Academic Jobs - Home of Higher Ed Logo

US Rhodes Scholars Class of 2026 Announced: 32 Leaders Head to Oxford

264views
Submit News
brown hardbound book on white table
Photo by Britta Preusse on Unsplash

The announcement of the US Rhodes Scholars Class of 2026 marked a momentous occasion in American higher education, highlighting the nation's brightest undergraduate talents destined for the hallowed halls of the University of Oxford. On November 15, 2025, the Rhodes Trust revealed 32 exceptional individuals selected from nearly 2,800 applicants endorsed by 264 colleges and universities across 16 districts. These scholars, representing 22 unique institutions, embody the scholarship's core criteria: academic excellence, leadership potential, and a commitment to service. Valued at approximately $75,000 per year—up to $250,000 for multi-year programs—the award covers tuition, fees, and living expenses, allowing recipients to pursue postgraduate studies starting in October 2026.

The Rhodes Scholarship, formally known as the Rhodes Trust Scholarships, was founded in 1902 by British philanthropist Cecil John Rhodes. It aims to develop public-spirited leaders who will contribute to the world's betterment, drawing students from over 25 global constituencies. For Americans, the process involves district committees reviewing applications, final interviews, and selection based on rigorous standards. This year's class underscores a blend of intellectual curiosity and real-world impact, with scholars planning degrees in fields from philosophy and statistics to engineering and global health.

🗺️ Geographic and Institutional Diversity

Scholars hail from every corner of the United States, grouped into 16 districts by state clusters. District 1 (Rhode Island) produced two: Yael S. Goldstein from Harvard University, focusing on philosophy and housing rights, and Nicholas G. Sanzi from Brown University, a politics enthusiast and legislative intern. Districts like 2 (Connecticut/New Jersey) feature Sophia J. Wang from MIT in aeronautics and Omar M. Abuattieh from Rutgers in pharmacy and policy.

Elite institutions dominate but with notable breadth. Harvard, Yale, and MIT each secured three spots, while the U.S. Military Academy (West Point) matched with three cadets: Max Felter, Johnathan Pinc, and Brandon Tran. Brown and the U.S. Air Force Academy had two each. Remarkably, Colby College, Rutgers, and George Washington University celebrated their first Rhodes Scholars in over 25 years, signaling rising talent at less traditional powerhouses.

Group photo of US Rhodes Scholars Class of 2026 celebrating announcement

This distribution reflects the competitive landscape of U.S. higher education, where Ivy League schools continue to nurture top applicants but public universities and service academies are gaining ground. For context, Harvard leads all-time with hundreds of Rhodes alumni, but this class shows broadening access.

Demographic Snapshot: A Class of Trailblazers

The Class of 2026 stands out for its diversity. Five Black scholars were named, including Olurotimi M. Kukoyi from UNC Chapel Hill and Florence N. Onyiuke from UPenn. Women comprise a significant portion, with figures like Alice L. Hall (MIT chemical engineering) and Esmeralda Abreu Jerez (Dartmouth geography). Five from military academies highlight service-oriented leadership, such as Robert J. Miller from USAFA, focused on neuroprosthetics.

Fields span STEM (engineering, neuroscience), social sciences (sociology, policy), humanities (philosophy, history), and interdisciplinary areas. Many are first-generation college students, immigrants, or from underrepresented backgrounds, aligning with Rhodes' evolving criteria emphasizing character and impact over pure academics.

Spotlight on STEM Innovators

Engineering and science dominate, reflecting global challenges. Sophia J. Wang (MIT) plans M.Sc. in Mathematical Physics and Global Governance, having led sustainability in Bhutan. Alice L. Hall (MIT) aims for D.Phil. in Engineering Science after designing tools for Ghanaian women. From USAFA, Robert J. Miller's neuroprosthetics work at MIT labs promises human augmentation advances.

Emma L.B. Finn (Harvard) bridges math, classics, and machine learning for D.Phil. in Statistics, exploring AI generalization. These scholars exemplify how U.S. colleges foster technical leaders ready for Oxford's rigorous programs.

Policy and Social Impact Leaders

Social policy themes abound. Yael S. Goldstein (Harvard) tackles housing philosophy at B.Phil. Philosophy, drawing from shelter work. August A. Rios (Yale) studies sociology for social policy M.Sc.s, serving on housing commissions. Omar M. Abuattieh (Rutgers) focuses on public policy after founding Muslim civic coalitions.

