New Alumna Athena Loch ‘11C Is St. John’s Latest Fulbright Recipient

July 28, 2011



The latest St. John’s graduate to receive a Fulbright Scholarship will spend the next academic year in Macau, where she will study the region’s blend of Chinese and Portuguese cultures while teaching English.

Athena Loch ‘11C, an English major and Art History minor, was a senior when she applied for the prestigious award in October 2010. She is one of two new graduates to earn a Fulbright Scholarship. Recipient Woodley Pean ‘11C will use his award to teach, volunteer and conduct research in the Dominican Republic. Last year, three graduate students received Fulbrights.

When Athena received word about her award this past May, she was surprised as well as delighted. “I worried that it was taking too long to hear from them,” she recalled. “But the GAAP Office assured me that some applicants don’t get a response until a bit later.” The Graduate Admissions Assistance Program (GAAP) helps undergraduate and graduate students to apply for prestigious academic awards and scholarships.

The 21-year-old Staten Island, NY, native chose to spend her Fulbright year in Macau because the blend of Portuguese and Chinese cultures fascinates her. The region is also close to Hong Kong, where her parents were born. “When I saw that it was one of the Fulbright destinations,” she said, “I thought it would be the most interesting location for me.”

A graduate of Susan E. Wagner High School on Staten Island, Athena said she chose St. John’s for two reasons. “I knew St. John’s offers a lot of opportunities to its students,” she said. “And I liked the fact that I could go to school in New York City, live in beautiful residence halls and still be close to home.”

As an English major, Athena enjoyed studying with outstanding scholars such as Dohra Ahmad, Ph.D., Associate Professor; Kathleen Lubey, Ph.D., and Amy King, Ph.D., Associate Professor, who was Athena’s mentor in the University’s Learning Communities Program, which fosters strong connections between faculty advisors and freshmen. In Art History, Athena counts Professor Laurence Waldron, M.F.A., among her most inspiring instructors.

Athena distinguished herself early in her St. John’s career. She was accepted into Phi Eta Sigma, the national honor society for outstanding freshmen. She went on to serve as a copy editor on The Torch, the weekly student newspaper, and an assistant editor of Sequoia, the literary magazine. “Whatever you want to do,” she said, “there’s a place for you to do something wonderful at St. John’s.”