Thomonique Moore Named 2024 Presidential Ph.D. Fellow
Annenberg School doctoral student Thomonique Moore is a recipient of the Penn Presidential Ph.D. Fellowship, which includes three years of funding.
The University of Pennsylvania recently announced the 2024 cohort of Presidential Ph.D. Fellows, which includes Annenberg School doctoral student Thomonique Moore. Chosen from the incoming class of Ph.D. students at nine schools at Penn, the Presidential Ph.D. Fellows are impressive scholars dedicated to their research.
“A foremost priority for Penn is robust support for our talented graduate students,” said Interim President J. Larry Jameson. “They are the future vanguard of academic excellence and knowledge creation, none more so than our Presidential Ph.D. Fellows. This Initiative helps advance the work of extraordinary scholars at Penn, and I look forward to the difference these Fellows will go on to make.”
Prior to joining Annenberg, Moore was an educational technologist and learning designer at New York University, where she developed resources for teaching and learning with generative AI tools as part of the Provost’s AI working group.
Drawing on her professional background in educational technology, her research focuses on the role of digital technologies and media as tools for youth to learn about, construct, and perform various aspects of their identity, including cultural, racial, political, and gender.
Previous Presidential Ph.D. Fellows include Annenberg doctoral students Kallahan Brown and Devo Probol as well as recent graduates Antoine Haywood and Mary E. Andrews. Each Presidential Ph.D. Fellow receives a three-year fellowship, including a 12-month stipend, tuition, fees, Penn Student Insurance coverage, and research funds.
Click here for a full list of the 2024 Presidential Ph.D. Fellows.