Public Health | Today at Elon | 51±ŹÁÏÍű /u/news Wed, 29 Apr 2026 18:24:14 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Elon welcomes 10th class of Multifaith Scholars /u/news/2026/04/29/elon-welcomes-tenth-class-of-multifaith-scholars/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 13:05:57 +0000 /u/news/?p=1045738
The 10th class of Multifaith Scholars.

Six rising juniors have been named members of the tenth class of Multifaith Scholars, a two-year fellows program for juniors and seniors that offers a closely mentored, experientially rich and intellectually rigorous educational opportunity for students with significant potential.

After a highly selective application and interview process, students are awarded $5,000 annually to support research and study in global contexts connected with religious diversity and multi-religious societies. Students who show great potential as academically curious and socially engaged leaders committed to their own ongoing development and the enhancement of their local and global communities are selected each spring.

“I am delighted to welcome these six impressive rising juniors into the Multifaith Scholars program and look forward to supporting their compelling projects over the next two years,” said Amy Allocco, director of the Multifaith Scholars program. “Their research interests include music and Christian religious experience, linguistic anthropology and the vocabulary of faith, religious diversity in clinical settings, gender and religious roles in Asian art, the intersection of biomedicine and traditional healing practices and the history of Black churches here in Alamance County.”

In addition to pursuing their faculty-mentored undergraduate research projects and undertaking academic coursework in religious studies and interreligious studies, the scholars will extend the program’s ongoing community partnership with the Burlington Masjid. Through the partnership, scholars teach English classes, participate in youth and social events with the local Muslim community, join community garden workdays, volunteer with the food pantry and take part in potlucks and iftar meals during Ramadan.

“It is wonderful to welcome such a strong class with such diverse academic interests,” reflected Brian Pennington, director of the Center for the Study of Religion, Culture, and Society, which supports the Multifaith Scholars program. “As we approach the tenth anniversary of the MFS, it is gratifying to see so many clear signs of the program’s maturity and significance: our largest class ever, the inclusion of seven new faculty mentors, and students majoring in three disciplines never before represented in MFS.”

The 2026-2028 Multifaith Scholars

Addison Anderson

Elon student in front of spring foilage.Majors: History, Sociology

Minors: Museum Studies, Public History, and Interreligious Studies

Mentor: Amanda Kleintop (History and Geography)

Project Title: History and Memory of Alamance County’s Black Churches

Proposed Research: Examine the relationship between Alamance County African American churches and local politics in North Carolina from Reconstruction through 1900.

Blair Berenson

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Anthropology

Minors: Jewish Studies, Sociology, Philosophy and Interreligious Studies

Mentors: Amy Allocco (Religious Studies) and Devin Proctor (Sociology & Anthropology)

Project Title: An Anthropological Approach to Cross-Generational Shifts in Hindu and Jewish Perspectives of Faith in the US

Proposed Research: Conduct fieldwork in Jewish and Hindu communities in Atlanta to understand how different generations articulate the concept of faith.

Katie Castelo

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Biochemistry

Minors: Neuroscience, Spanish, and Interreligious Studies

Mentor: Cathy Quay (Nursing)

Project Title: Bridging Faith and Medicine: Improving Cultural Awareness of Religious Practices in the Healthcare System

Proposed Research: Explore the healthcare industry’s approach to death and ways it can be more open to diverse religious practices.

Faith Elliott

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Neuroscience

Minors: Expressive Arts and Interreligious Studies

Mentors: Lynn Huber (Religious Studies) and Morgan Patrick (Music Theory)

Project Title: Neurotheology: An Interdisciplinary Study into Sacred Music and Feelings of Well-Being

Proposed Research: Examine the historical significance of music and understand and measure the behavioral impact associated with an emotional, transcendent spiritual experience and the well-being that results from listening.

Mariama Jalloh

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Public Health

Minors: Biology and Interreligious Studies

Mentor: Sandra Darfour-Oduro (Public Health)

Project Title: Faith, Healers, and Health: How Religious Beliefs and Community Trust Shape Healthcare Decisions in West African Communities

Proposed Research: Examine how religious leaders and traditional healers influence healthcare decisions in communities in Ghana, and how public health programs can partner with these practitioners to improve health education outcomes.

Ryleigh Rouse

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Majors: Art History, Religious Studies

Minors: Museum Studies and Public History and Asian Studies

Mentor: Kirstin Ringelberg (Art History)

Project Title: Religion’s Impact on Japanese Women: Through an Art Historical Lens

Proposed Research: Employ art as a lens to examine how religion shaped gender perceptions and Japanese women’s roles.

