Ebe Figueroa '24
Ebe is an Earth and Oceanographic Science major and History minor from the Chicago Metropolitan area, passionate about conservation and educational equity. During her Watson Year, Ebe will travel to several countries to see how communities are using different types of education to create access to and interest in the outdoors. She will collaborate with schools and non-profits to learn how people across cultures and historical contexts work to create a more inclusive and equitable conservation movement that empowers young people across different races, genders, and socio-economic statuses. After her Watson Year, Ebe plans on pursuing a Ph.D. to become a professor.
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Maya Lamm '24
Maya studied neuroscience and Asian studies at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾. Outside of the classroom, Maya is passionate about intergenerational relationships. During her summers in college, her jobs at eldercare facilities in Japan and the U.S. ignited her interest in eldercare. On her Watson year, she will explore how societies around the world give voice to elders. In addition, she's curious about what older and younger populations can gain from their relationships with each other. She knows that she wants to work with and for elders, and hopes that a year of exploring this passion will help clarify her path to do so.
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Ereny Morcos '24
Ereny majored in Government and legal Studies and minored in Visual arts. Her personal experience immigrating to the United States has been a beacon of hope yet over time has also exposed tremendous difficulties in the process that she hopes to work and ameliorate. She is incredibly passionate in working underrepresented groups through immigration policy reform, addressing racial disparities and amending educational policies and programs. She is excited for this year of exploration in which she will explore the meaning of home and belonging outside the U.S. In her free time she enjoys trying new food, painting and listening to music!
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Clara Benadon '23
Clara's upbringing in the MD agricultural reserve drives her to explore connections between ecological and human communities. This passion shaped her studies at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ in biology and math, her research in marine ecology, and her work as a fiber artist. She will embark on a Watson fellowship to study how fiber (wool, cotton, etc.) farmers and artists are adapting to the destabilizing impacts of climate change. She will collaborate with farmers, artists, and scientists to learn how anything from diminished pasture health to modernized economic demands impacts their fiber network. Clara plans to earn a Ph.D. and work a community ecologist in close collaboration with coastal communities.
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Arturo Linan-Martinez '23
Graduating as a Biology Major with a concentration in Molecular and Cellular processes, Arturo will embark on his Watson year where hewill focus on how masculinity is reproduced and enforced on all levels of society. He will work alongside educational innovators in Sweden, designing teams in toy factories Germany, drag queens in India and much more. He hopes that this work will help him in the future as an aspiring pediatrician.
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Radu Stochita '22
As a History and Sociology double major, Radu Stochita (Stoc) is fascinated by labor relations and the importance of labor unions in society. After having conducted an Honors Project on the labor relations in video games industry and worked inside the labor movement for over two years, he will take the journey around the world to learn more about labor groups in various cultures. He aims to discover how unions act as tools of community-building and how workers have been fighting for better and more just working conditions.
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Mary Nzeyimana '22
A Biochemistry major and Sociology minor on the premed track, Mary was awarded the Watson Fellowship to pursue a year of independent international research. On her Watson, Mary will explore the various ways women around the world behave as caretakers, what led them to the role, the influences of their womanhood, and how they cultivate community with themselves and others. An aspiring physician and public health worker, Mary hopes to utilize her education and personal narrative to advocate for, empower, and support black women and black women's health domestically and internationally. On campus, Mary is a co-founder of BUMP and is involved in various academic and extracurricular activities.
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Archer Thomas '21
A history major from Buxton, Maine, Archer has been granted the Watson Fellowship to embark on a year of international travel to learn about urban rail systems around the world. He is excited to learn more about the intersections between design and urban space, especially in light of climate change and the COVID pandemic. |
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Emily Oleisky '20
Emily is an aspiring healthcare practitioner, who studied Neuroscience and Anthropology at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾. As an undergraduate, Emily conducted bench and clinical research, led a dance group, and co-facilitated dialogues about community engagement and racial identity. During a semester of comparative health study, Emily witnessed the power deep listening in a healthcare setting, as she conducted an ethnographic research project on cross-cultural prenatal care. With Watson, she hopes to travel to the Netherlands, Italy, Kenya, Bangladesh, Peru, and Mexico, and use narrative medicine as a vehicle to better understand how individuals acquire their personal notions of health and well-being. Read about Emily’s Watson experience on .
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Hailey Wozniak '20
Graduating with a major in History and minor in Cinema Studies, Hailey will continue pursuing her interests in story, identity, and expression during her Watson year. She plans to immerse herself in the fashion cultures of Senegal, Brazil, India and South Korea to learn about how people push boundaries and cultivate personal styles in their contexts. While at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾, Hailey founded Avant-Garb Magazine, ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾'s fashion and culture magazine, was the co-President of Film Society, and worked as the assistant to Professor Tricia Welsch in the Cinema Studies department. Upon returning from Watson, she plans to work in the film industry.
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Anu Asaolu '19
Anu is an aspiring medical professional, who majored in neuroscience and theater. While at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾, she performed in plays and conducted research in a neuronal regeneration lab. After her summer internship at Bellevue Emergency department, Anu recognized the role of human interactions as a form of therapy for patients. During her Watson year, she will examine how therapies based in performance arts can be used to overcome the silence and stigma surrounding social health issues including alcoholism, immigration, gender-based violence, and racial trauma. She will travel to Australia, South Africa, Uganda, and France to explore the unique performance cultures in each country.
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Lexi Gray '19
A psychology and Italian studies double major from Brewer, Maine, Lexi is thrilled to travel the world on her Watson year. Lexi's long-standing interest in criminal justice was fueled throughout her time at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾, as she saw first-hand the flaws of the current system through volunteer work with Volunteer Lawyers Project and a local jail. Sparked by her experience working with mothers in an alternative incarceration program in Rome, Italy, her Watson year will consist of traveling to New Zealand, Japan, India, Israel, and Norway to learn about how cultural values of family impact criminal justice systems and personal definitions of justice.
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Brandon Morande '19
A double major in sociology and Latin American studies, Brandon examined the intersections between healthcare and housing insecurity while at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ and while studying abroad in Argentina, ultimately completing an honors project on homelessness in Argentina. He also interacted with these issues through public service, as an interim social worker, alternative break leader, and EMT. As a Watson Fellow, Brandon will explore story-telling and street activism amongst peer-based communities, speaking with homeless artists in the UK, shelter residents in Denmark, indigenous Maori in New Zealand, soccer players in Chile, and refugees in Colombia. Upon returning, he hopes to attend graduate school for sociology or public health.
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Nevan Swanson '18
Nevan is an aspiring photographer and filmmaker, who majored in visual arts and minored in government and legal studies. During his Watson year, he will travel to France, Hong Kong, Poland, and Tanzania. For his project, he will explore the tension and connection between documenting and experiencing. Alongside embarking on subprojects particular to each country, Nevan will be creating documents in the form of photographs, videos, journal entries, and audio recordings.
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Mariely Garcia '17 As an aspiring physician with an interest in health disparities, Mariely is invested in learning how systems of healthcare can evolve to meet the needs of underserved populations. During her Watson year, Mariely will explore the ways in which marginalized parts of people's identities, such as gender, sexuality, and legal status, affect their experiences accessing healthcare. She hopes that her Watson year will make her more sensitive to the factors that affect patients' ability to get well. During her time at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾, Mariely participated in Project Sunshine, Fostering Female Leadership in Youth (FFLY), and was an active member within the McKeen Center for the Common Good. Read to learn more.
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