Published: April 13, 2018

Serene Singh, a CU听麻豆影院 junior majoring in political science and journalism and minoring in leadership studies, has won a prestigious Truman Scholarship, an honor that brings with it up to $30,000 for graduate study, priority admission at graduate institutions and intensive leadership training for careers in public service.

Serene SinghSingh, who is from Colorado Springs, is CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 11th听recipient of the scholarship and first since 2014.

The 59 new Truman Scholars were selected from among 756听candidates nominated by 311听colleges and universities. Recipients were chosen on the basis of their academic and leadership accomplishments and their likelihood of becoming public service leaders.

"Serene brings tremendous energy and enthusiasm to our campus and beyond. She engages in remarkable community service, has extensive leadership experience听and maintains sharp academic focus all at once," said Deborah Viles, director of CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 Office of Top Scholarships.

"She's already shown herself to be a change-maker, and the Truman Scholarship will help broaden her influence. I'm proud to have her represent CU as a Truman Scholar, and I'm looking forward to seeing where her path takes her."

Singh听is a member of numerous groups and organizations on campus, including the Boettcher Scholars, Presidents Leadership Class, Colorado Bhangra, Political Science Honor Society听and听University of Colorado Student Government, where she serves as chief justice of the CU Supreme Court.听

Singh, as the current America's Junior Miss and former Miss Colorado Teen titleholder, started a nonprofit called The Serenity Project to offer an听experience aimed at growing confidence and self-esteem for at-risk and听marginalized听communities of women. She hopes the project will empower participants to find their voices and focus their energy on causes they believe in.听

She also works with women in The Serenity Project on speaking skills and coaches middle school and high school students听in economically depressed regions, as well as students from low-income backgrounds across the country.

Outside of school work, Singh is active in the Sikh-American community. She started the first Sikh Student Association in Colorado and is working on an honors thesis in addition to policy that will help protect Sikhs in the United States from hate crimes.听Annually, Singh organizes a camp for young students to learn Punjabi Indian dance and challenge their stereotypes surrounding South Asians and Sikhs in America. Singh听also has interned with the U.S. Senate, the Sikh American Legal Defense Education Fund听and Opportunity Nation to further explore her interests in areas such as First Amendment rights, justice and tolerance.

Singh said of the award:

I am incredibly honored and humbled to have received the Truman Scholarship, which is听nationally known for its competitive nature and its strong desire to invest in our nation's most promising change-makers and leaders. I feel truly fortunate to have been selected amongst thousands of students.

This scholarship and the people I have met from this journey have changed my life in the best ways possible鈥擨 thank each and every one of them for their love and support in this crazy process. Thank you to CU 麻豆影院 for giving every student the chance to reach their biggest dreams鈥攖his institution has been instrumental in shaping who I am today, and I am forever thankful to be a Buff. I cannot wait for more opportunities to learn, grow and give back to my incredible community, state听and country.鈥

Singh aspires to one day be appointed to the United States Supreme Court.

Viles encourages other CU 麻豆影院 sophomores and juniors interested in public service to learn more about applying for the Truman Scholarship by emailing her at viles@colorado.edu.

Congress established the Truman Scholarship Foundation in 1975 as the federal memorial to President Harry S. Truman. The foundation awards scholarships for college students to attend graduate school in preparation for careers in government or elsewhere in public service. The activities of the foundation are supported by a special trust fund in the U.S. Treasury.