The computer science major is the only one of the four winners of the 2018 Outstanding Undergraduate Researchers Award from a liberal arts college.
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Madison Skerritt, Charlie Hale, Lynnie Woodruff, Chloe Wang, Katy Frank, and Deedee Eisape are the 2017–2018 class of Haverford House Fellows, and, as such, will spend next year exploring global citizenship in Philadelphia and strengthening connections between the College and the city.
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After graduation the English major is headed to Thailand to help teach the English language and serve as a cultural ambassador for the U.S.
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Haverford alumni scientists have earned fellowships supporting their graduate education and research.
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The future religion major will use the award to fund ancient Greek language studies this summer.
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The Philadelphia criminal defense lawyer received the recognition from the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
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The illustrator won the SCBWI 2016 Winter Conference Portfolio Award.
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The assistant professor of political science and his co-authors won the 2015 award for their paper, “Assessing the Past and Promise of the Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey for Public Management Research: A Research Synthesis.”
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The assistant professor of computer science and her collaborators will receive $35,000 to create a website that will help people identify and fix hidden biases in their data.
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The anthropology major, who had never taken a political science course, taught herself about representative democracy to write the winning 6000-word essay while studying abroad at the University of Cambridge last year.
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The English and Russian double major will teach at a university in Russia and start an English conversation club.
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The growth and structure of cities major will work in a New York City agency as part of the nine-month fellowship.
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The biology major will research the genetic effects of prenatal exposure to SSRIs, a type of anti-depressants, during her year in the Netherlands.
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The history major will teach English in Germany.
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Maya Barlev and Erin Islo (both '12) have been awarded $25,000 to fund yearlong independent projects abroad.