When Howard University named president earlier this month, it marked a milestone not just for the historian of the Latin American African diaspora, but for an extraordinary Dartmouth program of which he is an alumnus: .
The fellowship was by the Mellon Foundation to encourage undergraduates from underrepresented minorities to pursue academic careers in the humanities and humanistic social sciences. The program builds on the legacy of the late Benjamin Elijah Mays, a scholar and educator known for mentoring a generation of social justice activists, including Martin Luther King Jr.
Dartmouth was one of the first schools invited to join the program, which now exists at nearly 50 institutions nationwide and in South Africa.
Beginning sophomore summer through senior year, fellows receive stipends and funds for research and conferences, have opportunities to receive mentorship and grow peer networks, meet regularly with mentors and advisers, and develop skills on everything from writing and research to the grad school application process.
A Record of Success
Though Dartmouthâs program is smallâannually accepting a cohort of five Mellon Mays Fellows and three Dartmouth Associate Fellows (funded through Dartmouth)âit has been remarkably successful, says , a professor of comparative literature who has directed MMUF at Dartmouth since 2010.
âI think the secret of our success is our focus on relationships. An academic career can seem full of mystery and risk. We provide lots of material information and training, but we focus on building community so that students can feel confident that they wonât face the challenges alone,â says Warren, who also serves as senior adviser for faculty development, diversity, and inclusion for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
âOur alums are key to this cycle of success. When current undergraduates see what their peers from similar backgrounds have done, they know that they too can succeed and become part of the next generation of knowledge-makers and justice-oriented educators.â
Of more than 200 Dartmouth Mellon Mays alumni, 67% have gone on to pursue doctoral degreesâmore than double the national ratio of BA-level graduates to PhD enrollments. More than 30 have gone on to careers in academia, including Vinson, who was the first of the programâs alumni to complete a PhD.

This year alone, six alumsâa recordâhave started or are about to start tenure-track positions, and two alums from the Class of 2007 were awarded tenure at their institutions last yearâincluding , an associate professor of religion and African and African American studies.
Also this year, a record five members of the MMUF Class of 2023âwho began the program as rising juniorsâhave been accepted into PhD programs. And Mellon Mays alumni have been the recipients of numerous prestigious awards and fellowships, including Fulbright scholarships, Ford Foundation predoctoral fellowships, National Science Foundation Âé¶čÊÓÆ” Research Fellowships, and fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Guidance That Leads to Grad School
âPrograms like Mellon Mays matter because they help students from marginalized communities realize that while academic institutions were not built for us or by us, we can be researchers and academics,â says Guadalupe Ortega â23, a double major in womenâs, gender, and sexuality studies (modified with Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean studies) and linguistics (modified with anthropology) from Escondido, Calif.
Ortega will start a PhD program in feminist studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, this fall. âPersonally, if I had not been in Mellon Mays, I donât think I would have written a thesis or applied to grad school, because these were not steps that I knew much about or felt prepared for,â Ortega says.
Next year, Lizet Garcia â23, a geography major from Hawthorne, Calif., will be pursuing a PhD in geography in the City University of New York Âé¶čÊÓÆ” Centerâs department of earth and environmental studies. Garcia says that Warren and , a senior lecturer in the Institute of Writing and Rhetoric, provide invaluable advice on everything from developing a thesis to cultivating relationships with mentors.
The informal motto among Mellon Mays Fellows? âTrust Professor Warren,â Garcia says.
âThe biggest help was the guidance through applying to grad school and to fellowships,â they say. âWhen I visited grad programs, I talked to students who didnât know that you should email professors and talk to current students prior to applying. Had I not been in Mellon, I wouldnât have known to build those connections.â
Jimena Perez â23, a geography major from Lynwood, Calif., plans to pursue a PhD in geography at the University of California, Berkeley. She credits Mellon Mays with helping her develop a network of mentors.
âAt the beginning of the program, we made a mentor map, and mine was very smallâmaybe a handful of people, family members, friends, and some faculty. Now itâs grown to even include people from outside of Dartmouth,â Perez says.

Garcia and Perez, along with Gabriel Gilbert â23, a Mellon Mays Fellow who plans to earn a PhD in linguistics at the University of Chicago, have each received NSF Âé¶čÊÓÆ” Research Fellowships to pursue graduate study. Gilbert has also received a Ford Foundation predoctoral fellowship. A fifth Mellon Mays classmate, AanĂ Perkins â23, will begin a PhD program in linguistics at the University of British Columbia next year.
Diversifying the Professoriate
The power of Mellon Mays continues beyond grad school acceptance letters, says Feyaad Allie â16, a former government major and geography minor who in June will graduate from Stanford with a PhD in political science. This fall, he is headed to Harvard for a one-year postdoctoral fellowship, after which he will join the Harvard faculty as an assistant professor of government. Heâs the first alumnus of the Dartmouth-funded associate fellows program to become a professor.
Allie, who studies democracy, identity, and inter-group relations in the context of India, is one of âa large group of MMUF alums who was offered faculty positions this year,â says Warren, who keeps track of .
âThat really tells a story about the impact of MMUF. Dartmouth faculty can see that these are people who in their recent memory were in their classroom. And now they are colleaguesâwho can become the PhD advisers of the students in class now. Opportunities to diversify the professoriate really are expanding.â
For his part, Allie says, âAcademia is a challenging field to navigate. There are a lot of unwritten rules and insider networks. These obstacles often differentially disadvantage students from under-represented backgrounds. Being part of MMUF helped me learn about some of these unwritten rules and set me up to be successful as an academic.â
Another recent alum to join the professoriate is Allison Puglisi â15, an assistant professor of history at Vassar College who specializes in Black thought and organizing in the 20th century United States. Puglisi is currently working on a project that explores how housing activists laid the groundwork for Black environmental activism.
Puglisi, who majored in history modified with womenâs and gender studies and went on to earn her doctorate in American studies from Harvard with a certificate in women, gender, and sexuality, credits Mellon Mays with teaching her to âbe proactive in advocating for my own educationâand now, that of my students.â
âAs a college student before MMUF, I went to class to âreceiveâ knowledge. But MMUF taught me I could actually help create it as a researcher,â Puglisi says. âAs a professor, I feel glad to do both. Itâs an exchangeâI like to think students learn from me, and I learn from them too.â
Similarly, anthropologist and digital ethnographer Kimberly Hassel â16 recently joined the faculty of the University of Arizona as an assistant professor of East Asian studies. She studies digital culture, youth culture, and identity in Japan.
âMMUF was an important community for me as a Dominican New Yorker at Dartmouth, as it was one of the few spaces for students of color on campus,â Hassel says. âI often felt inspired and motivated by my cohortâs advanced research and insightful discussions of positionality in the academy. I was encouraged to pursue my research interests, challenge systems of oppression in the academy, and be unapologetically myself. Thanks to the support of MMUF, I became the first in my family to receive a PhD and take on a career as a professor in the United States.â
Puglisi says that one of the key insights she took from Mellon Mays is the reminder âthat no one gets anywhere alone. I have such gratitude for the mentors who helped prepare me for the profession. Now that Iâm here, I feel privileged to be that for others.â
To that end, Hassel has a message for current Mellon Mays Fellows: âDo not hesitate to reach out to MMUF alumni! We are excited to hear from you and mentor you.â