May 19, 2012

UM Leads Effort to Train Ecuadorian English Teachers

Officials gather to announce the signing of the 'Go Teacher!' agreement in Ecuador.

Officials gather to announce the signing of the ‘Go Teacher!’ agreement in Ecuador.

OXFORD, Miss. – The University of Mississippi has signed on as the lead institution in a three-year, multi-university effort to help improve English language education in the South American nation of Ecuador.

The agreement with the Secretaría Nacional de Educación Superior, Ciencia, Tecnología é Inovación, or SENESCYT, the Ecuadorian national Secretary for Higher Education, Science, Technology and Innovation, calls for the training of 3,000 students as future public school teachers. Four other universities have joined UM as training sites for the program’s first year, which begins in May. “Go Teacher!” is a comprehensive 14-week, noncredit certificate program that combines 135 hours of language study, plus 135 hours of instruction in Teaching English as a Second Language. Upon completion, the Ecuadorian Ministry of Education will award the students a two-year contract to work in the Ecuadorian public school system.

“We are honored and excited to serve as the lead university for ‘Go Teacher!’ and look forward to continued collaboration with SENESCYT, the Ecuadorian Ministry of Education and our U.S. university partners,” said Timothy R. Angle, UM assistant provost for summer school and outreach.

The agreement was signed in March in Guayaquil, Ecuador. Ole Miss offers an advanced curriculum that will prepare students to interact in the English-speaking academic, social and professional world, Angle said.

“Go Teacher!” will be coordinated by three offices at UM: International Outreach, Intensive English Program, and the Department of Modern Languages. As the lead institution, Ole Miss will manage the project, placing the Ecuadorian students on the Oxford campus and at partner universities.

This summer, 500 Ecuadorians will be placed at five participating U.S universities, 100 at each location. The universities for the first phase of the program are UM, California State University at Long Beach, Kansas State University, San Diego State University and the University of Kentucky.

Phase 2 will involve 1,000 students, and Phase 3 includes the remaining 1,500 students.

As the participant level increases, additional universities will be invited to participate in the program, said Mona Menking, coordinator of international relations at the Division of Outreach and Continuing Education at UM.

“This is an amazing opportunity for the University of Mississippi to help make a difference in Ecuador,” said Menking, who spearheaded the ‘Go Teacher!’ proposal with Angle. “Having grown up in Ecuador, it is a great honor to be part of this collaborative project that can have such a long-lasting impact in such a wonderful country.”

Jean-Michel Mosquera, manager of the English program at the Ecuadorian Ministry of Education who proposed the partnership with Ole Miss, agreed.

“The Ministry of Education, concerned with improving English education in Ecuadorian public schools, is excited to have found a solution and a partner with the University of Mississippi, which will not only aid in preparing better teachers but also in instilling and promoting a stronger sense of higher education in our country,” Mosquera said.

As part of the partnership with SENESCYT, Ole Miss will also provide ongoing follow-up and evaluation to assess students’ progress and gather data. In addition, UM will provide training for all designated Ministry of Education staff charged with administering the evaluations to the partner universities. Faculty from the five universities will evaluate the data and use their findings to guide this and future programs.

Ecuadorian students have until April 15 to apply for the program’s inaugural year, and students are expected to arrive on campus by mid-May.

For more information on the Division of Outreach and Continuing Education at UM, visit, http://www.outreach.olemiss.edu/

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Student Becomes University’s Second Udall Scholar

When Taylor Cook walked into the chancellor’s office at the University of Mississippi, she was not expecting to see a roomful of smiling faces.

But that is what she got at a surprise reception to congratulate her on winning the 2012 Morris K. Udall Scholarship, which provides $5,000 for one year of study. She is the second UM student to achieve this honor.

Cook is among 80 national winners of the scholarships, given annually to college sophomores and juniors who are committed to careers related to the environment, tribal public policy or Native American health care.

