U.S. State Department – UofL News Tue, 21 Apr 2026 21:06:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 UofL alumna picked for State Department fellowship /post/uofltoday/uofl-alumna-picked-for-state-department-fellowship/ Tue, 12 Mar 2019 19:08:19 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=46030 Zerlina Bartholomew ’15 has been accepted into the Charles B. Rangel International Affairs Program, a U.S. State Department program intended to prepare outstanding individuals for careers as diplomats in the Foreign Service of the U.S. Department of State.Ěý

As a Rangel scholar, she will work toward a master’s degree and complete a congressional internship at The Hill, followed by a placement abroad with a U.S. Embassy.Ěý

Her international pursuit began while she was at UofL, where she majored in French and Political Science and minored in Middle Eastern Islamic Studies.ĚýAfter graduating in May 2015, Bartholomew was selected as a Fulbright Scholar.Ěý

It was during a chance encounter at a Washington, D.C., event that Bartholomew was encouraged to pursue the next chapter of her journey: the Rangel Fellowship. The prestigious program is competitive and currently represents the United States in 60 countries around the world.Ěý

“This is something I’ve always thought about. I’m excited, but nervous,” Bartholomew said. “I’m just the kind of person that gives it my all in everything I do. I just want to be an example for my community – that you can pursue your  dreams and it is possible to achieve them.”

Read more about Bartholomew and her upcoming adventure at .Ěý

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Three UofL students headed to India as Critical Language Scholars /section/arts-and-humanities/three-uofl-students-headed-to-india-as-critical-language-scholars/ /section/arts-and-humanities/three-uofl-students-headed-to-india-as-critical-language-scholars/#respond Tue, 20 Jun 2017 18:24:30 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=37263 Out of the 14 students nationwide chosen as Critical Language Scholars to study Bangla in Kolkata, India, three are from UofL.Ěý

Jeanelle Sears, Emily Cousins and Jon Phoenix, UofL graduate students, are heading to Kolkata, India, this summer as , a prominent award funded by the U.S. State Department to expand the number of Americans proficient in languages deemed to be “critical” to U.S. interest.

How did that happen? Did they already know each other? Did a faculty member encourage the students to apply for the scholarship? Do any of the students already speak Bangla?

No, no and no.

When asked how it happened that three UofL students were selected for the Bangla language program in Kolkata, CLS Indic Language Programs Officer Rhea Vance-Cheng said, “I had the exact same question. It’s definitely rare to have three students from one university at the same site.”

Sears, Cousins and Phoenix say they are just as befuddled. Phoenix speculated that the anomaly was a “super-insane coincidence,” while Sears thought having multiple Cards in the Kolkata program was “wild.”

The trio does share some similarities: all are interested in learning Bengali to expand their opportunities for research in areas such as sociology, environmentalism and writing studies. Sears and Phoenix are both sociologists from Knox County, Kentucky, while Cousins is an English studies student from Tokyo, Japan.

Once the CLS winners got over the surprise of learning that others from UofL were headed to India as part of the same program, they were all delighted.

“It’s very cool that I’ll actually be able to stay in touch with at least two other people in the program,” Phoenix said.

Sears added that having other Cards in the program offers “immediate affinity,” as well as the chance to support each other’s work once they return home.

Scholars will stay with host families in Kolkata and speak only Bengali for the duration of their stay (absolute beginners get a two-week grace period to get their skills up to snuff). The program includes daily instructional classes, extracurricular culture classes, weekly personal tutoring and occasional group excursions.

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