News

Nineteen Current and Former Students Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowships  teaser image

Nineteen Current and Former Students Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowships
 

Nineteen current or former Texas A&M University students have been named National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) award recipients for 2022. Winners with ties to Texas A&M include nine current graduate students and one current undergraduate. The remaining nine students earned bachelor’s degrees at Texas A&M and are currently in graduate programs at other institutions.

The NSF GFRP recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students pursuing research-based master’s and doctoral degrees at accredited U.S. institutions in NSF-supported science, technology, engineering, and mathematics disciplines. Undergraduate seniors and graduate students in the first year of their graduate programs are eligible to apply.
The five-year fellowship provides three years of financial support including an annual stipend of $34,000 and a $12,000 cost of education allowance. Founded in 1951, the NSF GRFP is the oldest graduate fellowship of its kind, each year awarding approximately 2,000 students from around 13,000 applicants.

NSF graduate research fellows are anticipated to graduate as experts in their fields and contribute meaningfully to research, teaching, and innovation in ways that advance our nation’s technological infrastructure and national security, as well as the economic well-being of society at large.

Congratulations to this year's awardees:

Leeanne Nicole Blind-Doskocil, Meteorology
Antonio Cordova, Biochemistry
Madison Elaine Edwards, Chemistry (current Texas A&M graduate student)
Alyssa Felix Thayne, Chemistry (current Texas A&M undergraduate)
Kristel Forlano, Materials Science and Engineering
Dylan Halbeisen, Chemical Oceanography
Urvi Kaul, Biological Anthropology
Devon Lee Kulhanek, Chemical Engineering
Annais Belinda Muschett-Bonilla, Marine Biology
Mia Rayne Kreitlow, Psychology (current Texas A&M graduate student)
Christian Landry, Mechanical Engineering (current Texas A&M graduate student)
Brendan Lyle Murphy, Chemistry (current Texas A&M graduate student)
Anna Louise Pritchard, Engineering (current Texas A&M graduate student)
Krista Grace Schoonover, Chemistry (current Texas A&M graduate student)
Nicholas Charles Starvaggi, Chemistry (current Texas A&M graduate student)

Grayson Avery Tung, Entomology
Brent Vela, Materials Science and Engineering (current Texas A&M graduate student)
Brandon Michael Woo, Entomology (current Texas A&M graduate student)

Danielle Frances Yarbrough, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

For a complete list of winners, visit the NSF’s award offers page and for more information, visit the NSF GFRP website

 

About the Author

image of author Rob Dixon

Rob Dixon

Rob joined the Graduate and Professional School in February of 2020. He oversees communications and marketing. His favorite part of his job is writing about student successes. Read more by this author at the links below.

Read more by this Author

Related Content

Explore Grad Aggieland

News

Zahra Ghiasi Wins 2024 Three Minute Thesis Competition

After stellar presentations on research ranging from the irrationality of group-thinking to immune system treatments for PTSD, chemical engineering doctoral student Zhara Ghiasi emerged victorious at Texas A&M’s 12th annual Three Minute Thesis (3MT®) competition on Tuesday night.

View All News
Blog

Aggieland - Lessons and Gratitude

I came to Texas A&M as an international student, but I will leave as part of something much greater - the Aggie family. That is something that cannot be fully described in words, but felt in every action, connection, and step I take toward a brighter future.

View All Blogs
Defense Announcement

Spatially intensive fish inventories conducted 70 years apart reveal strong spatial footprints of reservoirs in a regulated temperate river

View All Defense
Announcements