“This wouldn’t have been possible without the honors college and, of course, the honors college is part of the bigger university that has provided me all of these opportunities for leadership,” Cook said.

Born in Memphis, Tenn., Cook moved to Southaven when she was 14 and attended Horn Lake High School. She is a member of the Sally McDonnell Barkdale Honors College and the Trent Lott Leadership Institute, majoring in public policy and Spanish, with minors in environmental studies and sociology.

“I love to see effective passion, and you have taken a lot of good advice and you have channeled it in healthy and constructive ways,” Chancellor Dan Jones said. “Part of what our education is about is having people channel their passions. We are proud of you, and it is a proud moment for the university as well.”

Cook serves as an intern in the Office of Campus Sustainability and is the leadership behind the establishment of a Green Fund at UM. She was instrumental in hosting the Mississippi Alumni & Students for Sustainability Spring 2012 Environmental Leadership Summit, an event that brought together more than 50 Mississippi students from universities and colleges around the state. Cook has also served as the Mississippi Fellow for the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, which allowed her to participate in PowerShift 2011, a national meeting of sustainability leaders in Washington, D.C.

“Taylor is not only very intelligent, which is evident in her academic accomplishments and recognition as a Udall Scholar, but she has exceptional leadership skills and a remarkable ability to inspire others with her passion,” said Jim Morrison, director of strategic planning and campus sustainability. “I am confident that Taylor is one of those special leaders who will make our world a better place in the future. We are fortunate to have her as an intern in our office of sustainability and as a student leader at our university.”

It was Cook’s first visit to the chancellor’s office, and she was elated to be there.

“I am so happy; this is not what I expected and I am shocked,” she said. “One of the best parts of being a Udall scholar is being part of the Udall network. Plus, the scholarship money will pay for my fifth year of school here, giving me more time to work on my academic goals as well as sustainability projects on campus.”

Honors College Dean Douglass Sullivan-González said he was pleased, but not really surprised.

“Taylor is unique in that she not only has that contagious passion to advocate for environmental and sustainability issues but also the ability and drive to empower her peers to do the same,” Sullivan-González said. “And those peers are at the state, regional and national level.”

Cook credited the university with developing her leadership skills.

“There have been so many opportunities that I hope students take advantage of because that’s how things like this happen, just by putting yourself out there,” she said. “I feel lucky to have had all the opportunities this university provides. I never would have thought back in high school that it would have been such a wealth of opportunity here, but it really has been.”

Representing the university and the Udall program is a tremendous honor, Cook said.

“Part of my outreach is to wear my campaign on my sleeve,” she said. “I hope by telling others what I am doing, I can inspire sustainability leadership in them.”

Besides her work in the world of environmentalism, Cook fosters cats with Nine Lives Cat Rescue, serves as a Global Ambassador and is a member of the Student Vegetarian Organization, all while maintaining a 3.76 GPA.

In her Udall application, she wrote that she hoped “to be a vehicle of change for environmental and social justice both in the United States and abroad.” This scholarship is a sign of Cook’s dedication and potential, and will offer her unique opportunities as well.

One of Cook’s mentors is Eric Weber, assistant professor of public policy leadership, who first taught her in Honors 102.

“I’ve watched many students explore interests and struggle to find what they want to do,” Weber said. “Taylor’s studies clearly struck a chord and motivated her to become a leader on campus. For her, issues of sustainability and environmental consideration quickly rose to the top of her interests. She has made a difference not only in particular efforts in the community, but also in shaping the campus culture.”

Weber said he has no doubt that Cook will continue to make valuable contributions to the country’s policies on energy use and environmental sustainability.

Congress established the Udall Foundation as an independent executive branch agency in 1992 to honor Morris K. Udall’s 30 years of service in the U.S. House of Representatives Students interested in pursuing the Udall Scholarship can contact Andrus Ashoo (onsa@olemiss.edu), who serves as the university’s Udall representative.