Andrew H. Tomusiak (GWU), an Army Reserve intelligence officer, pursues public policy M.Sc.s. Their bios reveal internships with senators, health departments, and nonprofits, positioning them to influence U.S. and global agendas. For more on the selection, see the official Rhodes announcement.

Humanities and Arts Visionaries

Humanities shine with Aruna B. Balasubramanian (Yale) on rural arts development for M.Phil. Global Studies. Victoria M. Harris (UChicago) excavates African diaspora archaeology for M.Sc.s. Noah B. Tirschwell (Yale) explores history and Jewish studies amid dialogue initiatives.

These pursuits highlight Oxford's strengths in philosophy, history, and area studies, where U.S. scholars bring fresh perspectives from American campuses.

Rhodes House at University of Oxford, home to Rhodes Scholars

Military and Service Excellence

Five military scholars underscore discipline and duty. West Point's trio—Max Felter, Johnathan Pinc (chemistry researcher), Brandon Tran—join USAFA's Robert Miller and Anirvin Puttur. Their Oxford plans in engineering, policy, and sciences blend military rigor with academic depth, continuing a tradition of service academy Rhodes winners.

As detailed in Forbes coverage, this class includes athletes, artists, and Paralympians, enriching Oxford's community.

What This Means for U.S. Higher Education

The Class of 2026 validates U.S. universities' role in talent development. Ivies' dominance persists, but newcomers like Rutgers signal democratized excellence. Diversity—racial, socioeconomic, institutional—mirrors broader trends toward inclusive meritocracy.

Scholars' extracurriculars (debate, orchestras, startups) show holistic education's value. Amid debates on affirmative action and DEI, Rhodes emphasizes character, offering a model for admissions.

Proposed Oxford Pursuits and Future Impact

At Oxford, expect D.Phils., M.Sc.s, M.Phils. in stats/ML, engineering, policy, health. Keidy Palma Ramirez (Brown) on migration data science; Olurotimi Kukoyi (UNC) health evaluation. Past alumni like Rachel Maddow, Pete Buttigieg prove Rhodes' leadership pipeline.

By 2030s, expect policy shapers, innovators from this cohort.

Lessons for Aspiring Scholars

Applications open June 2026. Excel academically (GPA 3.7+ typical), lead (found organizations, intern high-impact), serve (volunteer, policy). Essays on character key. U.S. colleges' prep programs vital.

Explore Rhodes US application page for details.

Broader Implications for Global Higher Ed

Rhodes bridges U.S.-UK education, fostering transatlantic ties. Amid brain drain concerns, it retains talent for mutual benefit. For U.S. unis, producing scholars boosts prestige, rankings.

As class convenes October 2026, watch their Oxford contributions shape futures.

a blue sign that says phobias on it

Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash

Portrait of Sarah West
About the author

Sarah WestView author

Academic Jobs In House Author

Acknowledgements:

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Browse by Faculty

Browse by Subject

Frequently Asked Questions

📚What is the Rhodes Scholarship?

The Rhodes Scholarship is a prestigious postgraduate award to study at the University of Oxford, founded in 1902. It supports outstanding students in academics, leadership, and character.

🏆How many US Rhodes Scholars are there in the Class of 2026?

There are 32 American Rhodes Scholars in the Class of 2026, selected from 965 endorsed applicants across 264 US colleges.

🎓Which universities produced the most scholars?

Harvard, Yale, MIT, and the US Military Academy each had three; Brown and USAFA had two. 22 schools total represented.

🔬What fields will they study at Oxford?

Fields include philosophy, engineering, statistics, global health, policy, archaeology, and more, reflecting diverse interests.

🌍Is the class diverse?

Yes, with 5 Black scholars, strong female representation, military cadets, first-gen students, and from public/private schools.

📅When do they start at Oxford?

Scholars commence studies in October 2026, pursuing MSc, MPhil, DPhil degrees.

How competitive is the Rhodes Scholarship?

Extremely; ~1% success rate from applicants. Requires top academics, leadership, essays, interviews.

What do past Rhodes Scholars achieve?

Alumni include presidents, CEOs, Nobel winners like Rachel Maddow, Pete Buttigieg, advancing policy/science.

✏️How to apply for Rhodes 2027?

Applications open June 2026 via official site. Focus on GPA, service, essays.

📈Impact on US higher ed?

Boosts university prestige, highlights talent pipelines, promotes holistic admissions amid DEI debates.

🪖Military scholars in 2026 class?

Five from USMA (3), USAFA (2), blending service with academics like neuroprosthetics, policy.