The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

TWO METRO ATLANTANS ARE NAMED RHODES SCHOLARS

Phaidra Buchanan, Sam Patterson are named to 2021 class.

- By Rosalind Bentley rosalind. bentley@ ajc. com

Two university students from metro Atlanta have been selected as Rhodes Scholars for 2021, the Rhodes Trust announced Saturday.

Phaidra Buchanan, a University of Georgia student from Tyrone, and Samuel E. Patterson III, a Universit y of Maryland, Baltimore County, student from Marietta, are among 32 U. S. students named scholars- elect by the selection committee. They will pursue degrees in their chosen fifields of study at Oxford University in England beginning in October.

Buchanan is a senior at the University of Georgia, where she is completing a Bachelor of Science in Education. The Tyrone native is planning to pursue a Master of Science in comparativ­e and internatio­nal education.

While Buchanan plans a career in education, she played a large role in helping UGA reckon with the role slavery played in the university’s developmen­t and the universit y’s role in perpetuati­ng the institutio­n of slavery. As a member of UGA’S History of Slavery research team, Buchanan researched the lived experience­s of enslaved people connected to the university, the Trust said in a statement.

S he t o l d t he Rhodes Tr us t

she wanted to be a teacher “who fosters criticalit­y, compassion and joy,” and who advocates for policies that empower students and communitie­s. At UGA she i s a volunteer with U- Lead Athens, a tutor for the Athens Anti- Discrimina­tion Movement Tutoring Service and an assistant and panel moderator for the Morehouse College Annual Math Competitio­ns Bootcamp.

“The University of Georgia is very proud of our newest Rhodes Scholar,” President Jere W. Morehead said i n a s t atement. “Phaidra has amassed an impressive record of academic achievemen­t, engagement and leadership already as a UGA student, and we look forward to the positive impact she will continue to make on the world as she pursues her education and career path.”

In a statement provided by UGA, Buchanan said, “I am honored to join a long line of people pushing for equity and justice in education. I aspire to work alongside them to create a system that values and empowers all children to find their place in the world and improve it in their own unique ways. I appreciate the supportive community around me, and I look forward to representi­ng them as I take my place at Oxford.”

Patterson, of Marietta, is a senior at UMBC completing three bachelor’s degrees — in mathematic­s, statistics and economics. His work centers on equity in transporta­tion infrastruc­ture as a way to improve economic opportunit­ies in communitie­s. He plans to pursue a Master of Science in Nature, Society and Environmen­tal Governance. A musician and community music director,

Patterson plays upright bass and electric bass.

“Sam i s a deep c r i t i c al t hinker who l ooks at c ar culture and considers i t s effects not only on the environmen­t, but also in how it shapes access to education, work, health care, food and culture,” April Householde­r, director of prestigiou­s scholarshi­ps at UMBC, said in a statement. “He raises questions about how class and race intersect with suburban and city planning to limit people’s lives.”

P a t t e r s o n r e c e n t l y extended his research at the National Bureau of Economic Research, where he evaluated trends in transporta­tion changes in urban centers due to the pandemic.

“I’m so excited to go to the U. K.,” Patterson said in a statement. “I think it will do wonders for my research when I experience the European perspectiv­e on public transporta­tion and its place in society and sustainabi­lity. There are so many brilliant academics at Oxford that I’ m raring to meet. I just feel so fortunate to be where I am and to be going where I’m going.”

According to the Rhodes Trust, 22 of the scholars are s t udents of color; 1 0 are Black, equal to the greatest number elected in one year in the United States. Nine are first- generation Americans or immigrants; and one is a Dreamer with active DACA status. Seventeen of the winners are women, 14 are men and one is nonbinary.

“Thi s ye ar ’s Americ an Rhodes Scholars — i ndependent­ly elected by 16 committees around the country meeting simultaneo­usly — refl ec t t he remarkable diversity that characteri­zes and strengthen­s the United States,” Elliot F. Gerson, American Secretary of the Rhodes Trust, said in a statement.

The s cholarship­s were created in 1902 by the will of Cecil Rhodes. They provide all expenses for two or three years of study at the University of Oxford. They are “t he oldest and bestknown award for internatio­nal study, and arguably the most famous academic award available to American college graduates,” Gerson said in the statement.

 ??  ??
 ?? ANDREW DAVIS TUCKER/ UGA AND UMBC ?? Phaidra Buchanan and Sam Patterson, of metro Atlanta, were announced as two of the next Rhodes Scholars.
ANDREW DAVIS TUCKER/ UGA AND UMBC Phaidra Buchanan and Sam Patterson, of metro Atlanta, were announced as two of the next Rhodes Scholars.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States