Narragansett High School Grad Begins
Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern in the Fall
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PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND (July 9, 2020) – Alison McCadden of Saunderstown has been selected to receive a Rhode Island PBS Foundation Scholarship for high school seniors or college students pursuing a career in broadcasting, journalism, or communications. The award – up to $15,000 per year – is renewable for up to four years.
“In a very competitive field of applicants, Alison rose to the top,” said David W. Piccerelli, president of Rhode Island PBS. “Alison demonstrates the qualities we seek in scholarship recipients. She shows high academic performance and great potential for success and leadership in journalism. On behalf of the Foundation Board and the staff of Rhode Island PBS, congratulations to Alison for earning this scholarship,” he said.
McCadden was selected from dozens of applicants from the station’s broadcast area in Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts. She plans to major in journalism at the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications at Northwestern University.
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“A free press is a fundamental part of our society, and I think now more than ever journalism is a critical field to enter. I'm so excited to begin my college education and I'm humbled and honored to be a recipient of the Rhode Island PBS Scholarship,” said McCadden, a 2020 graduate of Narragansett High School and the daughter of Donna and Brian McCadden.
McCadden began considering journalism as a career while acting as the sole student representative on a statewide committee comprised of teachers, professors and historians that was developing curriculum resources for genocide education in Rhode Island.
"We were charged with accumulating and organizing resources to help teachers portray genocide appropriately and effectively. I had discussions with Brown professors and direct relatives of genocide victims, dug through databases for engaging resources and shared feedback from a student perspective," said McCadden.
"I navigated through an initially unfamiliar situation, talked with people who were completely different from me, researched important topics and created a final product that will educate and inform people. Looking back on my experience, I was practicing journalism without fully realizing it," she said.
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McCadden was valedictorian of the Class of 2020, senior class secretary, president of the National Honor Society, and competed in volleyball and lacrosse. In addition, she won the Rhode Island Law Day Essay Contest and Rhode Island Girls State Samsung Scholarship Award. She also served as a member of the Rhode Island Genocide Curriculum Task Force, where she developed statewide curriculum resources and wrote a unit of study for middle school students.
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