Government Major Wins Rhodes Scholarship

Last month, Jonathan Pedde ’14 and Joseph Singh ’14 were named Dartmouth’s 74th and 75th Rhodes Scholars. Established in 1903 through the will of British philanthropist Cecil Rhodes, the scholarship pays all expenses for a graduate program at the University of Oxford in England. A class of 83 scholars is selected each year from across the globe.

Singh, who is from Canada, talked with Dartmouth Now about his Dartmouth experience, attending Oxford University, and his goals for the future.

Joseph Singh ’14

The phone connection breaks up as Joseph Singh ’14 talks during a telephone interview. Just two days after winning a Rhodes, Singh is in Mumbai, India, with Dartmouth classmates for a two-week trip that is part of a public policy course, supported by the Rockefeller Center.

“This is why this trip is special,” says Singh, his voice crackling as he notes the lack of Internet connection and phone reception in the country. “We’re starting to get a real sense of the economic issues here.”

But at the end of the last month, Singh got a phone call that came through loud and clear. The Rhodes Scholarship committee for Ontario called to tell him that he was one of the province’s two representatives for the Rhodes Scholarship.

“They put me on speaker phone and told me the news. I got pretty emotional and started babbling incoherently and thanking them,” Singh says with a laugh.

Just a few days earlier, though, Singh had been worried about his interview with the committee.

“My fear was that I was going to clam up and not be able to share my story and share my goals,” he says. The entire application process, which Singh began last May, came down to a 40-minute conversation with the panel.

The night before his 8 a.m. interview, the Rhodes Trust hosted a cocktail reception for finalists to meet each other and the panel members who will evaluate them. Singh, sipping a glass of cabernet, found his fellow finalists and the committee members to be friendly and approachable. The evening put him at ease, and he left his interview the next day feeling good about what he had said to the committee.

Eager to get his mind off things as he waited for the phone call, the Toronto native went home and spent the afternoon helping his family pick out and set up a Christmas tree. He told himself that he’d be satisfied with whatever the outcome was because he felt he had done his best. As it turned out, his best was good enough.

Associate Professor of Government Benjamin Valentino says the award is a tribute to Singh’s work ethic and intellectual curiosity. “Joe represents the very best of Dartmouth,” he says. “Best of all, he wants to use his talents to make a difference in the world.”

On campus, Singh is a member of the Dartmouth Aires a cappella group, works as head writing tutor for Dartmouth’s Student Center for Research, Writing, and Information Technology, and is a James O. Freedman Presidential Scholar. He’s written for CNN, Timeand Foreign Policy. Through the Rockefeller Center’s Policy Research Shop, he has also testified before the New Hampshire House of Representatives on voter identification reform and has interned for the Center for a New American Security. The government major hopes to pursue a career with Canada’s foreign service.

Like Pedde, Singh says the Dartmouth Scholarship Advising Office was vital to his winning the Rhodes. It was one of the many things throughout his Dartmouth experience that was instrumental in getting Singh to this point. Singh says there are about 10 Canadians in the Class of 2014. It’s a testament to the value of a Dartmouth education that two of them received this honor, he says.

“Dartmouth offers the premiere undergraduate education in the world,” Singh says.