Retrievers are upping their research game in the 2024-25 Fulbright U.S. Student Program cohort

Published: Sep 23, 2024

UMBC 2024 – 2025 Fulbright U.S. Student Program recipients (l-r): Sarah-Fatime Yoda ’24, chemical engineering, research award to France; Jennifer Sorrells ’22, political science, research award to North Macedonia; and Nicole Attram ’23, mechanical engineering, master's award to Italy. (Marlayna Demond '11/UMBC)

At the height of COVID-19, Nicole Attram developed severe lower back pain which impeded her mobility and flexibility. While physical therapy helped mitigate the symptoms, the cause is still unknown. That experience determined the course of her career. After graduating from UMBC in 2023, Attram, mechanical engineering, received a 2024 – 2025 Fulbright U.S. Student award to study in Milan, Italy, in a master’s program in international healthcare management, economics, and policy specializing in pharmaceuticals and medical technology at the SDA Bocconi School of Management.

“This experience has inspired my interest in orthopedic biomechanics, particularly prosthetics, and exoskeletons, to help restore autonomy to individuals with lifelong mobility challenges,” shares Attram on her website. “I aim to conduct research at the intersection of systemic racism, healthcare policy, and orthopedic biomechanics to offer holistic care and assistive technology to underserved communities.” 

Each year, more than 10,000 students apply to the Fulbright U.S. Student Program with just over 2,000 selected from hundreds of colleges and universities across the U.S. In the last decade, UMBC students and alumni have received more than 85 Fulbright U.S. Student Program awards for research and teaching placements in Africa, Asia and the Pacific, the Middle East, South America, and Europe. UMBC was named a Fulbright Top Producing Institution for the third time in five years for the 2023 – 2024 cycle.

2024 – 2025 Fulbright t U.S. Student Program awardee sits on a stairwell wearing a gold sweater with black letter spelling UMBC and black dress pants.
2024 – 2025 Fulbright A LinkedIN post about a Fulbright award to Italy UMBC

Attram’s mentor Maria C. Sanchez, director of the Grand Challenge Scholars Program, professor of the practice, and director of the Engineering and Computing Education Program, says, “Nicole always displayed the motivation, perseverance, and inquisitiveness of a successful researcher. She also demonstrated a high level of global awareness that was refreshing to see in a non-international undergraduate student.”

Advancing global research

Attram is among eight recent graduates and alumni in UMBC’s 2024 – 2025 Fulbright U.S. Student Program class who are sharing their knowledge and building community around the world by earning a master’s degree, conducting research, or teaching English. This year is especially significant, as six of eight awards are research-focused, marking the highest number of research awards in UMBC’s Fulbright history. Students seeking research awards must develop a proposal in coordination with potential advisers in the universities and laboratories where they want to study as part of their application. Graduate degree awards require submitting both Fulbright and graduate school applications.

  1. Arpita Tuladhar ’23 public health, Research Award to Germany
  2. Jennifer Sorrells ’22, political science, Research Award to North Macedonia
  3. Jolie Greer ’24, psychology, Research Award to Bulgaria 
  4. Lauren Mister ’24, teaching English to speakers of other languages, English Teaching Award to Bahrain
  5. Sarah-Fatime Yoda ’24, chemical engineering, Research Award to France
  6. Stuart Holton ’24, political science, English Teaching Award to Slovakia
  7. Timothy Mallard, M.A. ’21, teaching English to speakers of other languages, Research Award to Uganda
An adult with a bald head and grey beard wearing a black polo shirt with the under armor  and UMBC logos 2024 – 2025 Fulbright

“This year’s cohort of Fulbright recipients and alternates shows the country and the globe what we at UMBC already know,” says Brian Souders, Ph.D. ’09, language, literacy, and culture, M.A.’19, TESOL, the associate director of global learning at UMBC’s Center for Global Engagement. In this role, Souders, who received a 2023 Fulbright International Education Administrator Award to Germany, has led hundreds of Retrievers through the Fulbright application process as UMBC’s Fulbright Program advisor. “We produce world-class graduates who will lead the future with their work in laboratories, in the field, and in the classrooms throughout the world.” (Image by Marlayna Demond ’11/UMBC)

Learn more about UMBC’s Fulbright Program.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Scroll to Top