Centre College Bonner, Gloria Lwin ’24, named to inaugural group of Obama-Chesky Scholars

Centre College Bonner, Gloria Lwin ’24, named to inaugural group of Obama-Chesky Scholars

Gloria Lwin ’24 has been named to the inaugural cohort of Voyager Scholarship recipients, a prestigious class of 100 college juniors nationwide who plan to pursue a career in public service.

The Voyager Scholarship is funded by former President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama through the Obama Foundation and Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky. The scholarship aims to provide college students with financial support for college costs and exposure to new places and experiences, along with a network of mentors and leaders to support them.

Lwin, a Centre College Bonner Leader and native of Owensboro, Kentucky, said her experience with the Bonner Program aided her greatly in the application process.

“The Bonner Program played a huge role in my interest in social justice issues and community service, and because of that experience, I have become more passionate about healthcare disparities,” she said. “My classes at Centre have pushed me, and I’ll be able to use the skills I’ve learned here in this opportunity.”

Partnership Expansion with University of Houston Provides Graduate School Benefits to Bonner Students and Alumni

Partnership Expansion with University of Houston Provides Graduate School Benefits to Bonner Students and Alumni

The Bonner Foundation continues to expand its partnerships with over 20 graduate schools that provide benefits for alumni of national Bonner Programs who want to pursue graduate education.

The latest partnership builds upon an existing relationship with the University of Houston, as one of the 70+ schools that host an undergraduate Bonner Program. Established in 2014, the University of Houston Bonner Leader Program aims to create high-quality educational experiences for students, while simultaneously working to build a better Houston community. As one of the largest programs in the Bonner Network, the University of Houston Bonner Leader Program supports over 100 undergraduate students in its four year program tied to honors. These students engage in sustained, project-based community engagement by focusing on the factors that perpetuate the cycle of poverty including food insecurity, educational achievement, and community health and nutrition.

The expanded relationship with the University of Houston now includes a partnership with the UH’s graduate schools Graduate School. This partnership provides application fee waivers to Bonner alumni or current students applying to any of the University of Houston Masters/PhD programs.

New Partnership with Morgan State University's Graves School of Business and Management Provides Graduate School Scholarships

New Partnership with Morgan State University's Graves School of Business and Management Provides Graduate School Scholarships

The Bonner Foundation continues to expand its partnerships with graduate schools to provide scholarships and other benefits for Bonner students and alumni pursuing graduate education.

The newest partnership developed in summer 2022 is with Morgan State University's Graves School of Business and Management. This is the second Bonner Foundation graduate partnership with a business school (Rollins College Crummer School of Business as the first) and the first graduate school partnership with a Historically Black College and University (HBCU). The Graves School of Business and Management was part of a strategic outreach project to increase graduate school partnerships in underrepresented fields and schools, such as business and STEM.

Morgan State University's Graves School of Business and Management (GSBM) is committed to enhancing academic rigor and quality. Being the first Business School in the State of Maryland, GSBM has over 70 years of experience and expertise in preparing students for the business world. As a student of the Graves School, you will acquire the advanced set of business skills based on a strong liberal arts foundation which enables you to be adaptable to different settings, domestic and global.

Values in Action - Bonner Alumna Kyera Singleton '11, wins the Catharine Lealtad Service to Society Award

At a museum in Medford, Massachusetts, Kyera Singleton is centering enslaved people’s stories—and connecting their histories to the current movement for racial justice.

Singleton is the executive director of the Royall House and Slave Quarters, the only known freestanding structure where enslaved people lived in the northern United States. During the pandemic, her innovative leadership included creating virtual events to bring the museum to new audiences.

Singleton views her work as “anything but neutral,” writes her nominator. “Her museum asks audiences to reflect deeply on uncomfortable truths, and to question firmly held cultural assumptions.” She emphasizes enslaved people’s humanity and resilience by highlighting acts of resistance and moments of joy and pleasure.

“You have to center Black people as political agents in their own history. We have always fought for our own freedom, and everyone else’s, and continue to do so today.”

How Camila Guayasamin’s summer internship offered national leadership experience with local support

How Camila Guayasamin’s summer internship offered national leadership experience with local support

Camila Guayasamin ’24 may have stayed close-to-home for her summer internship, but she still gained national perspectives along the way.

