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RH student earns Fulbright
Patterson
Precious Patterson of Richmond Hill is one of two Mercer graduates who earned Fulbright awards this year. - photo by Photo provided.

MACON — Precious Patterson of Richmond Hill is one of two Mercer University alumni who have been selected to receive Fulbright U.S. Student Awards to either pursue graduate study or teach abroad starting this fall.

The other Fulbright recipient is Lena Heamvas of Marietta.

Patterson earned her bachelor’s cum laude in economics with minors in business administration and chemistry in 2015.

She will pursue a Master of Science in renewable energy, enterprise and management at Newcastle University in Newcastle, England. She plans to study the effects of communal investments on fuel poverty in northeast England and Scotland.

"I am incredibly grateful for the opportunity to represent the United States as a Fulbright grantee," Patterson said. "A Fulbright isn’t just a grant, it’s a lifelong commitment to improving the world through international collaboration."

She has spent the past year volunteering in Thailand through Teach Thailand Corps.

"Receiving this award has given me the confidence and the means to help strengthen U.K.-U.S. relations in the global shift toward sustainable living," she said. "Implementing renewable energy technology that is cost-effective and efficient is a key component of sustainable living, and both countries have much to gain from continued cooperation and partnership. By the end of my degree program, I hope to learn that I have been of service to British and American communities by conducting research that is mutually beneficial and useful when making decisions about sustainable policies and practices."

After earning her master’s degree, Patterson plans to pursue a career path that aids in the global transition toward sustainable living, such as working on renewable energy policy as an economist or helping businesses transition to renewables as a consultant.

As an undergraduate, Patterson served as a laboratory assistant with the Academic Resource Center for three years, performed as a trumpeter with the Mercer Wind Ensemble for three years and worked in multiple positions in the Office of Student Affairs for two years. She was a member of Mercer’s Young Americans for Liberty for four years, and participated in the Student Government Association as a student correspondent on the Heritage Life Committee.

She received a grant from Mercer’s BB&T Center for Public Policy and Capitalism to present her senior research on the effects of minimum wage on labor rates at the local level during the Association of Private Enterprise Education conference in Cancun, Mexico. She also presented this research at the University’s Breakthroughs in Engagement, Arts and Research Day, and she was a finalist for the McAfee Scholarship.

The Fulbright U.S. Student Program, the government’s flagship international educational exchange program, is sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the United States Department of State. Since its inception in 1946, the Fulbright Program has provided more than 300,000 participants — chosen for their academic merit and leadership potential — with the opportunity to study, teach and conduct research, exchange ideas and contribute to finding solutions to shared international concerns. For more information, go to us.fulbrigh tonline.org.

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