The Office of National Scholarship Advisement conducts workshops each semester to introduce students to major national scholarships. Go to http://www.honors.olemiss.edu/national-scholarship/ for more information.

 

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Oxford Student Lands ‘Big Four’ Internship

A University of Mississippi junior majoring in international studies, German and accountancy has landed a summer internship with one of the Big Four public accounting firms, but this is just another amazing accomplishment in her stellar career.

Martina Cotelo was born in Uruguay, the granddaughter of a German Jew who had emigrated there to escape Nazi persecution. She was a fifth-grader when the family moved to Oxford in 2001.

After graduating from Oxford High School, she entered Ole Miss to take advantage of opportunities provided by the Croft Institute for International Studies and Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College.

She holds a Barksdale Scholarship, and last year, she was one of two Honors College students to receive a Barksdale Award. The $5,000 awards were established to encourage students to test themselves in environments that don’t have the built-in safeties of a classroom, teaching lab or library. She used the funds to travel to Uruguay last summer to continue research on her grandmother’s autobiography, which she had begun sharing in letters to her granddaughter before her death more than three years ago.

Cotelo’s internship this summer, from mid-June through mid-August, takes her to the Ernst & Young company’s Times Square office in New York. She pursued the opportunity on her own after receiving a tip from the accountancy school about the annual Discovery Ernst & Young Conference.

“I received an email about the conference that Ernst & Young has for underrepresented minorities, and once I was selected for the conference, the recruiter asked me if I was interested in interning with their Horizon Program. I went to interview for the internship in December, and I got a call-back in January.

The internship program rotates the students throughout the different sections of the company and provides a broad overview of how it operates.

“I hope to see how the material we learn in class is put to use in the office and how everything is applied,” she said.

Mark Wilder, dean of the School of Accountancy, says he is not surprised at Cotelo’s latest accomplishment.

“Martina is an outstanding student,” he said. “I know that she was a superb representative for Ole Miss in the Discover Ernst and Young Diversity Leadership Conference, and I’m certain she will excel in their Horizon Program as well.”

In her quest to learn more about her ancestors, Cotelo plans to continue her research by studying in Potsdam, Germany during the 2013 spring semester. In preparation, she is enrolled in an independent studies class aimed at deciphering more of the letters and contextualizing the material.

“When I arrived in Uruguay last summer, I was shocked to find seven boxes my grandmother had packed with documents and letters written mostly in German, some in Spanish, and there was a bit of Hebrew thrown in, as well. I tried to tackle the most legible letters and the stories she left about her last months in Berlin. After that, I organized over 700 letters, by dates, recipients and senders. I found out a lot about her family that did not flee to Uruguay.

“The research is incredibly broad, but I will choose one angle of it for my senior thesis for Croft and Honors.”

Cotelo says she has not been disappointed in her college choice.

“I have had incredible professors and countless opportunities to pursue what interests me. The accounting school, Croft and the Honors College constantly support my ideas and goals. There has never been a moment in my three years when I felt like I didn’t have support from the faculty and staff. It has been truly incredible.”

As Cotelo continues her Ole Miss career, those who know her best expect her record of excellence to continue.

“Martina is an absolutely amazing student,” said Kees Gispen, executive director of the Croft Institute. “In addition to combining challenging majors like accountancy, international studies and German, she will be adding a fourth dimension: a senior thesis on a topic central to ethics in the modern world, based on difficult-to-decipher German language sources and holding deep personal meaning for her and her family. She reflects today’s globalized world in a way that bodes well for the future. We haven’t seen or heard the last of Martina Cotelo yet.”

Wilder concurred, saying, “Martina has taken full advantage of the opportunities Ole Miss affords top students. She is part of a newly created double degree program partnership between Croft and the School of Accountancy, while also excelling as a student in the Honors College. She will have countless opportunities in the professional world. We are extremely proud of Martina and her accomplishments.”

Cotelo’s parents are Enrique and Irene Cotelo, UM faculty members in the Department of Modern Languages.