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Fifteen students selected as 2026 Lumen Scholars /u/news/2026/04/24/fifteen-students-selected-as-2026-lumen-scholars/ Fri, 24 Apr 2026 13:19:06 +0000 /u/news/?p=1045344 Fifteen rising juniors at Elon have been selected to receive the 2026 Lumen Prize, the university’s premier undergraduate research award that includes a $20,000 scholarship to support and celebrate their academic achievements and research proposals.

Lumen Scholars will work closely with their mentors during the next two years to pursue and complete their projects. Efforts traditionally include coursework, study abroad, research both on and off campus, internships locally and overseas, program development, and creative productions and performances.

“It was another very competitive year, and the Lumen Advisory Board saw many good applications,” said Michael Carignan, director of the Lumen Prize and professor of history. “These 15 represent truly special talent and engagement. We look forward to watching the projects unfold over the next two years.”

The name for the Lumen Prize comes from Elon’s historic motto, “Numen Lumen,” which are Latin words meaning “spiritual light” and “intellectual light.” The words, which are found on the 51±ŹÁÏÍű seal, signify the highest purposes of an Elon education.

2026 Lumen Prize Winners

Tajallah Amirkhil
Mentor: Molly Green
Major: Public Health & Biochemistry
Project: Barriers and Resilience: Exploring Mental Health among Afghan Refugee Women in North Carolina

Emma Briceño
Mentors: Dan Burns & Tita Ramirez
Major: English (Creative Writing)
Project: The Desert Lighthouse, a Novel: an Exploration of Queerness and Safety through Body Horror, Immortality, and Genre Reinvention

Kelley Calvillo
Mentor: Renay Aumiller
Major: Dance Performance and Choreography
Project: The Body Knows: Developing a Feminist Framework for Distributed Choreographic Authorship

Chloe Cone
Mentors: Eryn Bernardy & Ahlam Armaly
Major: Biochemistry
Project: Solutions in the Soil: Unearthing Novel Antibacterial Compounds from Soil Microbes to Combat Antimicrobial Resistance

Sanai Crosby
Mentors: Lauren Kearns & Matt Wittstein
Major: Exercise Science & Dance Science
Project: Dance and Neural Activity: Examining Neural Activity Across the Choreographic Process and Performance Environments

Fleur Helmantel
Mentor: Scott Wolter
Major: Biomedical Engineering & Chinese Studies
Project: Development of Tissue-Mimicking Phantoms for the Treatment of Breast Cancer

Anna Keller
Mentor: Scott Morrison
Project: Perceptions and Practices of Outdoor Literacy: a Two-Part Mixed-Methods Study

Nevaeh Kimmie
Mentor: Katrina Jongman-Sereno
Major: Psychology & Economics
Project: To Code-Switch or Not to Code-Switch: Authenticity, Psychological Outcomes, and Social Judgement of Black College Students in Predominantly White Academic Spaces

Lisa Kranec
Mentors: Hwayeon Ryu & Efrain Rivera-Serrano
Major: Biomedical Engineering & Applied Mathematics
Project: Mathematical Modeling of Excessive Collagen Production in Cardiac Fibrosis

Jordyne Lewis
Mentor: Steve DeLoach
Major: Economic Consulting & Data Analytics
Refugees, Emotional Wellbeing, and Financial Inclusion in Uganda

Kendall Lewis
Mentor: Jen Uno
Major: Biochemistry & Mathematics
Project: Can the Microbiome Heal the Brain?Evaluating Butyrate’s Efficiency in Reducing Stroke Severity within the Context of Obesity

Ja’Mir Parham
Mentor: Zack Hutchens
Major: Astrophysics
Project: RESOLVE, ECO, and eRASS: Probing Galaxy Growth through Cold and Hot Gas

Danny Stern
Mentor: Karl Sienerth
Major: Chemistry
Project: From Backlog to Breakthrough: Use of Fluorescence Quenching for the Development of an Explosive Identification Database

Ainsley Thompson
Mentor: Yuko Miyamoto
Major: Biochemistry
Project: Decreasing Platinum Chemotherapy Resistance by Downregulating STAT3 and Upregulating PTEN in the SKOV3 Cell Line

Scout Winter
Mentor: Bill Evans
Major: Exercise Science
Project: Effects of a Whole-Food Plant-Based Diet on Insulin Resistance and Inflammation in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes

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Mallory Otten ’26, Rena Zito present research at sociology conference /u/news/2026/04/21/mallory-otten-26-rena-zito-present-research-at-sociology-conference/ Tue, 21 Apr 2026 16:31:08 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044119 Lumen Scholar and public health major Mallory Otten ’26 and her faculty mentor, Associate Professor of Sociology Rena Zito, presented their research, “Perpetrator Gender, Sexuality, and Perceptions of Intimate Partner Violence: Evidence from
an Experimental Vignette Study” at the annual meeting of the Southern Sociological Society on April 11 in Jacksonville, Florida. Their talk was included in the Crime, Law, and Deviance Mini-Conference.

