UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Penn State 2022 alumna Josie Krieger, the inaugural recipient of the Rhea S. Schwartz Fellowship in the College of the Liberal Arts, is midway through her year of service at the Utah Refugee Services Office in Salt Lake City, Utah, where she is a member of the AmeriCorps Volunteers in Service to America program.
Established in late 2021 thanks to a $2 million gift ($1 million in immediate use funds; $1 million estate gift) from 1971 Penn State alumna Rhea Schwartz and her husband, Paul Wolff, the Schwartz Fellowship provides one year of funding for a graduating senior in the College of the Liberal Arts to engage in a service-related activity after graduation. The program is the first endowment of its kind at Penn State.
Krieger — who graduated with degrees in economics and history and minors in Jewish Studies and Middle East Studies — is a State College native whose parents “instilled independence and self-reliance and encouraged me and my sisters to be adventurous through both academics and travel.” She was a Paterno Fellow, a Schreyer Scholar, co-founder of Students Teaching Students, and a member of the Presidential Leadership Academy as an undergraduate. She studied in Azerbaijan as a Penn State undergraduate and spent eight weeks in Turkey after graduation as part of the Critical Language Scholarship Program. She spent time as a refugee case manager in Kansas City, Kansas, as part of another AmeriCorps program; she also served as an intern for Management Systems International (a firm that contracts with the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID), where she learned about how USAID distributes food in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
“All of these experiences gave me the desire to work with internally displaced people and with the refugee community,” Krieger said, noting that her strengths in project management and capacity building rather than direct service prompted her to apply for her current AmeriCorps experience in Utah.