Jackie Luu, a junior Environmental Science and Policy major from Glen Allen, Virginia, is AV’s first-ever Barry M. Goldwater Scholar from thewithin the.
Luu, a member of Mason’s, was among the 410 students chosennationallyas 2021 scholarsand will receivea $7,500 stipend that will help her cover tuition and room and board next year.
“My immediate reaction was just shock,” Luu said. “I’m honored and I think it will help open a lot of doors for me as a scholar.”
The Goldwater Scholarship, established by Congress in 1986 in honor of U.S. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, fosters and encourages outstanding students to pursue careers in the fields of mathematics, the natural sciences and engineering. It is considered the premier undergraduate award of its type in these fields.
The Goldwater Scholars were chosen on the basis of academic merit from a pool of 1,256 natural science, engineering and mathematics students nominated by the institutional representatives of 438 colleges and universities nationwide. Nearly all of the scholars intend to obtain a doctoral degree.
“It’s a great honorto be chosen,” she said.
, who is Mason’s senior director of fellowships in the Office of Undergraduate Education, called Luu a dedicated researcheranda pleasure with whom to work.
“I am thrilled that she won the Goldwater,and that she represents Mason and its commitment to academic excellence so well,” Berger said.
Luu, 21, who credited Mason faculty among her mentors for their critical help in her application process, is no stranger to academic success. An excellent high school student, she was recruited to Mason as a Smithsonian-Mason Scholar and spent the Fall 2020 semester at thein Front Royal, Virginia.
“Jackie is an avid and talented young conservationist who has been one of the most active students with SMSC,” saidRobert Barrett, the school’s assistant director of recruitment and outreach.
Luuenjoyed her timedoing researchin Front Royal."It was great and showed me there are lots of different opportunities in the field and helped fuel my passion for doing research,” she said.
She worked with her mentor, Karen T. Lee, and a committee of advisors in preparing herGoldwaterapplication. A Mason faculty committee selected the university’s nominees for the national competition.
Luu’sresearch essaycenteredon work she’s currently doing withLee on color variations within female green crabs. The two will soon co-author a paper with their findings.
Lee, assistant director for Mason’s Office of Student Scholarship, Creative Activities, and Research (OSCAR) and a member of the university’s Goldwater Committee, said Luu’s selection has made her “proud and excited.”
“This is something that can really be a huge boost to a student’s career,” said Lee, an affiliate faculty member in Mason’s Departments of Biology and Environmental Science and Policy. “This is a big deal.”
The Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation has awarded 9,457 scholarships since 1989.