Mallory Otten ’26

Otten and Zito’s research examined how gender and sexual orientation shape public perceptions of intimate partner violence (IPV). Using a nationally representative survey experiment with more than 1,600 U.S. adults, participants were shown the same IPV scenario, but with the perpetrator’s gender and sexual orientation changed across versions. They found that people judged heterosexual male perpetrators most harshly, while gay male perpetrators and heterosexual female perpetrators were seen as less culpable, less dangerous and less deserving of punishment. Lesbian perpetrators fell in between, suggesting that judgments about violence are shaped by assumptions about who is capable of causing harm and who is seen as a “real” victim.

The study draws attention to how stereotypes about masculinity, femininity and sexuality influence responses to abuse. Because intimate partner violence is often framed as a “women’s issue,” violence against men —  especially gay men — can be minimized or dismissed. In contrast, women perpetrators may be seen as less threatening. These perceptions matter because they affect whether victims seek help, how law enforcement and courts respond and whether survivors are believed in the first place.

Zito also presented a study titled “‘It’s Never Stopped Me Doing Anything I Wanted to Do’: Disability (Dis)Identification in Tourette Syndrome” as part of the Disability & Health session. The research explored how adults with Tourette Syndrome (TS) understand and articulate their condition in relation to disability, including how they position themselves as disabled, non-disabled or in-between. Based on 30 in-depth interviews, Zito found that disability identity is shaped less by how people interpret their experiences rather than simply by tic severity. Some rejected the disability label, equating disability with physical incapacitation and having a limited life, while others embraced it by pointing to chronic pain, workplace barriers, stigma and public scrutiny. Many fell somewhere in between, describing TS as disabling at times but hesitating to claim disability status. The research shows that TS exists in the “borderlands” of disability, where identity is influenced by cultural ideas about normality and what counts as a “real” disability.

The Lumen Prize supported Otten’s research. Zito’s research was supported by an 51±ŹÁÏÍű Summer Research Fellowship.

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51±ŹÁÏÍű’s Sandra Darfour-Oduro hosts Taste of Africa event /u/news/2026/03/30/elon-universitys-sandra-darfour-oduro-hosts-taste-of-africa-event/ Mon, 30 Mar 2026 20:18:07 +0000 /u/news/?p=1042529 On March 5, Sandra Darfour-Oduro, assistant professor of public health studies, organized the inaugural Taste of Africa event, designed to create dialogue and deepen understanding of the diverse opportunities and issues across the African continent.

The panel was led by Elon faculty members Ifeoma Udeh, Titch Madzima, Sandra Darfour-Oduro, Sheila Otieno and Mussa Idris. Each speaker contributed unique perspectives shaped by their research, professional backgrounds, and personal experiences, offering attendees a multifaceted view of contemporary issues affecting African nations. Throughout the event, the panelists addressed a series of thought-provoking questions that guided the discussion. “Which issues in Africa have most influenced your research? allowing each speaker to reflect on the driving forces behind their academic work.

Healthcare, trade, culture and religion in African countries were the major focus of discussion. Panelists emphasized the importance of the African Continental Free Trade among African countries. They also acknowledged the surge in non-communicable diseases and discussed promoting health education, investing in healthcare, and expanding access to medical care in Africa.

Religion and culture were explored as a powerful social force, particularly in response to the question, “Can religion be leveraged as a tool for social and health promotion in Africa and how?” Panelists discussed how religious institutions often serve as trusted community hubs and can play a significant role in disseminating information, encouraging positive behavioral changes and fostering social cohesion.

Finally, the discussion concluded on an optimistic note with the question, “What gives you the most hope about Africa’s future?” Panelists pointed to many different things that gave them hope, but among them were the continent’s rapidly growing youth population, increasing innovation and expanding opportunities as key sources of hope. They emphasized the resilience and creativity of African communities, as well as the potential for continued growth and global influence. The event was moderated by Salome Onikolase and Mariama Jalloh.

In addition to the academic discussion, attendees were treated to a traditional Ghanaian meal, which added a meaningful cultural dimension to the event. Sharing food created a welcoming atmosphere and allowed participants to experience a tangible aspect of African culture, reinforcing the event’s goal of connection and understanding. The event was made possible through the support of Associate Provost for Academic Inclusive Excellence Naeemah Clark, Dean of Global Education Nick Gozick, the Isabella Cannon Global Education Center at Elon, and Beth DeFord, program assistant.