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Partnership Supports Only State High School Chinese Program

  OXFORD, Miss. – The Oxford High School students in Ping Zhang’s class await their instructor’s arrival. As she enters the room and takes her position in front of the class, the students rise from their seats, bow and respond to her greeting – in Mandarin Chinese. For the next 45 minutes, it is the only language spoken in the classroom. These five are among nearly 20 students getting a rare opportunity to learn Chinese while in high school, thanks to the Chinese Language Flagship Program and the Department of Modern Languages at the University of Mississippi.   With funding from the Language Flagship, the department established and helps support the Chinese-language program at OHS, the only one of its kind at a Mississippi public high school. Since its inception in 2008, the program has continued to expand cultural awareness and promote inclusiveness. “The focus of the course is for students to achieve overall proficiency, so the curriculum is much different than that of their other classes,” said Zhang, a UM graduate student in the Teaching English as a Second Language program who had teaching experience in Chinese and worked with OHS officials to launch the program. “In addition to being able to fluently speak, listen, read and write in Chinese, my students must also know and understand the culture and customs of China.” The program began with six students the first year, and about the same number of students enrolled in Chinese 1 the following year. Four students continued to Chinese 2. While there are 26 phonetic sounds that correspond to the English alphabet, the spoken Chinese language is filled with various tones that convey different meanings to the listener. Students are required to know and speak the inflections associated with each group of tones. Unlike English, there are no tenses nor is there any verb conjugation in Chinese. The written Chinese language (a form of calligraphy) contains more than 5,000 “picture words,” each varying in stroke lengths, size and shape, which give distinct meanings to the symbols. Many characters are made of two parts. One part, called “radicals,” represents the character’s meaning, and the other part represents the sound. “Each language has its own set of rules,” Zhang said. UM’s Chinese Language Flagship Program subsidized instruction in the first year. The UM program is doing that again this year with an eye toward Oxford expanding the curriculum beyond second year next year. Nearly 20 students are taking Chinese at OHS this year in two levels. “As chair of the Department of Modern Languages at the University of Mississippi, I am exceedingly proud of the working relationship our department has with Oxford High School,” said Donald Dyer, professor and co-director of the Chinese Language Flagship Program. “Off and on, our department has been able to help OHS monetarily with its Chinese program. Our efforts and support have paid enormous dividends at OHS. Oxford High School has one of only three Chinese-language programs in the state of Mississippi and the only program at a public school, a testament to OHS’s progressive academic programs and its forward-looking administration.” Chinese 3 is likely to be added next year and AP Chinese is a real possibility in the near future, Dyer added. A number of OHS students with no Chinese background have taken a month of intensive Chinese at UM in the summer through the university’s federally-funded StarTalk program for high school students. Those students have been able to move directly into Chinese 2 after being in StarTalk.Two of Zhang’s students – including Dyer’s daughter, Erin – have become elite members of UM’s Flagship program and three of her students have taken Chinese courses on the UM campus while still in high school after having taken Chinese 1 and 2. Zhang’s current students hope to do the same. “I definitely plan to continue studying Chinese while I pursue a degree in journalism,” said Alli Bridgers, one of three OHS seniors in Chinese 2. She has already been accepted into the UM Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College and has applied to the Croft Institute for International Studies. “Because the United States’ relations with China are constantly getting stronger, I want to be able to stand out in the job market should I get the opportunity to live and work in China one day. I also like Chinese food and enjoy being able to order dishes using the native language.” Austin Dorris, another senior in Chinese 2, has applied directly to the university’s Flagship Chinese program. Though his initial motive for learning the language was the potential for financial profitability and job security, Dorris has since changed his focus. “Though I always enjoyed learning other languages, I’ve really grown to love the Chinese people and culture,” he said. “I’m very excited about the possibilities of studying, living and working in China one day.” Senior Tory Dixon is the only Chinese 2 student who has already visited the country. “After I took Chinese 1, I went on a mission trip to work in an orphanage in China,” Dixon said. “While there, I discovered the Chinese people are very peaceful and likeable. Once I earn my degree, I’d like to return to work as a surgeon.” Glenn Hopkins, dean of UM’s College of Liberal Arts, praises the accomplishments of Dyer and Zhang. “The Department of Modern Languages’ support of the innovative Oxford High School Chinese program broadens students’ educational experience and prepares them for success in college and beyond,” Hopkins said. The UM Chinese Language Flagship Program (founded in 2003) is, together with Brigham Young University, one of two Chinese Flagship Centers in the United States. The Nanjing Chinese Flagship Center in China is a common resource for the UM and BYU Flagships and for seven newer Flagship programs at Arizona State University, Hunter College, Indiana University, San Francisco State University, the universities of Oregon and Rhode Island, and Western Kentucky University. For more information about UM’s Chinese Language Flagship Program, visit http://www.olemiss.edu/chinese/. Click the image to enlarge

