Graduate students win prestigious NSF fellowships
The National Science Foundation has awarded 32听prestigious Graduate Research Fellowships to听CU 麻豆影院 students, including two from Smead Aerospace, paving the way for them to continue their innovative and impactful research on campus.
The awards, , recognize outstanding graduate students from across the country in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields. CU 麻豆影院's aerospace honorees are PhD students Samuel Fedeler (Advisor: Marcus Holzinger) and Brodie Wallace (Advisor: Scott Palo). The pair are among 2,050 nationwide听winners selected from thousands of applicants across the country.
鈥淭he significant number of graduate students at CU 麻豆影院 receiving these prestigious fellowships is a true testament to our high caliber students, their intellectual merit and impact of their research,鈥 said Leslie Reynolds, interim dean of the听Graduate School. 鈥淲e are so proud of them and the work they are doing.鈥
The 2019听winners (including 14 additional students who earned Honorable Mention recognition)听represent a wide range of scientific disciplines from across campus, including astronomy, biology, chemistry,听computer science, engineering, mathematics, physics and more. Each recipient will receive a $34,000 annual stipend for the next three years as well as professional development opportunities.
鈥淭hese fellowship recipients have the capability, dedication and drive to positively impact society through science and engineering,鈥 said Bobby Braun, dean of the College of Engineering and Applied Science. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to see how their research plans mature over their graduate careers. For our college, this is a new record of NSF Graduate Research Fellows. I鈥檓 especially proud of the diversity and breadth of this cohort in which each of our departments and graduate programs is represented.