As one of five Bonner Scholars selected for the National Summer Intern program at the Corella & Bertram Bonner Foundation in Princeton, Guayasamin worked alongside fellow scholars from Virginia, Texas, North Carolina, and Ohio.

During the 10-week internship, these young leaders shared their Bonner Program experience by developing new resources and strategies for the national network of over 75 colleges and universities.

W&L's Kiera Stankewich ’25 tackled food justice in Louisville, Kentucky this summer

W&L's Kiera Stankewich ’25 tackled food justice in Louisville, Kentucky this summer

Q: What kind of work are you doing?
This summer, I spent eight weeks in Louisville, Kentucky working with New Roots: Fresh Stop Market, a nonprofit that focuses on food justice. This small organization reaches about 700 families, which equates to 2,200 community members. Their mission is to increase fresh food access and ensure that affordable fresh food is available year-round in all neighborhoods. The markets function similarly to a crop share. My responsibilities included office work in the morning and tending markets in the afternoon. In the office, I completed paperwork, edited spreadsheets, sent reminders for people to pick up their shares, published blog posts, handled phone calls and organized deliveries to bring shares of produce to those unable to access the markets themselves. In the afternoons, we went to the markets to organize, pack and distribute fresh produce to community members. The produce came from local organic farms, and there was a total of nine locations, where each market operated every other week. Families and individuals signed up and paid for this crop share on a sliding-scale system based on their income. Each bag has eight to 10 food items, which change weekly.

Landy Lin ’22, Centre Bonner Scholar, named to prestigious National Hunger Fellowship

Landy Lin ’22, Centre Bonner Scholar, named to prestigious National Hunger Fellowship

Recent graduate Landy Lin ’22 has added another high-profile line to her resume.

Lin, a first-generation Bonner Scholar and Shepherd Intern, was named as a National Hunger Fellow earlier this summer.

The Bill Emerson National Hunger Fellowship “trains and inspires new leaders in the movement to end hunger and poverty in the United States.” Lin said she’s eager to get first-hand experience in Washington D.C., and it was her Bonner Program experience that led her to the fellowship.

Impacting a Community

Paul Remmler ’23 spent the summer as an intern at the Putnam County Museum conducting community-based research and at the Putnam County Library assisting with training and program development.

Remmler, from Shelbyville, Indiana, began working at the museum as a DePauw Stone Scholar, a program for first-year students that focuses on civic leadership. He continued his work through the Bonner Scholar Program, a community service-based scholarship program. 

During Remmler’s sophomore year, he helped the museum staff research and design a small exhibit on nitroglycerin and its role in rail transport. “As part of the research, I also looked at crime in the county in relation to nitroglycerin transport, the rail systems, the role it played as well as if there were any accidents related to its transport,” he said.

“The information was so interesting, and I loved putting it together. There’s a very passionate community in the area for railroad history.

“My work with the DePauw Gaming Club led to me exploring the beneficial social contributions that gaming can provide, inspiring my work with the Putnam County Library, while my love for the people of the community and museum staff inspires me to continue working with them.”

Remmler founded the nonprofit Putnam County Gaming Initiative, through which he hopes to learn how to effectively manage community programming efforts that positively affect a community. His goal? To gain valuable entrepreneurial skills so he can open and operate his own businesses one day.

Remmler credits his success at DePauw to the faculty members he has worked closely with. “Professor Hiroko Chiba has been incredibly understanding, flexible and supportive of me exploring areas of interest while still providing a gentle hand to ensure I stay on track,” he said. “Professor Harry Brown has relentlessly supported my interests, particularly in the area of game design, and helped me find ways to explore those interests in an academic context.”

Remmler said his post-graduation plans are open to opportunity but may include continuing his work in Greencastle, particularly with the gaming initiative and DePauw.

Forming a Path in Public Health

Brandon Collins ’23, a neuroscience and global health double major, chose DePauw because of the small class sizes, tight-knit community and opportunity to be a Bonner scholar and environmental fellow. 

Collins, from Clarksville, Tennessee, began volunteering at the Putnam County Health Department in fall 2021, assisting in the COVID-19 vaccine clinic as part of his community service requirement for the Bonner Scholar Program. 

