Provides $9,500 per Year for Two Years plus NOAA Summer Internship
Jacob “True” Furrh, a University of Houston environmental science and civil engineering major, was selected as a recipient of a Hollings Environmental Science Scholarship.
The Hollings Scholarship, instituted in 2005, pays tribute to Senator Ernest Hollings of South Carolina, an advocate for ocean policy and conservation. The scholarship supports undergraduate education in the environmental sciences through scholarships and internships with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
The scholarship, open to university sophomores, offers up to $9,500 in tuition per year for the junior and senior year, as well as a 10-week, paid internship at a NOAA facility during the summer. Rachel Sanchez-Ruffra, a biology major in UH’s College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, was also selected for the honor.
Furrh, a Tier One Scholar and member of the Honors College, is active in NSM Student Leadership, is a senior editor of the student-run journal Acta Mineralogica Houstonica, and spends weekends as a coordinator in UH CARES. Furrh participated in a UH study abroad to Iceland and completed a Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship in 2017. These experiences heightened his interest in research into environmental issues. Through the NOAA Hollings Scholarship, he hopes to study coastal resiliency and how environmental stewardship can mitigate the effects of disasters.
By offering hands-on experience in environmental science, research, technology, policy, education, and management, internships with NOAA have a proven track record of launching successful careers in environmental science. NOAA reports that 75 percent of Hollings recipients go on to graduate school, and more than 7 percent have since received National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships.
Applicants to the Hollings Scholarship must be sophomores at the time of application and should have an interest in pursuing a career related to public service or oceanic and atmospheric research. The application for 2019 will be available on September 1.
- Excerpted from an article by Mallory Chesser, Honors College