Emory named a top producer of Fulbright winners, Peace Corps volunteers


Emory's Fulbright awardees for 2018 include (back row, left to right) Emily Pingel, Asha Fradkin, Julia Munslow, Jonathan Conde-Peraza, (middle row) Abigail Lopez-Rivera, Nora Sullivan, Lydia Rautman, Zachary Denton, (front row) Chebon Ryan and Hyemin Na.
Emory's Fulbright awardees for 2018 include (back row, left to right) Emily Pingel, Asha Fradkin, Julia Munslow, Jonathan Conde-Peraza, (middle row) Abigail Lopez-Rivera, Nora Sullivan, Lydia Rautman, Zachary Denton, (front row) Chebon Ryan and Hyemin Na.

Asha Fradkin is one of the Oxford alumna who serves as a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant.

Emory University is a top producer nationally of students and recent alumni who receive U.S. Fulbright awards and a leading producer of Peace Corps volunteers, according to rankings in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Both programs provide resources and support for exceptional students to conduct research, study or teach abroad.

Emory had 14 students or recent alumni (who applied as students) receive Fulbright awards to teach or conduct research abroad for 2018-19, which makes Emory a top producer nationally among research institutions, according to the Chronicle’s Top Producers of Fulbright U.S. Scholars and Students list.

Winners of the award, named after the late Sen. J. William Fulbright, are selected on the basis of academic or professional achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership potential in their fields.

“The students and alumni selected for the Fulbright program provide a wonderful illustration of Emory’s broad academic strengths, as well as the campus culture of servant leadership,” says Megan Friddle, director of Emory’s National Scholarships and Fellowships Program.

Emory ranks No. 12 among medium-sized colleges and universities on this year’s Top Producers of Peace Corps Volunteers list, also published by the Chronicle. There are 23 Emory students currently volunteering in countries around the world.

This is the 10th consecutive year that Emory has ranked among the top 25 medium-sized schools for Peace Corps volunteers, rising steadily in the rankings since 2010, when it ranked No. 25. Since the Peace Corps’ founding in 1961, more than 560 alumni from Emory have served abroad as volunteers.