
As of early July, 17 University of Pennsylvania students and alumni have been offered Fulbright U.S. Student Program grants for the 2025-26 academic year. The list includes six members of the Class of 2025, who graduated in May, and three current graduate students.
They will conduct research, pursue graduate degrees, or teach English in Australia, Austria, Canada, Germany, Greece, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Moldova, Morocco, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Türkiye, and the United Kingdom.
The Fulbright Program, which has rolling admissions, is the United States government’s flagship international educational exchange program, awarding grants to fund as long as 12 months of international experience. Penn consistently ranks as a “Top-Producing Institution” among those with the highest number of candidates selected for the Fulbright U.S. Student Program.
In addition to the 17 recipients, seven Penn affiliates have been named alternates for Fulbright awards during this application cycle. Most of the Penn recipients applied for the Fulbright with support from the Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships.
Among Penn’s Fulbright grant recipients for 2025-26 are three current graduate students.
Claire Elliot is a doctoral student in religious studies in the School of Arts & Sciences, studying modern Theravada Buddhism, primarily in Thailand and Sri Lanka. She graduated from Penn in 2017 with a bachelor’s degree in religious studies. She has been offered a Fulbright to research contemporary dreaming practices in Thailand.
Arielle Hardy is a doctoral candidate in Penn’s Art and Archaeology of the Mediterranean World Graduate Group. She has been offered a Fulbright Greece-Turkey Joint Research Award to study Hellenistic altars.
Theresa Haupt is a graduate student pursuing a master’s degree in bioengineering, concentrating in biomedical devices, from the School of Engineering and Applied Science.. She graduated with a bachelor’s degree in chemistry in 2024 from Haverford College, which assisted in her Fulbright application. She has been offered a Fulbright to conduct research at the University of Melbourne in Australia, focusing on the kinematics of patients with lower limb osteoarthritis.
Six of the recipients graduated in May in the Class of 2025.
Leo Biehl earned a bachelor’s degree in urban studies and political science with a minor in German from the College of Arts & Sciences. He has been offered a Fulbright Community-Based Combined Award to Austria to study housing policy at TU Wien, the Vienna University of Technology, and explore the city’s novel approach to reducing homelessness by working for neunerhaus, an Austrian community organization. He also would teach English at Austrian schools.
Emmie Chacker submatriculated to earn a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in biology from the School of Arts & Sciences. She has been offered a Fulbright to study biology at the Berlin Institute of Health and Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine in Germany.
Timothy Lie earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from the College. He has been offered a Fulbright to conduct research at Universitas Indonesia, exploring the role of mitochondrial DNA variants in dengue severity and investigating how mitochondrial function is permanently altered after dengue virus infection.
Henry McDaniel earned a bachelor’s degree in Russian and East European studies and diplomatic history from the College. He has been offered a Fulbright to teach English in Moldova.
Aleena Parenti earned a bachelor’s degree in linguistics with a minor in Chinese language and culture and a certificate in French from the College. She has been offered a Fulbright to teach English in Taiwan.
Elan Roth earned bachelor’s degree in mathematical logic with a minor in religious studies from the College. He has been offered a Fulbright to pursue mathematics research at the University of Waterloo in Canada, building on research in computable algebra, which classifies the difficulty of calculating properties of mathematical objects found in nature.
Among the recipients were alumni who graduated between 2024 and 2021.
Class of 2024
Nova Meng earned a bachelor’s degree in bioengineering with a minor in chemistry from the School of Engineering and Applied Science. She has been offered a Fulbright to conduct research on the foraging behavior of wild bees and honeybees at the Australian National University in Canberra.
Rajat Ramesh earned a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and history from the College. He has been offered a Fulbright to go to Bangalore, India, to study how electronic health record systems can improve tuberculosis reporting and care delivery among rural populations.
Class of 2023
Zane Grenoble graduated from Penn’s dual-degree Huntsman Program in the Wharton School and the College. He has been offered a Fulbright through the Binational Business Program to work in Mexico City while taking international business courses at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México.
Class of 2022
Emily R. Antrilli earned a master’s degree in secondary education from the Graduate School of Education. She has been offered a Fulbright to teach English in Taiwan.
Emma Steinheimer earned a master’s degree in education from the Graduate School of Education. She has been offered a Fulbright to teach English in Morocco.
Rachel Swym earned a bachelor’s degree in English with minors in environmental humanities and consumer psychology from the College. She has been offered a Fulbright to pursue a master’s of science and health communications degree at the University of Manchester in the United Kingdom.
Teresa Xie earned a bachelor’s degree in political science with a minor in cinema studies from the College. She has been offered the Young Professional Journalist Fulbright to conduct a year-long journalism project in Berlin, examining how the 24-hour culture shapes marginalized communities, which can find refuge in creative spaces after-hours.
Class of 2021
Paul Lin earned a bachelor’s degree in earth science from the College, a master’s degree in computer science from the School of Engineering and Applied Science, and a postgraduate degree in GIS and Spatial Analysis from the Weitzman School of Design. He has been offered a Fulbright research scholarship under the U.S.-Korea Presidential STEM Initiative Award. He would go to Seoul to work with professors from Korea University and Seoul National University to study the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning for optimizing evacuation routes under crises scenarios.
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