Scholar to Discuss Concept of Incarnation in Spanish Literature for Annual Longest Lecture

Frederick A. de Armas

A distinguished Spanish literature scholar and professor in the humanities at the University of Chicago will discuss the “Spanish Golden Age” Tuesday (Nov. 29) at the University of Mississippi.

Frederick A. de Armas is set to deliver the 51st annual Christopher Longest Lecture at 6 p.m. in Bondurant Auditorium. A reception precedes the lecture at 5 p.m., and both events are free and open to the public.

His talk, “Art Made Flesh: Ekphrasis of Incarnation from Cervantes and Lope de Vega to Galdós and Vargas Llosa,” focuses on a curious metamorphosis used by Spanish writers from the 17th century to the present, looking at instances where descriptions of a work of art within a text lead to incarnation.

“In other words, we will discuss how brief glances at artworks in plays and novels serve as a point of departure for the images to come alive, to become human and interact with other characters within the text, like handsome Frankensteins made from a painting or a statue,” de Armas said. “The talk will consider the implication of such ‘transgressions,’ the effects on other characters and on the readers; and how the uses of this ‘living art’ change through the centuries in key Hispanic literary texts.”

Each year for the lecture, the Department of Modern Languages chooses the focus of the lecture by alternating among all the languages taught at UM, and this year, de Armas stood out when Spanish was chosen.

“He is a preeminent scholar in the field of Spanish literature and students and faculty who come will receive a rare professional treat,” said Donald Dyer, chair of modern languages. “He is very well respected in the field and is the author of many books. He is currently also the chair of the Department of Romance Languages at the University of Chicago, one of the finest academic institutions in the country.”

Most recently de Armas has published “Writing for the Eyes in the Spanish Golden Age,” (2004); “Ekphrasis in the Age of Cervantes,” (2005); “Quixotic Frescoes: Cervantes and Italian Renaissance Art” (2006) and “Don Quixote among the Saracens: A Clash of Civilizations and Literary Genres” (2011). He has co-edited “Hacia la tragedia aurea: lecturas para un Nuevo milenio” (2008) and “Ovid in the Age of Cervantes” (2010).

The Christopher Longest Lecture Series was established at UM in 1960 by Ann Waller Reins Longest, in recognition of Christopher Longest’s distinguished service to the university from 1908 to 1951 in the departments of Classics and Modern Languages. The annual lecture series, sheltered in the departments of Modern Languages and English, features visiting scholars in these fields.

For more information or assistance related to a disability, call 662-915-7298.

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Scholar to Discuss Concept of Incarnation in Spanish Literature for Annual Longest Lecture

A distinguished Spanish literature scholar and professor in the humanities at the University of Chicago will discuss the “Spanish Golden Age” Tuesday (Nov. 29) at the University of Mississippi. is set to deliver the 51st annual Christopher Longest Lecture at 6 p.m. in Bondurant Auditorium. A reception precedes the lecture at 5 p.m., and both [...]