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Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences, launches new mission, vision and core values /u/news/2026/02/27/elon-college-the-college-of-arts-and-sciences-launches-new-mission-vision-and-core-values/ Fri, 27 Feb 2026 15:13:11 +0000 /u/news/?p=1040355 Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences, introduced a new mission statement, vision statement and core values during its spring faculty meeting following a year and a half-long process led by Dean Hilton Kelly.

Since his 2023 arrival at Elon, Kelly has hosted a ‘listening tour’ and spent time with each department to hear directly from faculty and staff about what they value. Kelly said that common themes soon emerged from those conversations and the new statement reflects dozens of discussions.

Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences new vision statement reads: “The Heart of an Elon Education: Ignite Curiosity, Engage Challenges, Transform Worlds.”

The mission statement then declares:

“Upholding the centrality of the liberal arts, we explore and apply disciplinary and interdisciplinary knowledge for inquiry, creativity, discovery and problem solving in a complex and changing world.”

The statement lists core values that include accessibility, belonging, critical thinking, diversity, equity and inclusion, integrity, intellectual curiosity, problem-posing and respect for human dignity.

Community Reflections

  • “There were several opportunities for different groups, departments, branches, interdisciplinary programs, to discuss versions on the table. It was in those conversations where we might learn how a word or phrase was heard within and across disciplines; where we found convergence, deeper awareness, and respect. The both-and of this process modeled what we value and genuinely captures our shared identity as Elon College.” – Caroline Ketcham, associate dean of Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences and a professor of exercise science
  • “It was always important to us that this wasn’t a process where faculty were just asked to weigh in at the end, after the real decisions had already been made. From start to finish, it was grounded in listening to what faculty across the college say we do well and what values they believe guide our shared work. Our task wasn’t to invent a mission, vision and values, but to clearly articulate what faculty are already living and leading with. I think that’s why faculty can so readily see themselves and their departments represented in the final statements.” – David Buck, associate dean of Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences and an associate professor of psychology
  • “Having shared goals and articulated values helps everyone in the college feel connected as a community, value each other’s work and prioritize our energies on initiatives that matter to us.” – Shannon Duvall, interim associate dean of Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences and professor of computer science
  • “I appreciated the collaborative nature of it all, not just between the dean’s office and department chairs, but also extending to faculty members across Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences. It really did involve all of us. What particularly stood out to me were the conversations in our chairs’ meetings with the dean where we came to agreements on core values. It’s inspiring to see that distinctly different types of disciplines uphold the same core values.” – Joel Karty, chair of the Department of Chemistry and 51±ŹÁÏÍű’s Sydney F. & Kathleen E. Jackson Professor of chemistry
  • “I appreciated being part of a process that felt genuinely collaborative. Our participation was not merely symbolic. It felt meaningful, and I experienced the dean’s office as truly listening. The process itself was also inspirational, and I feel bolstered in leading my own department through similar work. It was powerful to see such a broad, collective effort take shape into something tangible.” – Samantha DiRosa, chair of the Department of Art and a professor of art and environmental studies
  • “The process of creating a new vision statement, mission statement and core values for Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences was both thoughtful and deeply collaborative. Over many months, department chairs worked together to reflect on what makes us distinctive and how best to express those qualities in guiding statements. The process intentionally sought input from across departments, ensuring that everyone in the college had the opportunity to contribute their perspectives. Personally, the time spent reflecting with fellow chairs on what makes each of our departments special fostered a deeper sense of shared purpose and collective commitment.” – Carrie Eaves, chair of the Department of Political Science and Public Policy and associate professor of political science and public policy

Kelly said he was pleased the final language resonated with the faculty in the college.

“The true measure of a successful attempt to lead a group or an organization towards a renewed vision, mission and core values is whether the words and sentiments ‘sound like us’,” he said. “When I heard that some faculty believed my presentation of our vision, mission and core values at our spring faculty meeting ‘sound like us,’ I knew that our work together in small and large group settings was a huge success. It means that stakeholders were heard and that the words resonate so much so that the tune or melody is familiar. The vision, mission and core values reflect truly who we are and where we are going with much intention.”

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Madeline Mitchener ’26 makes tangible change on Elon’s campus through public policy studies /u/news/2026/02/26/madeline-mitchener-26-makes-tangible-change-on-elons-campus-through-public-policy-studies/ Thu, 26 Feb 2026 17:51:14 +0000 /u/news/?p=1040260 Since she can remember, Madeline Mitchener ’26 has expressed an interest in helping others. Originally from Pfafftown, North Carolina, her passion has now evolved to combine with her public health studies and public policy, leading her to a career of helping others through advocacy and policy change.

