Knox Stories
Alumni Find Success in the Museum Field as Knox Bolsters Program
The art museum studies program ensures students are well-equipped for dynamic roles in the evolving museum field.
Lisa Harris
Director of the Gerald and Carol Vovis Center for Research and Advanced Study and Health Professions Advising
2 East South Street
Galesburg, IL 61401-4999
Fax: 309-341-7166
Ten Knox College juniors have been chosen as Ford Fellows for the 2014-2015 academic year. Ford Fellowships are awarded to students with strong academic records who are interested in pursuing independent research. The recipients are chosen by a panel of three faculty members and the director of the Gerald and Carol Vovis Center for Research and Advanced Study.
Ford Fellows participate in a weekly seminar during Winter Term to prepare them for undertaking research and to help them explore options for future graduate study. The students also receive a stipend to sponsor their research, conducted over the summer. Ford Fellows often continue their research when pursuing senior Honors projects.
Mariangela Maguire, interim director of the Gerald and Carol Vovis Center for Research and Advanced Study, sees the Ford Program as a way to "demystify graduate school" and as a way for students to learn from each other and their faculty mentors.
"One of the main goals of the program is to bring together students from a wide range of academic disciplines," she said. "Talking with each other about their research projects, they gain confidence in communicating about complex topics and they gain an appreciation of how knowledge is created in fields other than their own."
Newly named Ford Fellows, along with their academic majors, their faculty mentors, and the tentative titles of their research projects:
(Photo at top: Student Michael Supej uses an inert atmosphere glovebox as part of the research he is pursuing under the supervision of Knox College faculty member Helen Hoyt.)
Published on February 19, 2014