strauss 鈥23 (inclusive elementary and special education, School of Education) G鈥24 (literacy education), ETA, Spain
- Elizabeth Vanek G鈥24, a clinical mental health counseling student in the School of Education, ETA, Mexico
- Ciara Young 鈥24, an international relations and anthropology major in the Maxwell School | A&S and linguistics major in A&S and member of the Ren茅e Crown Honors Program, ETA, Korea
The 2024 alternates are:
- Huleymatu Barrie 鈥22 (international relations in the Maxwell School | A&S, ETA, Ghana
- Ian Ferguson, a Ph.D. student in history in the Maxwell School, research award, Kenya
- Liam Goff, a senior broadcast and digital journalism major in the Newhouse School, ETA, Germany
- Mary Matthews, a senior international relations major in the Maxwell School | A&S, ETA, Estonia
- Laura Roman Lopez G鈥24, a master鈥檚 degree student in magazine, news and digital journalism in the Newhouse School, ETA, Argentina
Jaemon Crosby
Crosby, while studying at LAMDA, hopes to bring a new perspective and diversify the world of classical acting, as classical texts and acting historically have been written for and performed by white men.

鈥淪ome of these texts, for example Shakespeare, convey a bigger message and an experience that is not unique to just one race or gender, but to everyone,鈥 Crosby says. 鈥淭here has been a big revamp in the use of classical texts and bringing them to modern eyes, and I want to be a part of that. 鈥 I have always been very drawn to language, rhetoric and the power of listening. I hope this training will help me bring that into works that are performed today and give me a new perspective and interpretation of texts to bring into auditions as I begin my acting career.鈥
Crosby hopes he can be a role model for younger Black kids in that they may see themselves in classical texts. 鈥淩epresentation is very important in television, theatre and film,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 want to act and play roles that go against stereotypes of what a Black man is and show what we can be and the power in our Blackness.鈥
He also hopes that in the future, the connections he makes during his time in the U.K. will aid him in producing shows both in the United States and the U.K. 鈥淚n my time during my previous semester abroad in London (through Syracuse Abroad), I saw so many beautiful, specific and bold plays that are telling important stories that all should see,鈥 Crosby says. 鈥淭heatre should tell stories that allow people to see themselves in them and relate, tell untold stories, educate and make people feel less alone. Everyone should have access to that. There are amazing shows I think should be brought to the U.S., and their messages shared with everyone. I want to be a part of that, and this training and the connections I make will help me get there.鈥
Jessica Hogbin

During her Fulbright year in Italy, Hogbin will conduct research for her dissertation, which studies how melancholy鈥攁 now-defunct medical category from humoral theory鈥攚as used and abused by Renaissance scholars and physicians to express and explain mental health and the mind. Her project, 鈥淚nnumerable Melancholies: Medicine, Mental Health and Human Nature in Renaissance Italy, 1450-1650,鈥 engages with the deeply interconnected relationship between medicine, narratives around mental health and politics in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Hogbin will conduct research in several archives and libraries in the Veneto region of Italy, including the Historic Archive of the University of Padua, the Marciana Library, and the State Archives of Padua and Venice.
鈥淭hrough this study, I aim to explore the increasing presumption that it was a patient鈥檚 responsibility to care for their own mind and body, along with stereotypes that claimed certain people were more likely by birth and social status to be victims of melancholy, concepts that continue to affect how mental health is imagined to this day,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 am greatly looking forward to spending this Fulbright year building my dissertation project, conversing with Italian scholars and eating plenty of gelato.鈥
Hogbin plans to transform her dissertation into a book project in the future. 鈥淚 hope to take everything that I learn during my Fulbright year, both academically and culturally, back into the classroom, where I am looking forward to sharing this information with my students and allowing the content that I find to shape my lessons.鈥
Lindsay Kernen
During her Fulbright year, Kernen will pursue a master’s degree in work and organizational psychology at the University of Strathclyde Business School in Glasgow, Scotland.

Her research will focus on interpersonal relationships in organizations and how diverse groups have the power to produce creative, innovative and profitable outcomes as opposed to conventional top-down management styles.
鈥淚 hope to bridge theory and practice, promoting the importance of community involvement in psychological research. I鈥檓 looking forward to partnering with an organization in Glasgow to improve employee well-being and satisfaction,鈥 she says. 鈥淚’m so excited to have a year dedicated to community-based learning and I hope this leaves me exposed to many diverse perspectives in the psychology field and beyond.鈥
Beyond her Fulbright year, Kernen plans to embark upon a career dedicated to connecting psychological research that informs employee wellbeing with organizational practices and to raise awareness of the benefits of inclusive group dialogue for innovative workplaces. 鈥淭his experience will allow me to dig deep into these topics while providing many opportunities to collaborate with local organizations to implement these strategies while learning from the local community and diverse cultures,鈥 she says.
In addition to her studies, Kernen plans to attend meetings for worship at the local Quaker meetinghouse and enjoy Glasgow’s vibrant music and arts scene.
Julianne Strauss

During her Fulbright year, Strauss will be an English teaching assistant in the La Rioja region of Spain. 鈥淚 hope to find ways to promote inclusive education within the classrooms I teach in and in the school community,鈥 says Strauss. 鈥淚 also want to instill a love of reading in my students and use inclusive children鈥檚 literature that I read in my own U.S. classrooms to promote English learning.鈥
Strauss, who studied in Madrid during her junior year through Syracuse Abroad, hopes to grow as a Spanish speaker and immerse herself in Spanish culture. 鈥淚 have not had the chance to visit this region previously, so I want to explore all of my new home,鈥 she says.
She plans to use this Fulbright year as a chance to expand her teaching experiences to students who are learning English as a second language. 鈥淚 want to bring this experience home and draw upon it to support my future students in the Central New York or New York City region,鈥 she says.
Students interested in applying to the Fulbright program should contact the Center for Fellowship and Scholarship Advising at 315.443.2759 or cfsa@syr.edu. The campus deadline for the 2024-25 application cycle is Sept. 10.