Mitchener’s connection to Elon began through an unexpected source: her mother’s nursing practice. Her mother was treating a patient who was attending Elon, which gave Mitchener access to explore the campus.

She recalls the day she visited for the first time: “While my mom was seeing her patient, she left me downtown. I went to Oak House and walked around the campus. And after the tour, I fell in love with Elon. I knew that this was my campus, and this was my home,” she said.

After this newfound love, Mitchener explored ways to begin her Elon journey through financial aid programs. She discovered and applied to both the Odyssey Program and Public Health Scholars.

Mitchener with friends after a Dance Works performance

She remembers the night her academic potential was recognized; it was the night of her final senior year dance concert. As the show wrapped up, she received a call from Elon’s Odyssey Program delivering good news of her acceptance into the program through the Kerrii Brown Anderson Odyssey Scholarship.

Now a senior double major in public health and policy studies, Mitchener is actively involved in creating solutions for the community’s public health problems.

“Growing up, I always thought the way to help others was just being a doctor,” she said. “I really love how public health is grounded in not only finding the root issue, but understanding the community that you’re working with.”

While Mitchener was in a public health course that was required for the Public Health Scholars Program, she recalls her professor, Associate Professor of Public Health Studies Stephanie Baker, stating: “If you’re going to be a healthcare professional and be upset at the systems that don’t allow you to help your patients to the full extent that you want to, being a healthcare professional might not be for you.”

“That stuck with me, because I think of insurance and how much medicines can cost, making it very difficult for people to access healthcare. I want to be a piece of the healthcare solution,” said Mitchener.

Now, Mitchener and her course group are currently working to revise the Public Art & Honorary Policy for the city of Burlington. This includes making an application form for any community member who wants to donate a piece of art or get a memorial plaque. Additionally, she created a resource for community members to connect with local and statewide art collectives.

“We share all of our deliverables with the city in hopes that they will implement the policy. They can make any edits they see fit, and it was a collaborative process where we were constantly in contact with the city,” said Mitchener.

Mitchener (bottom row, second to the right) with her Periclean Cohort

Also involved with Periclean Scholars, Mitchener was able to mentor the sophomore class and go to their global partner in Sri Lanka.

“The Periclean cohort has honestly just been such a light in my Elon experience and not only given me community but also purpose,” she said.

Her initiative for change doesn’t stop there; Micthener is also a HealthEU Senator with Elon Student Government Association.

“A big piece of Student Government is writing legislation and advocating for the student body and what they need,” she said.

Through the SGA, she has already taken noticeable action to improve the Elon community through HealthEU policy. She identified a lack of seating accessibility at the bus stop near the Dalton L. McMichael Sr. Science Center. Now, there is now a covered seating area that sits beautifully outside the McMichael Science Center.

Mitchener also took the initiative to further amplify student voices at a dinner with Elon President Connie Ledoux Book. Through her connection to the community and the students in it, she identified a common problem among Elon students having access to transportation to the airport during breaks. After she represented and stood up for community needs, changes were made. Students now have wider access to airport transportation through Elon-provided shuttles.

“It taught me how important having connections is,” she said. “If I didn’t have a connection with those students, if I didn’t take my time to ask and understand their needs and why they have them, the problem wouldn’t have been addressed or been on the radar.”

Remembering the help she received along the way, Mitchener states her Odyssey scholarship acted as a “launching pad” for her success in her public health and policy studies.

“The Odyssey Program doesn’t just keep you stagnant,” she said. “It empowers you to branch out and pursue whatever you want on campus. It’s allowed me to fully embrace the college experience.”

Mitchener describes a recent “melt your heart moment” she experienced with another student. While leading a tour of Elon to prospective students, one girl spoke up and said, “I love this school. I want to go here so badly. But I don’t know if I can afford it.” It was then that she offered to share the Odyssey and scholarship resources with the prospective student to help her achieve her dream Elon experience. Just a year later, the prospective student had committed to Elon on an Odyssey scholarship and is now Mitchener’s mentee.

“Donors get to empower a student,” said Mitchener. “I don’t think about it like you just give a student money and walk away. Instead, you’re empowering them and giving them the tools to pursue whatever it is that they want.”

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Holly Miranda ’20 awarded Rotary Global Grant to support graduate study in Taiwan /u/news/2026/02/17/holly-miranda-20-awarded-rotary-global-grant-to-support-graduate-study-in-taiwan/ Tue, 17 Feb 2026 13:58:25 +0000 /u/news/?p=1038971 Elon alumna Holly Miranda ’20 has earned the Rotary Global Grant from the . The $30,000 grant supports graduate study outside of the United States for those studying within Rotary’s six areas of focus: peace building and conflict prevention, disease prevention and treatment, water and sanitation, maternal and child health, basic education and literacy, and community economic development. With Rotary’s support, Miranda is currently earning her Master of Science in Global Health from National Taiwan University in Taipei so she can fulfill her mission of strengthening healthcare systems around the world.

