By Staff Reports
(Hawaii)– Brandy Dobson has been chosen a 2017 Portz Scholar by the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC), receiving the organization’s top prize for undergraduate honors students. Dobson was one of only four scholars selected throughout the country.
This is the second consecutive year that an English student from UH Mānoa earned the prestigious award. Jonathan Omuro was a 2016 Portz Scholar. Both were mentored by the same professor, Cynthia Franklin.
Dobson will present her winning thesis at the NCHC conference in Atlanta in November. Titled “A Murmur in the Weeds: A Memoir,” the work is an intimate and searing portrait of sisterhood and survival.
“I knew I wanted to write my story since I was in high school, but it was always too painful to begin on my own,” said Dobson. “I studied English to be better equipped to handle the work of expressing my childhood experience someday. In my second semester at Mānoa, I took an autobiography class and wrote some difficult things. My professor, Dr. Franklin, suggested I make it into an honors thesis. I realized then that I didn’t have to begin on my own.
“I’ll be forever grateful for the knowledge and genuine care of everyone who walked with me through the process: my mentor, Dr. Franklin; my thesis committee members, Professors Shawna Yang Ryan and Subramanian Shankar; English Program Director Dr. James Caron; and Dr. Vernadette Gonzalez, Honors Program director. All these wonderful people gave me invaluable guidance throughout this academic and personal journey.”
Dobson’s achievement instills pride in all who worked with her. Together, the dynamic team provided a close and ideal partnership between faculty and engaged student.
Originally from the Big Island, this wife and mother of five, and recent UH Mānoa graduate, is starting a group for women to write their own stories of hardship and trauma. Dobson will complete her memoir but, ultimately, she would like to publish children’s and young adult books.