From Starkville to Scotland: MSU student-athlete anticipates 2021 Fulbright U.K. Summer Institute
Contact: Sasha Steinberg
STARKVILLE, Miss.āŗ£½ĒŅłÄøĀŅĀ×ās Judy and Bobby Shackouls Honors College, James Worth Bagley College of Engineering and university Athletics will be well represented next summer in the United Kingdom where a Bulldog student-athlete will participate in the prestigious Fulbright U.K. Summer Institute program.
Reese A. Dunne of Starkville, a junior mechanical engineering major and member of MSUās cross country and track and field teams, is looking forward to immersing himself in a new culture during his studies at Scotlandās University of Strathclyde and the Glasgow School of Art.
āIām super excited because I feel like Glasgow will be the perfect backdrop for me as a first-time international traveler,ā he said. āIāve lived in the South my whole life, so it will be fun to explore somewhere different.ā
Dunne is one of this yearās five nationwide Fulbright U.K. Summer Institute recipients who will travel to Scotland next summer, along with five others who will be selected from next yearās applicant pool. He chose the Fulbright U.K. Summer Institute program in Scotlandāone of four options for 2021ābecause it specifically focuses on technology, innovation and creativity.
āI thought this institute sounded perfect for me with my engineering background and passion for undergraduate research and solving global challenges,ā he said. āIām excited to visit with and learn from faculty members because I think it will help me with leadership opportunities, including a service organization called Nonnieās Notes that I launched during my junior year at Starkville High School.ā
Dunne founded Nonnieās Notes to honor his grandmother Nonnie, who was diagnosed with Alzheimerās disease in 2005.
āI am very into musicianship, and I wanted to bring together other musically inclined students to perform at retirement homes for patients with dementia and Alzheimerās disease,ā said Dunne, an avid pianist. āItās one of the coolest things Iāve ever done, and Iām really excited for COVID to be over, so we can continue with it.ā
One of Dunneās fondest āNonnieās Notesā memories is seeing his grandmother sing and clap along while his brother Connor performed Scott Joplinās classic ragtime piece āThe Entertainer.ā
āIt made me happy to see Nonnie happy, along with a lot of other residents who came in while we played piano,ā said Dunne, who also is a member of the MSU ŗ£½ĒŅłÄøĀŅĀ×Singers. āI feel like music has therapeutic effects that have not been explored yet, and thatās one thing I really want to do through Nonnieās Notes.ā
Dunne said he has benefitted from the support of the Shackouls Honors College since his freshman year when he enrolled as a recipient of the G.V. āSonnyā Montgomery Presidential Endowed Scholarship. He also is receiving the James Carl and Hazel Forbes Endowed Scholarship through the Bagley College of Engineering.
āGrowing up in Starkville and with both parents working at ŗ£½ĒŅłÄøĀŅĀ×, I knew that if I came to State, that was definitely something I wanted to be a part of,ā he said of the Shackouls Honors College, where his sister Marika will be a senior in the fall.
His father Jim Dunne is associate vice president for academic affairs in MSUās Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President and a professor in the College of Arts and Sciencesā Department of Physics and Astronomy. Dunneās mother Demi is an office associate for MSUās University Academic Advising Center.
āIāve had a passion for math and science all my life and knew I wanted to do something in the engineering field, but another big reason I came to Mississippi ŗ£½ĒŅłÄøĀŅĀ×was because of the ,ā Dunne said. āIt allows me to take business courses throughout the four years I pursue my mechanical engineering degree, and then get an MBA in the fifth year. Being able to do both is awesome.ā
āAwesomeā also is how Dunne describes his experience as a Bulldog student-athlete.
āOne great thing about being at Mississippi ŗ£½ĒŅłÄøĀŅĀ×is the diverse group of people,ā he said. āCross country and track are mentally and physically challenging sports, but doing them here has been so rewarding.ā
Dunne is equally confident that next summerās Fulbright U.K. Summer Institute experience will be just as beneficial, and said he has much gratitude for MSU Professor of English Tommy Anderson who helped him throughout the application process. Anderson serves as the Shackouls Honors Collegeās director of fellowships, the College of Arts and Sciencesā associate dean for academic affairs and MSU Librariesā interim dean.
āDr. Anderson is so knowledgeable of prestigious scholarships like Fulbright, Rhodes and Goldwater, and it has been great to ask him questions. I thought it was interesting that freshmen and sophomores could apply for these types of scholarships, and that was one reason I wanted to pursue this opportunity.ā
Dunne said he ā100 percentā encourages other students to consider MSU prestigious scholarship opportunities, just as fellow Starkville native Jacob N. Easley inspired him to apply for the Fulbright U.K. Summer Institute. Easley, who graduated summa cum laude in May with an MSU bachelorās in mechanical engineering, also studied at the University of Strathclyde and Glasgow School of Art as the first MSU student to participate in the Fulbright Summer Institute.
āHearing about Jacobās time abroad made me want to have my own experiences in Scotland,ā Dunne said. āI want to be an ambassador for the Fulbright Summer Institute program and an inspiration for other students at ŗ£½ĒŅłÄøĀŅĀ×.ā
For more on MSUās Judy and Bobby Shackouls Honors College, visit ; the Bagley College of Engineering and Department of Mechanical Engineering at and ; MSU Athletics at .
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