Miranda is the sixth Elon student in five consecutive years to receive District 7690’s Rotary Club’s Global Grant. She follows Faith Leslie ‘21, Allison Potter ’22, Kiara Hunter ’23, and joint recipients Megan Curling ’23, Ava de Bruin ’23 and Nazaneen Shokri ’24. All recipients since 2022 have had at least one major in public health, a testament to the Department of Public Health’s ability to successfully prepare leaders who address the most pressing public health concerns of the 21st century.

This opportunity is not limited to public health majors, though, and all interested Elon students and alumni should contact the National and International Fellowships Office for more information about the application process.

From Elon to the CDC

At Elon, Miranda double majored in public health studies and international & global studies and minored in geography. She made the most of her undergraduate experience by engaging in research and service, and studying abroad in Tanzania. Outside of the classroom, she worked in the Truitt Center for Religious and Spiritual Life and is proudest of her time as a Multifaith Intern.

The combination of these experiences prepared Miranda well for a post-graduate career with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where she served for five years. She first served as a COVID-19 epidemiologist in Kentucky before transitioning to a new role at the Vermont Department of Health, where she specialized in public health emergency preparedness and response. Miranda’s time with the CDC helped her clarify her passions and refine her professional philosophy: “equitable access to healthcare is essential for thriving communities.”

With this domestic training under her belt and her philosophy front of mind, Miranda was ready to go global.

An Intersection of Values

When the time came to think about furthering her education, Miranda grew confident in her decision to look beyond the United States.

“I knew I wanted to shift my career toward global health, but I also knew I did not want to do so without first understanding my own interests, values, and limits through hands-on experience,” she explained. “When I began thinking about graduate school, I realized that studying abroad would allow me to expand that perspective while learning how health systems operate in a different cultural and policy context.”

Holly Miranda on her first day of class at National Taiwan University.

Miranda was drawn to Taiwan for its strong public health infrastructure and commitment to disease prevention. National Taiwan University’s MSc in Global Health program, with its emphasis on international perspectives, offered an unparalleled opportunity for her to deepen her academic and technical training.

To support her goal of attending NTU’s Global Health program, Miranda began working with the National and International Fellowships Office at Elon, which assists students and alumni in identifying and applying for externally funded scholarships and grants. She first applied for a study/research grant through the and was unfortunately unsuccessful, but undeterred. She continued conversations with Ann Cahill and Nicole Galante, director and assistant director of the Elon National and International Fellowships Office, and it quickly became clear that she was a perfect fit for another fellowship: The Rotary Global Grant.

Guided by their core areas of focus, Rotary is a highly values-based organization that seeks to support students who are just as passionate about solving the world’s problems as they are. The intersection between Miranda’s work and Rotary’s goals was evident to both Miranda and her advisors.

“I couldn’t think of a better fit. It’s almost as if Holly has spent her whole life preparing to be a Rotarian without actually knowing it,” said Galante.

It was no surprise, then, when Miranda applied for and ultimately received the $30,000 grant that enabled her to begin graduate studies in the fall of 2025.

Returning to the Classroom While Arriving in a New Country

Holly Miranda and friends at a Lunar New Year’s Festival.

Returning to the classroom after five years—in a new country, no less—presented its challenges for Miranda, but she quickly found her footing.

During her first semester, she took courses like Global Health Science, Introduction to Epidemiology, and Social and Behavioral Health, while also participating in field trips to the National Health Care Agency, the global think tank CAPRI, and the Taiwan International Workers Association. To get the most out of her experience in the country, Miranda also took advantage of the free Chinese language courses offered by NTU for international students. Her intensive winter course met for three hours a day, five days a week.

Holly Miranda in Keelung, Taiwan.

As she looks towards the remainder of her time in the program, Miranda is eager to begin her master’s thesis.

“I’m looking forward to conducting my thesis research, focusing on adolescent mental health. I am honored that Professor Shu-Sen Chang is my thesis advisor; he is a leading expert in mental health and suicide prevention in Taiwan and the region. It is a privilege to be part of his lab and to contribute to this area of public health, which I am deeply passionate about,” she said

Once she graduates, Miranda will be well prepared to re-enter the workforce, strengthening health systems, enhancing disease surveillance, and improving outbreak preparedness. In the long term, she aspires to lead outbreak response efforts with MĂ©decins Sans FrontiĂšres (Doctors Without Borders), combining the values and experience she’s gained from Elon to Taiwan, to no doubt make this world a better and healthier place. 

