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AICPA Awards $264,000 in Minority Doctoral Academic Fellowships

the American Institute of CPAs has awarded 22 deserving scholars the Minority Doctoral Fellowship. Funded by the AICPA Foundation, this unique Fellowship provides $12,000 each to full-time minority accounting scholars who have demonstrated the ...

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To help increase the number of CPAs from diverse backgrounds teaching and serving as role models at the college and university level, the American Institute of CPAs has awarded 22 deserving scholars the Minority Doctoral Fellowship. Funded by the AICPA Foundation, this unique Fellowship provides $12,000 each to full-time minority accounting scholars who have demonstrated the potential to become accounting educators. 

“One of the best ways to encourage diversity in our profession to ensure that there is diversity among accounting educators,” said Kim Drumgo, AICPA director of diversity and inclusion and vice chair of the National Commission on Diversity and Inclusion.  “The Minority Doctoral Fellowship recognizes these outstanding students and helps them on their path to becoming educators and mentors of the profession’s future leaders.”

The distinguished 2015-2016 AICPA Minority Doctoral Fellowship recipients are listed below in alphabetical order: 

  • Herita A. Akamah, University of Oklahoma
  • Maurice Atkinson, Michigan State University
  • Joye L. Baugh, Jackson State University
  • Lydia N. Didia, Jackson State University
  • Brent A. Garza, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • Michelle Harding, The University of Virginia
  • Oscar J. Harvin, Florida Atlantic University
  • Chevonne Herring, University of Mississippi
  • Ethan G. LaMothe, University of South Carolina
  • Thomas F. Lewis, Jr., Virginia Commonwealth University
  • Makila C. A. Major, University of Memphis
  • Sydnee Manley, University of Mississippi
  • Christopher Alan Miller, University of Mississippi
  • Patricia Navarro, University of Central Florida
  • Porschia Nkansa, University of Memphis
  • Christian Simon Paparcuri, Arizona State University
  • Rebeca Perez, University of Oregon
  • Andrea Rozario, Rutgers University
  • Syrena Shirley, Penn State University
  • Justin Cole Short, University of Tennessee
  • Kecia Smith, Texas A&M University
  • Kimberly Rochelle Walker, University of Wisconsin-Madison

“The recipients of the AICPA Minority Doctoral Fellowship are helping to secure the future of the profession,” said Steve Matzke, AICPA director of college and university initiatives. “On behalf of the AICPA, we congratulate them on their hard work and wish them success on their journey to becoming educators.”

The Minority Doctoral Fellowship is open to ethnic minorities who have obtained or plan to pursue a CPA license. They must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Additional requirements are available online

Qualified candidates may apply on the AICPA website. The 2016-17 application will be available in March 2016, with an application deadline of May 15, 2016.