MURFREESBORO — One
bright MTSU graduate’s pathway to the stars is being paved with a major
monetary boost.
Katelyn Stringer, who graduated from MTSU in May 2015 with a
bachelor’s degree in physics, will use her $5,000 fellowship from the Phi Kappa
Phi honors society to help finance her graduate degrees in astronomy at Texas
A&M University.
“I was not expecting it at all,” Stringer said of her
stipend. “It was such a nice surprise.”
Stringer’s academic excellence in high school resulted in a
Buchanan Scholarship, which paid for her entire baccalaureate education at
MTSU.
“We all know that college is expensive and I’ve been very
fortunate … to have the Buchanan Fellowship,” said Stringer. “But I also really
don’t have anything left over. So it’ll be really nice to have a … start on
making a safety net for the future.”
Included in that economic “safety net” is a three-year diversity
fellowship from Texas A&M, which Stringer will supplement with part-time
teaching work and research grants.
Although she won’t become an official student at A&M
until September, she began research on July 6 to get a head start on the work
to come.
The Lake Charles, Louisiana, native, who grew up in Smyrna,
Tennessee, will study the properties of very old stars from a galaxy that was
sucked into the Milky Way by gravity.
Last summer, on a visit to A&M’s McDonald Observatory,
Stringer was allowed to climb inside a telescope as workers were installing a
new secondary mirror.
“I put on these little goofy bootie-looking things over my
shoes, and I climbed inside a 107-inch diameter telescope,” she said.
Ironically, Stringer admits to being “lost in space” when
she first arrived at MTSU.
“I wouldn’t say that I was aimless, but I really didn’t have
a concrete direction,” she said.
Stringer credits professors Eric Klumpe, Daniel Erenso and
Charles Higgins and retired professor Vic Montemayor with inspiring her choice
of astronomy.
“The more I learned, the more I grew to love it,” Stringer
said.
She loved it so much that she served as president of the MTSU
Astronomy Club from 2013 to 2015.
Stringer also credits Laura Clippard, a coordinator in the
University Honors College, with helping her craft the application that
convinced Phi Kappa Phi to grant her the fellowship.
Phi Kappa Phi was founded in 1897 at the University of Maine
to acknowledge and honor excellence in all academic disciplines. Its motto is
“Philosophia Krateito Photon,” which is Greek for “let the love of learning
rule humanity.”
“Having a committee of successful people look at my application
and say, ‘Yes, we think she has potential,’ that’s an awesome pat on the back,”
Stringer said.
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