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Childbirth course inspires students and shapes career paths beyond Elon /u/news/2026/02/12/childbirth-course-inspires-students-and-shapes-career-paths-beyond-elon/ Thu, 12 Feb 2026 16:55:39 +0000 /u/news/?p=1038596 As it approaches its silver anniversary as an upper-level elective, a popular seminar led by one of 51±ŹÁÏÍű’s most prolific teacher-scholar-mentors has been praised by alumni for inspiring their own careers in helping to bring new life into the world.

The “Childbirth” core seminar created and led by Cynthia Fair, a professor of public health and human service studies and the Watts/Thompson Professor at 51±ŹÁÏÍű, has become a transformative course on campus that Fair describes today as a highlight of her teaching career and one of her favorite courses.

Students and graduates say they feel the same way and several have cited the course as a meaningful experience that influences their career journeys through its exploration of the social, historical and cultural aspects of childbirth.

First offered in 2003, the course’s origins date to Fair’s undergraduate studies at Davidson College when she learned about a professor who taught a childbirth course to non-biology majors. “It was one of those moments where the clouds parted,” said Fair, who has mentored dozens of undergraduate researchers at 51±ŹÁÏÍű over the past two decades. “I knew I was meant to teach this course.”

Fair brings three aspects of experience to the classroom: lived experience as a mother, clinical experience working with pregnant people and families, and research on childbirth topics such as waterbirth and fertility.

“Throughout the course we look at the historical portrayal of women’s bodies, the effects of structural racism, cultural anthropology, the evolution of midwifery care, and even the language we use around birth,” Fair said. “Language shapes how we see the world, and it shapes how care is delivered. I love teaching this course because I lived it.”

Students also examine where birth occurs, from hospitals to homes to birth centers, and consider how environments, systems and support networks influence labor and outcomes.

Fair said she hopes students leave the course with more than academic knowledge. She wants them to develop a voice they can use in any medical context. Discussions often focus on strategies to reduce maternal mortality and how to support a birthing person’s decisions.

“Everyone is born, yet we rarely talk about birth,” Fair said. “Students have so many questions, and I create a space where no question is ‘stupid’.”

A signature assignment asks students to reflect on their own births to explore how personal experience, family stories and cultural messaging shape their understanding of childbirth.

Throughout the semester, the classroom becomes an interactive space. Students learn and practice baby massage techniques and explore breastfeeding practices and holds. Fair regularly invites guest lectures, including a childbirth educator, midwife, doula and neonatal intensive care unit clinical social worker.

Four students practicing baby massage
Students practicing baby massage.

Whether students pursue clinical careers or become advocates for maternal health, Fair said, she is proud of the course’s impact.

“My dream is for students who enter health-related fields to nurture this passion and to improve outcomes. I also want each student to know how to advocate for themselves in a medical setting.” Fair said.

Over the years, Fair’s course has shaped career paths for several students who either discovered or deepened their passion for maternal and child health. Some Elon alumni now volunteer their time to visit with Fair’s current students.

Cat Palmer ’15, a practicing nurse-midwife, visited the class during the most recent fall semester to share her own story with current students.

Cat Palmer '15 (left) with Cynthia Fair (right)
Cat Palmer ’15 (left) spoke to students in Cynthia Fair’s, professor of public health and human service studies and the Watts/Thompson Professor (right), Childbirth core seminar class.

“The midwifery philosophy honors the autonomy and sovereignty a person giving birth has over their body and their own experience,” Palmer said. “Dr. Fair’s class sparked a passion I did not know I had, and demonstrated that scientific rigor, public health, healing arts and service to one’s community could all meet in the discipline of midwifery. In many ways, the balance of didactic coursework and experiential learning in the ‘real world’ that I received at Elon set me up perfectly for my career as a midwife.”

Because of Fair’s course, Harper McEvoy ’25 shifted her own career trajectory from pursing a degree in physician assistant studies to becoming a midwife. McEvoy had long been interested in childbirth and was even able to connect with Palmer to talk about similar experiences.

McEvoy will soon attend Yale University School of Nursing, where she plans to become a nurse-midwife and a women’s health nurse practitioner.

“Hearing real-life stories and participating in hands-on exercises helped us truly experience how these professionals create environments that advocate for and support women through such a transformative experience,” McEvoy said. “Dr. Fair’s course helped me realize what truly excites and fulfills me, and it gave me the clarity and confidence to change direction. I realized I wanted to be someone who honors birth, advocates for mothers and stands with them through both the most challenging and joyful moments.”

