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Campus & Community

Charlotte Ebel ’25, Ayla Ray ’27 Receive Phi Kappa Phi Awards

Monday, August 18, 2025, By Kelly Homan Rodoski
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Center for Fellowship and Scholarship AdvisingCollege of Arts and SciencesMaxwell School of Citizenship and Public AffairsRenée Crown University Honors ProgramS.I. Newhouse School of Public CommunicationsSOURCEstudent research

An alumna and a student have received awards from Phi Kappa Phi (PKP), the nation’s oldest and most selective collegiate honor society for all academic disciplines.

Charlotte Ebel ’25, who received a bachelor’s degree in public relations from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and in women’s and gender studies and German from the College of Arts and Sciences, has been awarded a fellowship worth $8,500 by the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi. She is one of 48 recipients nationwide to receive a PKP fellowship.

Ayla Ray, a junior majoring in biology in Arts and Sciences and in environment, sustainability and policy in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, was awarded a Phi Kappa Phi Pioneer Award, which recognizes outstanding undergraduates for their research and leadership.

Phi Kappa Phi has a long history at Syracuse University. A chapter was established on campus in 1916, the 16th chapter in the nation at the time. In 2014, reorganizations left the Syracuse chapter without a leader. The chapter was relaunched in the spring of 2024 by the Center for Fellowship and Scholarship Advising (CFSA). Adam Crowley, scholarship advisor with CFSA, serves as chapter president.

More than 150 members were inducted into Phi Kappa Phi this spring, bringing the total to more than 350 new members in the first two years of the restarted chapter.

Charlotte Ebel

Woman wearing white blouse and blue jacket standing in front of the Hall of Languages

Charlotte Ebel

At Syracuse, Ebel was a member of the Renée Crown University Honors Program, a University Scholar, Remembrance Scholar, Newhouse Scholar and Newhouse Marshal. She was also a research assistant in Professor Nick Bowman’s Extended Reality lab and a member of Newhouse’s student-run public relations firm, Hill Communications. She was inducted into the Syracuse PKP chapter in 2024.

Ebel was also a member of the University’s Division I rowing team. As such, she trained 20 hours a week and helped the team win the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) championship in 2024. She was a member of the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee for two years and served as vice president in 2024-25.

As a Phi Kappa Phi fellow, she will pursue a master’s degree in politics and international studies at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom beginning in September. She also plans to try out for the Cambridge University Boat Club in hopes of winning a seat in one of their crews in the historic Boat Race between Cambridge and Oxford. The race, held on the Thames River, is a major sporting event in the U.K.

At Cambridge, Ebel plans to study sportswashing—the practice of using sports to improve the reputation of a country, organization or individual—within the context of women’s sports. She plans to explore why some countries with extensive recorded histories of women’s rights abuses participate in global women’s sporting events, which are typically associated with progressive ideology and women’s liberation.

“In many cases, these countries are also trying to normalize their extremist governments and establish diplomatic relations,” Ebel says. “I hope to illuminate these connections between global politics, women’s rights and women’s sport through my research, connections that have become more prominent in recent years with the heightened popularity and visibility of women in sport.”

As for the future, Ebel has several avenues she is interested in pursuing, from working for an international sporting organization to the Peace Corps to law school. “I’m hoping that my year at Cambridge will help clarify my passions into a career that best utilizes them,” she says.

Ayla Ray

Woman wearing while blouse and is smiling

Ayla Ray

Ray, who has a minor in Earth sciences, is a member of the Renée Crown University Honors program and the recipient of the 1870 Scholarship. She was inducted into the Syracuse PKP chapter this past spring. In her first semester, she joined the fungal ecology lab of Christopher Fernandez, assistant professor of biology. In the lab, she has designed, received SOURCE (Syracuse Office of Undergraduate Research and Creative Engagement) funding for and is actively running an experiment investigating the effects of warming and drought on the productivity and stability of plants and mycorrhizal fungi.

Fungal ecology is a field Ray is deeply passionate about. “I am able to investigate below ground organisms that provide a strong foundation to their ecosystems and host plants,” she says. “The ecological perspective my lab pursues allows me to connect my research with a strong variety of fields. Understanding how our forests are responding to climate change conditions on a microbial level is crucial as we work to support ecosystem resilience and pursue effective restoration efforts.”

Ray is a recipient of the H. Richard Levy Biology Research Award. As a researcher for Fernandez this summer, she has investigated the impacts of pH, soil organic matter and inoculum source on plant productivity and leaf litter decomposition.

A member of the Outing Club, Ray enjoys hiking, backpacking, caving and rock climbing. She is a volunteer for the South Campus Food Pantry and will be a peer mentor for SOURCE this year.

Following graduation, Ray plans to pursue a Ph.D. in ecology and continue research investigating the below ground impacts of climate change as they relate to host plant and forest productivity

“Receiving the PKP Pioneer Award is an honor, I am proud to be recognized by such a prestigious organization, which prides itself on its value of knowledge,” Ray says. “Beyond this recognition, this award provides meaningful support of my undergraduate research journey, allowing me to focus more fully on my academic and research goals.”

  • Author

Kelly Rodoski

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