His interest developed into a passion, he said.

And since then, he has become increasingly involved with the health department.“The experience has been nothing short of highly rewarding and insightful,” he said. “The people I work with have become more and more like family and they are always incredibly supportive of my professional and academic goals.”

In February he was asked to work on a landfill well testing project. “I compiled data that had been collected over nine years and was able to present the results to the Putnam County Board of Health in May,” he said. “There I made a point of emphasizing that there were certain heavy metal concentrations that were above minimum detection levels that would have been unsafe for drinking and bathing.” Since the presentation, he has been able to get approval for furthering the investigation into how that might be affecting residences nearby. 

Collins said many faculty and staff members have guided him in significant ways. “Professor (Sharon) Crary (chemistry and biochemistry) was the reason I ended up majoring in global health after taking her intro course. She and professor Susanne Biehle (psychology and neuroscience) advised me on graduate school opportunities and guided me in one of the environmental health projects I’ve undertaken at the Putnam County Health Department.”

Following graduation, Collins plans to obtain a master of public health degree with the goal of earning a Ph.D. in public health.

Alex Gibson, Berea College '08 Bonner Alum, Reports on Devastating Flooding in Eastern Kentucky

Alex Gibson, Berea College '08 Bonner Alum, Reports on Devastating Flooding in Eastern Kentucky

The Louisville Courier Journal published an opinion piece by Alex Gibson titled:

We are prepared for flooding here, but we were not prepared for complete destruction

He begins the piece as follows:

“Floods are a part of life wherever there is water, this is not surprising to us. The North Fork of the Kentucky River flows by the historic, iconic building of Appalshop at 91 Madison Street where we’ve been since 1982. Most days, the trickling fork provides an almost idyllic background noise, a fixture in downtown Whitesburg as people walk daily over it using the walking bridge, some taking a place to rest near it on a bench and enjoy a beautiful day.But water is not always so kind. We are prepared for floods - insurance, contingency plans, emergency response teams that know how to solve these problems quickly and efficiently - because we know that while water can be gentle and a calming balm to a busy day, it can also rip houses from their foundation and sweep people downstream in a matter of seconds.”

Announcing the Refreshed Bonner Wiki

Announcing the Refreshed Bonner Wiki

With over three decades sharing campus examples, guides, and documents to download, the Bonner Foundation is excited to announce a recently updated Bonner Resources Wiki.

This summer, the five National Bonner Summer Interns at the Foundation — Anu Baskar (George Mason ‘24), Camila Guayasamin (The College of New Jersey ‘24), Dominique Dore (University of Houston ‘22), Mikaela Chin (High Point University ‘24) and Selah Ndouta (Capital University ‘22) — worked with the Foundation staff to refresh the look of the wiki’s homepage and, more importantly, update campus examples and other documents.

They devoted particularly attention to the Bonner Program Management and Community-Engaged Learning sections. In addition, Mikaela and Dominique also created a short video on how to navigate this wealth of knowledge.

Liz Brandt from The Bonner Foundation selected for Campus Compact’s Engaged Scholars Initiative

Liz Brandt from The Bonner Foundation selected for Campus Compact’s Engaged Scholars Initiative

Campus Compact this week announced the 15 faculty and staff selected as the 2022-2023 cohort of Engaged Scholars as part of its Engaged Scholars Initiative. The Engaged Scholars Initiative is a year-long collaborative learning and leadership program. Each cohort consists of a diverse group of early-career faculty and staff who are equipped to lead equity-focused change at their institution and in communities.

Scholars were selected from a highly competitive pool of candidates from Campus Compact member institutions. Scholars were nominated by institutional leaders and represent 14 institutions from 12 states. Members of the cohort hold a wide variety of roles on their campuses, but each has a demonstrated history of effective civic and community engagement work.

HPU’s VISTAs and Bonners Accomplish Service Milestones in 2021-22 Academic Year

HPU’s VISTAs and Bonners Accomplish Service Milestones in 2021-22 Academic Year

High Point University’s AmeriCorps VISTAs and Bonner Leaders have worked throughout the past year to better the High Point community.