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CSI/CUNY News Release |
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For Immediate Release |
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College of Staten Island students named
2004 Jeannette K. Watson Fellows
Distinguished Fellowship Program Grooms Freshmen and Sophomores
for Professional and Personal Growth
Staten Island, NY – July 19, 2004 – Three College of Staten
Island students have earned Jeannette K. Watson Fellowships this
year, a
sought-after paid summer internship program offering mentoring and
lifetime contacts to talented freshmen and sophomores at CUNY and
independent city colleges who demonstrate exceptional academic
promise and outstanding leadership skills.
The recipients of this year’s Jeannette K. Watson Fellowships at the
College of Staten Island are April Boland, Melody Messina, and
Khadijah Rentas.
April Boland is a sophomore at the College of Staten Island where
she majors in English and history. She currently volunteers at
Lighthouse International and has been an active youth group leader
for several churches in her community. Upon graduating from high
school, Ms. Boland took a year off before attending college to
provide fulltime childcare for her newborn siblings. Ms. Boland will
intern at the Local Initiatives Support Corporation this summer.
Melody Messina majors in Early Childhood Education at CSl with the
intent of pursuing a career in Applied Behavioral Analysis Therapy.
Also participating in the CUNY Honors College Program, she is the
recipient of a number of scholarships including the Peter Vallone
Scholarship. Ms. Messina’s extracurricular activities include
co-facilitating the CUNY Honors College Provisional Student Council
and chartering the CSI Community Service Club. She has worked as a
tutor for the school’s Writing Center and is currently a teaching
assistant for On Your Mark, a program providing tutoring and
assistance to special needs children. This summer, Ms. Messina will
intern at the Association to Benefit Children.
Khadijah Rentas, a rising junior at CSI, is the Student Publication
Board Representative of All Ways a Woman literary magazine, in
addition to being one of its contributing editors. She has
demonstrated her commitment to the campus community, serving as a
member of Educated Volunteers In Life and the Community Service
Club, and acting as an Admissions Ambassador to the college. Ms.
Rentas majors in communications and hopes to pursue a career in
journalism. She participates in the CUNY Honors College Program. Ms.
Rentas will intern at the Gotham Gazette this summer.
Previous College of Staten Island recipients include 2000 Fellowship
recipients Kenyatta Carter, Yekaterina Lushpenko and Tara Lynch,
2001 recipient Kristine Gansico, and 2002 recipient Elie Jarrouge.
Established by The Thomas J. Watson Foundation in 1999, the
fellowship operates on the principle that “talent is broadly
distributed but only selectively developed.” Watson Fellows have
their pick of coveted job placements (“work they can learn from”)
over three consecutive summers in non-profit agencies, business
organizations and in government service that give them a chance to
grow and develop interpersonal skills, and gain self-confidence in a
variety of professional settings. In the third summer, Watson
Fellows can apply for an international assignment through
partnerships with Save the Children, the Institute of International
Education, and The Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice.
A series of weekly seminars further enhances the learning experience
by encouraging debate and interaction, and also provides an
opportunity for Watson Fellows to share stories about their work
experiences. Visits to cultural institutions like Shakespeare in the
Park and the Metropolitan Museum of Art enable students to discover
New York’s free summer offerings. Every Watson Fellow receives a
generous stipend as well as a laptop computer to complete their
assignments.
Eight colleges in all, including the College of Staten Island,
compete annually for 15 Jeannette K. Watson Fellowship openings; at
least one college from each borough is included in the pool of
eligible colleges. Each school may nominate up to five candidates,
many of whom are selected from honors programs.
For more than 40 years The Thomas J. Watson Foundation has provided
opportunities for graduating seniors at 50 selective liberal arts
colleges to travel abroad for a year of work and study through The
Thomas J. Watson Fellowship. In 1999 The Jeannette K. Watson
Fellowship was launched to provide a set of unparalleled workplace
and seminar experiences to ignite the professional and personal
growth of students at eight urban colleges in New York: City
College, College of Staten Island, Hunter, Lehman, Long Island
University (Brooklyn), Marymount Manhattan, Pace University
(Manhattan), and Queens College.
For more information about The Jeannette K. Watson Fellowship or to
receive an application packet, contact Caryl Watkins at (718)
982-2302.
The College of Staten Island (CSI) is a senior college of The City
University of New York (CUNY), the nation’s leading urban
university. CSI offers 35 academic programs, 15 graduate degree
programs, and challenging doctoral programs to 12,000 students.
The 204-acre landscaped campus of CSI, the largest in NYC, is fully
accessible and contains an advanced, networked infrastructure to
support technology-based teaching, learning, and research. For more
information, visit www.csi.cuny.edu
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