Lafayette is one of four  exclusively undergraduate liberal arts and engineering colleges among  the 108 institutions whose students were honored
Meredith White ’06 was recently awarded the National Defense  Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship. Run by the  Department of Defense, the fellowship program is committed to increasing  the number and quality of the nation’s scientists and engineers.
Lafayette is one of four exclusively undergraduate liberal arts and  engineering colleges among the 108 institutions whose students were  honored. White also received an honorable mention for a National Science  Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship.
The three-year NDSEG fellowship, sponsored specifically by the Office  of Navel Research, includes full tuition to any U.S. graduate school  and a stipend of over $30,000 for each year.
White, who graduated with a B.S. degree in biochemistry, is currently  enrolled in the joint graduate program through the Massachusetts  Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute  (MIT/WHOI), with a focus on biological oceanography. She plans on  becoming a marine biologist.
“I picked Lafayette because I love science, but I also enjoy the  liberal arts,” she says. “My education at Lafayette has really prepared  me well for graduate school.”
White’s proposed oceanographic research examines the forced movement  of benthic organisms (those that live on the lowest level of a body of  water), and what factors allow some species to thrive in new areas, but  discourage others.
White’s success reflects Lafayette’s focus on undergraduate research  and close student-faculty interaction.
She performed EXCEL research examining snails infected with parasites  with Bernard Fried, Kreider Professor Emeritus of Biology; Joseph  Sherma, Larkin Professor Emeritus of Chemistry; and Michael  Chejlava, the chemistry department’s instrumentation specialist. She  coauthored an article with Sherma and Fried based on this research  which appeared in the Journal of Liquid Chromatography & Related  Technologies (2006), and the Journal of Parasitology (2007).
She also spent a semester in the Lafayette faculty-led program at  Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, Ghana,  taking courses in chemistry, African culture, and African art history.
See a list of  recent Lafayette recipients of national and international scholarships  and fellowships for undergraduate and post-graduate study. For  information on applying for scholarships and fellowships, contact Julia  A. Goldberg, associate dean of the College, (610) 330-5521.