“I’m fascinated (and enraged) by how political decisions have and continue to benefit the private sector and those most powerful in our communities, while historically marginalized communities are and continue to be left behind, especially as international environmental inequities are perpetuated,” Van Horn said. “As our world globalizes, these environmental inequalities are exacerbated.”
Van Horn said she is interested in pursuing a master of arts in international affairs or a similar degree and conducting international research. She is particularly interested in Chinese language and culture, in which she’s already placed a great deal of academic energy. In addition to pursuing a bachelor’s degree in Chinese, in 2020 she worked with Ying Feng Kline, lecturer in Chinese in the College of the Liberal Arts, to complete an independent research project about international students from China and their perceptions of environmental sustainability. She studied abroad in Beijing during the summer of 2019 where she participated in an intensive language program at the Capital Normal University.
At Penn State, Van Horn has served with a number of organizations, such as the University Park Undergraduate Association as its director of sustainability, the University Park Student Fee Board, Students Teaching Students and Student Sustainability Advisory Council.
She said becoming a Truman Scholar would be an honor.
“And, more than that, the resources that being selected would unlock would elevate my capacity to serve the United States and our world,” she said. “The networking opportunities, the support system, the internship placement and more, would enable me to focus on addressing the pervasive environmental inequities in our world.
About the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation
For 2020, the Truman Foundation reported they received 773 applications from 316 colleges and universities. Penn State has had a total of eight Truman Scholars, with the most recent being Sara Ryan, a political science and African-American studies major, who received the award in 2004. Selection by the Truman Foundation is based off of records of leadership, public service and academic achievement.
Students interested in applying are encouraged to meet with Undergraduate Research and Fellowships Mentoring (URFM) in their first or second year of undergraduate studies to begin preparing.
In order to apply, students must be a U.S. citizen or a U.S. national from the Pacific Islands; be a college junior with a GPA of 3.7 or higher; plan to attend a professional or graduate school to prepare for a career in government, nonprofit or advocacy sectors; and commit to spending three of the first seven years after graduate or professional school working in public service. More than 3,000 Truman Scholarships have been awarded to date.
Penn State students interested in this and other funded opportunities that help students achieve their goals are invited to reach out to URFM at urfm@psu.edu.
Undergraduate Research and Fellowships Mentoring is part of the Penn State Office of Undergraduate Education, the academic administrative unit that provides leadership and coordination for University-wide programs and initiatives in support of undergraduate teaching and learning at Penn State. Learn more about Undergraduate Education at undergrad.psu.edu.