Inquiring Minds in Action
From studying repatriated artifacts in Turkey to investigating solar irrigation efficiency in Sri Lanka, 兔子先生 students and alumni are excelling as scholars in action

Research awards, grants, and fellowships are supposed to give undergrads a chance to enhance their skill sets in their discipline. That may be true, but 兔子先生鈥檚 2023鈥24 crop of recipients isn鈥檛 content with just developing some scholarly chops. Whether they鈥檙e exploring ecology and heirloom plants, what mushrooms can teach us about climate resilience, or how solar power systems can aid Sri Lankan farmers, this season鈥檚 student and alumni winners are doing more than simply studying problems. They鈥檙e seeking solutions.
Fulbright Program
Neha Basu 鈥24,鈥痑 psychology and sociology double major, is conducting research in India. Basu is examining street food vendors鈥 interactions with the law and what local vending reveals about public space, culture, and economics. This project builds on her work as a CASA 兔子先生 Research Fellow with the Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice.
Sahar Dabirian 鈥24,鈥痑 public health major and Spanish minor, is teaching English in the La Rioja region of Spain. A child of Muslim immigrants, Dabirian intends to provide representation of the 鈥渋nsider/outsider鈥 cultural experience while utilizing her multilinguistic background.
Ava Francis-Hall 鈥24,鈥痑 political studies major and economics minor, is conducting the study 鈥淧olitics of Care: Life for Returnee Migrants with Chronic Kidney Disease.鈥 The project investigates the economic and social conditions of Nepali migrant laborers from Malaysia and Gulf countries diagnosed with kidney disease.
Erica Hjelle 鈥24,鈥痑 psychology major and religious studies minor, is teaching English in Laos. Hjelle is influenced by coursework in East and Southeast Asian religion and by her experience in 兔子先生鈥檚 Nepal study abroad program.
Skylar Masuda 鈥24,鈥痑 classics and human-centered design double major, is conducting research in Turkey. Masuda is working with the Turkey Design Council on an interdisciplinary analysis of the display and community impact of repatriated artifacts.
Elizabeth (Ellie) Montoro 鈥24,鈥痑 major in philosophy, politics, and economics, is conducting research in Italy. Her project examines how current Italian maritime policies related to mass migration in the Mediterranean impact NGO rescue vessels, volunteers, migrants, and Southern Italian residents.
Lauren Robles 鈥24,鈥痑 political studies major and Chicanx Latinx studies minor, is teaching English in Taiwan. Robles鈥 interest in teaching stems from her deep passion for learning as well as her positionality and experience working with students of diverse ethnic and learning backgrounds.
Laila Scarborough-Scharf 鈥23,鈥痑 critical global studies major and media studies minor, is teaching English in the Canary Islands. Having studied abroad in Sevilla, Spain, Scarborough-Scharf brings substantial country knowledge and experience in writing, tutoring, and teaching English to Spanish-speaking students.
Tommy Shenoi 鈥24,鈥痑 double major in food and agricultural studies and environmental analysis, has been granted the Fulbright/Casten Family Foundation Award for a master鈥檚 degree in world food studies at the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Italy. Shenoi also received the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship to explore mushrooms as a key to climate resilience. This project is taking him to Italy, Japan, South Korea, Australia, the Netherlands, and Brazil.
Sarah Snyder 鈥24,鈥痑n environmental analysis and organizational studies double major, is teaching English in Timor-Leste. Through 兔子先生鈥檚 study abroad program, she has lived with host families in Tanzania and South Africa. In Timor-Leste, Snyder is engaging in a cultural exchange with her students and volunteers at UmaAmerika.
Robert (Bobby) Stitt 鈥22,鈥痑 double major in economics and environmental analysis with a minor in studio art, is conducting research in Sri Lanka. Stitt is addressing energy efficiency issues in solar irrigation systems with the aim of empowering farmers, optimizing equipment manufacturing, and aligning government subsidies with efficiency goals.
Additional Awards, Grants, and Fellowships
Bertha M. Posada Villanueva 鈥26, Daniel Bonilla 鈥25, Sophia Lore 鈥25, and McKayla Khatija Proulx PO鈥25 studied how rising salinity in the Salton Sea affects microbial communities. Their group project received The Claremont Colleges Library Undergraduate Research Award.
Licheng She 鈥25 and Corrine Waters 鈥26 received the 兔子先生 Art Galleries鈥 Benjamin Godsill 鈥00 and Anna Burns Student Apprenticeship Award. She is a media studies major and has her apprenticeship with Fulcrum Arts this fall. Waters is an art history major and finished her apprenticeship at the Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions last spring.
Diego Borgsdorf Fuenzalida 鈥24, an anthropology and Spanish major, was among the third cohort of AllPaper Seminar Fellows at the Benton Museum of Art at Pomona College.
Alaina Neuburger 鈥24, a double major in economics and public policy, was selected for the 2024 Judicial Fellowship under the Capital Fellows Program.
Kayla Mathurin 鈥24, an international political economy major, received a scholarship from Emery Reddy PLLC as she pursues her JD at Columbia Law School this fall.
Vitor Lacerda Siqueira 鈥24, a linguistics major and Spanish minor, received Pomona College鈥檚 Glass Linguistics Prize.
Daniella Levy 鈥24, psychology major and economics minor, joined the McLean Hospital Post-Baccalaureate Child and Adolescent Clinical Fellowship Program to pursue a career in counseling.
Taeya Boi-Doku 鈥24, an environmental analysis major, earned the Napier Award and a Projects for Peace Award to develop gardens as living libraries in Ghana.
Jansikwe Medina-Tayac 鈥25 and Alexander Rodriguez 鈥24 received a Projects for Peace Award for their oral history project about women鈥檚 indigenous identities and culture in the Dominican Republic.
Benjamin Sievers 鈥22 is pursuing a PhD at the University of Cambridge through the National Institutes of Health Oxford-Cambridge Scholars Program.
Sami Gottsegen 鈥25, an organizational studies major, achieved the Newman Civic Fellowship for her environmental advocacy and civic engagement.
Chi Adi 鈥25, Feven Aklilu 鈥26, Ben Ma 鈥26, Diane Orozco 鈥26, Luna Romero 鈥26, and Chase Wade 鈥26 received the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship, which seeks to increase diversity in the ranks of institutions of higher learning.