Triple-Major Junior Spends Fall Semester in Scotland on his Third Study Abroad

Hunter Nicholson of Brandon enrolled at the University of Mississippi in 2009, counting on the Sally McDonnell Barksdale
Honors College and Lott Leadership Institute to help make his Ole Miss experience an affordable education comparable to that of a top-tier school.

He says he has not been disappointed.

“That’s why I’ve been able to afford three study abroad programs, so far,” said Nicholson, who is spending this semester in Scotland. A member of the Honors College and Lott Institute, he is a junior with a triple major, in public policy leadership, Spanish and accountancy.

Nicholson arrived at the University of Edinburg, where he is living in a five-person dorm, in August. After five weeks of classes on Scottish and UK
politics, he is completing a 10-week internship under a member of the Scottish Parliament. He also plans to explore that part of the world.

The Scottish Parliament

“I’ll spend most of my time researching the effects of a proposed major change in the Scottish tax system,” he said. “I plan to spend my free weekends
exploring the rest of Scotland by train and bus. The week before Christmas, I’ll head to Rome, and I plan to return home on Christmas Eve.”

He says he is also enjoying sightseeing in and around Edinburgh.

“Edinburgh is a very old city, so I have spent most of my free time, so far, exploring its history of several thousand years. In the center of the city is a
giant grassy hill called Arthur’s Seat. Catching a sunrise on it has been one of the highlights so far.”

Nicholson holds a Lott Leadership Scholarship and an Academic Scholarship. He received special funding for this study abroad from the Honors College and Lott
Institute.

His affiliation with the Honors College has given him access to its vibrant center of academic excellence, which merges intellectual rigor with public
service to help member students from all disciplines become outstanding in their fields.

The Lott Institute has provided him with an intellectual community of faculty and students designed to turn ideas into action. Lott students also have the
opportunity to meet and interact with a large number of public leaders and take part in numerous public programs in this country and abroad.

Nicholson’s other study abroad trips have taken him to the Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador, with the Lott Institute, and to Spain for the
faculty-led program “Spanish in Cádiz.”

A graduate of Brandon High School, Nicholson is the son of Charlie and Vicki Nicholson.

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UM Alum Launches Charitable Company to Benefit Impoverished Entrepreneurs

 

Nisolo works with small-scale shoe producers in Trujillo, Peru.

A company designed to help impoverished entrepreneurs across the globe will launch Thursday (Oct. 6) with a recent Ole Miss graduate at the helm.

Patrick Woodyard, University of Mississippi alum, is launching his new charitable company, Nisolo, with an initial product line including high-quality, fashionable leather shoes and accessories for men and women of all ages. Nisolo provides entrepreneurs and artisans in communities around the world with access to new markets. The company is currently working with small-scale shoe producers in Trujillo, Peru.

“Nisolo has been created and designed to intrinsically address the issues of job creation and quality education in impoverished communities,” said Woodyard, founder of the company. “Through the purchase of our products, consumers are supporting job creation as we purposely contract impoverished producers who, through their work, empower themselves to shape their own future. Additionally, consumers directly contribute to quality education projects as we donate 10 percent of our profits to education programs in the impoverished areas where our producers live. That way, not only is empowerment offered through stable jobs, but opportunity is shaped into reality for the thousands of bright young minds willing to make lasting change in their communities.” [Read more...]

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Nine Outstanding Freshmen Named 2011-12 Croft Scholars

Croft Scholars 2011-2012: (from left to right, top row): Taylor Brack, Zack Whitehead, Laura Bridges, Maggie Spear (second row): Bo Solomon, Kelly Kennedy, Alison Bartel (first row): Andrew DeLeeuw, Sheila Arun Kumar

Six students from Mississippi and one each from Alabama, Tennessee and Texas have entered the University of Mississippi this fall on prestigious scholarships as members of the Croft Institute for International Studies.

