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Liberal & Fine Arts

Mellon grant gives UTSA students the opportunity to make an impact

Enrique Iglesias
Enrique Iglesias
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The UTSA Mellon Undergraduate Humanities Pathways Program has been awarded a three-year, $500,000 grant from the Mellon Foundation that will give more students the opportunity to train as researchers, with the goal of making a societal impact.

The grant will fund mentorship and training opportunities for 36 students who plan to pursue graduate studies in the humanities and interpretive social sciences.

The students will conduct research alongside UTSA faculty mentors on the theme “Latinos in a Changing World.” They will also visit Texas humanities doctoral programs, attend professionalization workshops, and receive support for their applications to humanities graduate programs.

Housed in the UTSA Mexico Center, the Pathways Program builds a bridge to the professoriate for historically underserved students, and others invested in diversifying academia, said Jerry González, director of the UTSA Mexico Center and principal investigator for the program.

This new project is following on the heels of two other very successful ones. The first two Pathways Programs spanned 2016-2019 and 2019-2022. This current cohort is in the research internship phase where students are expected to apply for graduate programs in fall 2022.

“Our enthusiasm for this project is driven by the enthusiasm that students have shown for the program over the years,” González said. “For students with aspirations to go to graduate school or enter the academy as a faculty member, the program aims to demystify every step of the process by making visible the hidden curriculum of the Ph.D. route.”

Previous fellows have gone on to doctoral programs with a deeper understanding of what to expect, which helps to adjust to the workload demands and nuances of the scholarly environment. The program also emphasizes a critical pedagogy that challenges students to engage in the most challenging political and cultural issues of today, he added.

“This is not by accident. Our students shape the curriculum by virtue of their research interests, methodological approaches and requests for particular programming. The Mellon Foundation’s support for this program makes a significant impact on the students, many of whom are learning about academia and about Latino studies at the same time,” González said.

The program has produced 16 Ph.D. students and at least 15 master’s degree students, one of which held a Fulbright Fellowship in Germany.

Since its inception, the program has consistently met the goals laid out in the original proposal, which is to expose students from underrepresented groups to doctoral humanities studies.

González added, “The program has prepared them to be competitive in an increasingly difficult environment for Ph.D. acceptance, as well as for success in a Ph.D. program.”

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