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Gephardt Institute selects new cohort of Civic Scholars, inaugural cohort graduates

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The Gephardt Institute for Public Service has selected eight sophomores for its third cohort of the Civic Scholars Program. With its mission “to cultivate the next generation of civic leaders,” this program seeks students with exemplary scholarship, leadership and commitment to community engagement.

The new Civic Scholars will enroll in two years of academic coursework related to civic leadership and receive mentorship to prepare them for a life dedicated to public service. Additionally, the scholars are provided a $5,000 grant to carry out a civic project in the summer between their junior and senior years. These funds are provided in part by donors to the university’s scholarship campaign, “Opening Doors to the Future.”

Class of 2015 cohort of Civic Scholars:

Victoria (Tori) Bawel of Jasper, Ind., is majoring in biochemistry in Arts & Sciences. She is interested in poverty alleviation through science and medicine.

Madeleine Balchan of Springfield, Ohio, is studying systems science and engineering in the School of Engineering. She hopes to use system dynamics tools to examine the domestic food system.

Rachel (Rori) Bridge of Westborough, Mass, is double majoring in global health and the environment and African and African American studies with a minor in Swahili, in Arts & Sciences. She plans to work in public health with a non-governmental organization in Uganda.

Anirudh (Raja) Krishna of Solon, Ohio, is studying economics, international and area studies, and Chinese, in Arts & Sciences. He is interested in building social bridges through digital literacy in St. Louis or a civic engagement program for students in New Delhi.

Elliot Louthen of Riverside, Ill., is majoring in political science with a minor in religion and politics, in Arts & Sciences. He hopes to carry on his father’s work in community development by utilizing economic redevelopment to revitalize overlooked regions.

Reuben Riggs of Nacogdoches, Texas, is majoring in anthropology and African American Studies, in Arts & Sciences. He is interested in social justice and plans to address the stigma around mass incarceration.

Seiko Shastri of Moorhead, Minn., is double majoring in international and area studies and Spanish, in Arts & Sciences. She hopes to promote intercultural dialogue on immigrant and refugee issues.

Jason Silberman of Lincolnwood, Ill., is majoring in philosophy-neuroscience-psychology and anthropology, both in Arts & Sciences. He is interested in improving health care for individuals with developmental disabilities.

Junior Civic Scholars embark on summer projects

Having completed their first year of coursework, the seven junior Civic Scholars are about to embark on their summer projects in cities ranging from St. Louis to Berlin. Their projects have been refined through a year of preparation, during which they have partnered with community organizations, written detailed proposals, and conducted workshops with campus partners. They will begin their projects with $5,000 in grant funding as soon as this spring semester concludes.

Inaugural cohort to graduate

As their second year in the program comes to a close, the inaugural cohort of five Civic Scholars is preparing to graduate. Their post-graduation plans include Teach for America, Harvard Medical School and the New York City Urban Fellows Program.

“The Civic Scholars Program helped me decide to pursue a career in medicine and identify ways to be a civic leader in that field,” said senior Andreas Mitchell, who, with fellow Civic Scholar Grace Chao, has been admitted to Harvard Medical School.

Through the program, the senior cohort has met with White House officials in Washington, D.C., planned a service project with a high school in the Mississippi Delta, and successfully carried out individual projects across the country and internationally.

Students interested in the Civic Scholars Program can apply in the spring of their sophomore year. For more information, contact Jenni Harpring, program manager, at (314) 935-8182 or jharpring@wustl.edu.




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