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Gendle and Tapler lead conversation at NCCE PACE conference to promote equity in community-based learning /u/news/2026/02/12/gendle-and-tapler-lead-conversation-at-ncce-pace-conference-to-promote-equity-in-community-based-learning/ Thu, 12 Feb 2026 14:04:30 +0000 /u/news/?p=1038625 Mathew Gendle, director of Project Pericles and professor of psychology, and Amanda Tapler, associate director of Project Pericles and associate teaching professor of public health, co-led a community conversation at the 2026 North Carolina Campus Engagement PACE conference, hosted by 51±ŹÁÏÍű on Feb. 11.

Titled “Disrupting power structures to promote equity in community-based learning,” this conversation championed ways in which relational power dynamics between academic institutions and community partners can be equitably reformed. This session was guided by two overarching questions: 1) How might we engender robust self-examination around the question of whether academic programs are operating in equitable or paternalistic ways? and 2) What can academic practitioners do to break down barriers to true equity in community partnerships and meaningfully enhance equity in program design, execution, and evaluation?

Best practice models in community-based learning, such as Fair Trade Learning, emphasize that academic practitioners must equitably co-create programs with community partners. While many practitioners agree with these aspirational standards, bringing them to life poses challenges. Communities that have been historically subject to colonialism and exploitation may not feel empowered to lead. Community partners may not consider it possible to co-create because of deeply rooted assumptions that academic institutions lead and community partners follow.

Academic programs often approach partners to seek their approval for complete/nearly complete memorandums of understanding, project plans, and course syllabi. This can happen intentionally or be the product of assumptions about the default way of doing things. Such approaches do not display equitable co-design through collaboration. Embedded and presumed imbalances in power dynamics that exist between academic institutions and community partners need to be acknowledged and comprehensively explored. Partnership outcomes must focus on mutual benefit instead of primarily privileging student benefits and outcomes. And the senior leadership and counsel’s offices of academic institutions must understand that it is healthy to cede significant components of control over partnerships while, at the same time, doing everything required to keep students and community partners safe.

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Abby Lee ’25 combines knowledge in public health and political science as an Elon Year of Service Fellow /u/news/2026/01/15/abby-lee-25-combines-knowledge-in-public-health-and-political-science-as-an-elon-year-of-service-fellow/ Thu, 15 Jan 2026 15:10:32 +0000 /u/news/?p=1036990 With a degree in public health studies and political science, Abby Lee ’25 has always been civically minded. Now, as an Elon Year of Service Fellow, she’s continuing that civic engagement with Impact Alamance.

“Living in Alamance County for four years, I just thought it would be really beneficial to give back to the community that gave me so much,” said Lee. “This position sounded exactly like what I wanted to do.”

Abby Lee ’25

The Year of Service Fellows Program is an opportunity through the university’s Student Professional Development Center that allows recent graduates to work at local organizations to improve health, education and economic development in the Alamance County community. Lee is one of six Fellows in the program, with three working at Impact Alamance.

Impact Alamance has three focus areas: healthier (focusing on improving community health), smarter (focusing on education) and stronger (focusing on strengthening community partnerships).

As an employee for “healthier,” Lee has worked on a variety of different grant projects, including installing a local basketball court in the town of Mebane, North Carolina, funding a mobile recreational unit and planning Impact Alamance’s annual wellness summit.

“I’ve worked on smaller projects, but it means so much to the people that we help,” Lee said. “That’s probably my favorite part; just seeing how much Impact Alamance truly does.”

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Since beginning her year of service for Impact Alamance, Lee has been able to draw on her experiences within her coursework at Elon, in addition to her previous internships.

“My last internship was with my public health practicum class with the Women’s Resource Center of Alamance County,” Lee said. “That was my first local internship and really shaped my path, showing how great it was to work for and help the people of Alamance. I think ultimately, that’s what led me to decide and apply.”

Additionally, Lee credits different professors from both public health and political science for igniting her interest to double major, as well as shaping her world view on the healthcare system.

“Dr. Yanika Faustin was the reason I decided to double major in public health after taking one of her courses, Reproductive Justice,” Lee explained. “She definitely shaped my time at Elon, as well as Dr. Stephanie Baker who was my senior seminar professor for public health. She really showed me that this is what I wanted to do.”

Lee has been able to reap the benefits of the Year of Service Fellows program, as it has provided her real-world experience before beginning a post-graduate degree. Since her first undergraduate internship was also with Alamance County, she has been able to continue honing her relationships and making an impact in the community.


This story is part of a series of features on the 2025-26 Year of Service Fellows, highlighting the work they are doing in the Alamance County community.

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