April 26, 2021
After studying Chinese for a week in high school, Meghan McPeak wanted to quit. Then something clicked.
"I started to remember the characters. It wasn't hard anymore," said the 22-year-old from Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Her affinity for and skill in Chinese led her to the University of North Georgia (UNG) and its Chinese Language Flagship Program, which helped McPeak attain a highly competitive national scholarship. She is one of six UNG students to win a Boren award in spring 2021.
"This award and experience will be a huge step for me to reach my goal of working in national security," said the senior pursuing degrees in modern languages with a Chinese for global professionals concentration and strategic and security studies.
McPeak will study Chinese at the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center in Monterey, California. She will be joined by fellow Boren award winner Dillon Evans, who met McPeak in summer 2017 at UNG's Summer Language Institute. The two are members of the Chinese Flagship program on UNG's Dahlonega Campus.
"Everything that I have planned for so long now is set in place," said Evans, a senior pursuing a degree in modern languages with a Chinese for global professionals concentration who is a captain in UNG's Corps of Cadets. The 22-year-old from Columbus, Georgia, is also a member of the Honors Program.
The other four Boren recipients are:
"We are very proud of all our applicants' resilience, persistence, diligence, and hard work during this challenging application cycle," said Dr. Victoria Hightower, assistant director of the nationally competitive scholarships office and associate professor of history. "Some awardees have applied for this award or others in the past and it is nice to see that their persistence paid off."
Torres is the first UNG student to win the Boren Flagship Initiative award. The Indonesian Flagship initiative invites students to learn Indonesian from scratch first domestically, and then abroad, fully funded.
Smith is also a notable winner, becoming the second UNG student to earn a Boren Fellowship. She plans to enroll in UNG's Master of Arts in International Affairs. Lauren Billet was the first UNG recipient in 2018.
The Boren Scholarship and Fellowship provide up to $25,000 for students to intensively study language and culture abroad. In exchange, students agree to work for the federal government for at least a year and receive coaching and mentoring upon their return to facilitate this objective.
Students interested in learning more about nationally competitive scholarships should contact ncs@ung.edu for more information.