The 2011-2012 Croft Scholars each receive $8,000 per year for four years of undergraduate study. The Croft Institute, created in 1997 through a $60 million gift by the Joseph E. Bancroft Charitable and Educational Fund, ensures that students are prepared for leadership in business, public service, education and other fields with a deeper knowledge of an increasingly interdependent world.

New Croft Scholar Mary Margaret “Maggie” Spear of Kingwood, Texas, says the Croft Institute and Chinese Language Flagship Program attracted her to UM.

“These programs have Ivy League standards and are gaining similar levels of recognition in the job and grad school markets but without the exorbitant price tag, not to mention the fact that Ole Miss is such a beautiful place to be. During my first visit, I fell in love with the campus and Oxford.” [Read more...]

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Recent UM Graduate Ryan Parsons Named Prestigious Portz Scholar

… Parsons to present paper to National Collegiate Honors Council

 Recent University of Mississippi graduate Ryan Parsons has been named one of three 2011 Portz Scholars by the National Collegiate Honors Council.

As a member of the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College and the Croft Institute for International Studies at UM, Parsons graduated in May with a bachelor’s degree in international studies and Chinese.

Each year, honors colleges nationwide are invited to submit outstanding research/creative papers written by their students; from those submissions, three scholars are selected. Parson’s winning paper was his honors and Croft thesis about public policy concerning migrant workers and the education of migrant children in contemporary China.

Ryan Parsons

“I researched how well migrant workers are treated in these areas, focusing on education and economic opportunities,” said Parsons, a member of the Chinese Language Flagship Program at UM. He said he chose the program because he wanted to challenge himself and get involved in a culture that is completely different from the one he experienced while growing up.

Parsons, a Hattiesburg native, plans to travel to Phoenix to present a summary of his thesis Oct. 22 at the NCHC conference.

His adviser, Joshua Howard, said it was a delight to work with Parsons because he is hard-working and always goes the extra mile to improve his work.

“Ryan tackled a very important and topical issue for his senior thesis, and skillfully wielded a number of theories on citizenship with solid empirical work that was based on copious reading of Chinese sources gleaned from the press, official documents and websites,” said Howard, a Croft associate professor of history. “Of the dozen theses I’ve supervised or been a second reader for, Ryan’s thesis was exemplary in his use of Chinese language sources. He was able to explain complex concepts without getting bogged down in social science jargon and demonstrates much empathy toward the migrant workers he documents.”

Parsons is the university’s third Portz Scholar. In 2002, Amanda Guth, a psychology and biology major, won the award for her thesis, which was directed by Ken Sufka. In 2006, Heather Carrillo, a classics and art history major, won the award for her thesis, which was directed by Aileen Ajootian.

Having an honors student receive a Portz is important because only three students are selected nationwide, said SMBHC associate dean John Samonds.

“It shows that our students can compete with anyone in the country,” Samonds said. “Among the many outstanding graduates we had in 2011, Ryan Parsons was a stellar honors student. His ability to grapple with a complex subject using a number of theories is the epitome of what we want in an honors student.”

Parsons spent this summer working in Beijing with the ROTC’s Project Go, a summer language study program for ROTC students from around the country. The program is run by Zhu Yongping, UM professor of modern languages, who taught Parsons at UM.

Parsons was in China when he got the news he had won the Portz scholarship.

“One day I woke up to a half-dozen emails that the faculty of the Honors College and others had sent during the night, and it took me a minute to realize what had happened, but it was a pleasant surprise,” he said.

Next month, Parsons begins the master’s program in development studies at the University of Cambridge. He is the son of Chris and Barbara Parsons of Hattiesburg.

The Portz Scholars program was created through the Portz Fund in honor of Dr. John Portz, the first director of the University Honors Program at the University of Maryland at College Park, and his wife, Edythe Portz. For more information on the program, go to http://www.nchchonors.org/about-portz-fund.shtml.

For more information, visit the UM Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College.

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