Andr茅s Castro Samayoa, an assistant professor in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development, was named one of 11 Mellon Emerging Faculty Leaders for 2021, the Institute for Citizens & Scholars has announced. He is the first Boston College faculty member to receive the honor.
                Andr茅s Castro Samayoa (Gary Wayne Gilbert)
Funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the MEFL awards support 
junior faculty whose research focuses on contemporary American history, 
culture, and society, and who are committed to the creation of an 
inclusive campus community for underrepresented students and scholars. 聽
Castro
 Samayoa, a member of the Lynch School鈥檚 Education Leadership and Higher
 Education department, was recognized for his work drawing from 
sociological and historical methodologies focused on Minority Serving 
Institutions, a subset of more than 600 federally designated colleges 
and universities in the United States. His project examines how 
administrative data and the construction of racial and ethnic markers 
are used to develop policies to advance equity in education.
鈥淲e 
are thrilled that Andr茅s has won this very competitive award,鈥 said 
Stanton E. F. Wortham, the Charles F. Donovan, S.J., Dean of the Lynch 
School. 鈥淭he honor recognizes both his highly regarded research on 
access and equity in higher education and his exemplary character as a 
university citizen. As much as any other colleague, Andr茅s brings 
together faculty and students to build community and create substantive 
engagements that benefit the entire school. We are grateful that he will
 use this award to enrich our collective life further.鈥
The MEFL 
award is designed to free the time of junior faculty working toward 
tenure, including those from underrepresented groups and others 
committed to eradicating disparities in their respective fields, so they
 can engage in and build support for systems, networks, and affinity 
groups that make their fields and campuses more inclusive. The awardees 
were selected through a competitive interview process by a selection 
committee of four former and current university leaders with various 
academic and research backgrounds. 聽
Established in 2015, the 
MEFL program has now supported more than 50 junior faculty who represent
 the next generation of leaders and scholars in the humanities and 
social sciences, and who are poised to play a significant role in 
shaping American higher education. Founded in 1945, the Princeton, 
N.J.-based Institute for Citizens & Scholars, formerly the Woodrow 
Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, administers the MEFL program.
Phil Gloudemans | University Communications | May 2021
            
                    