Two Clark School Seniors Elected to Phi Beta Kappa

Two Clark School Seniors Elected to Phi Beta Kappa

Two Clark School Seniors Elected to Phi Beta Kappa

Two seniors in the University of Maryland’s A. James Clark School of Engineering have been invited to become members of Phi Beta Kappa (ΦBK), the oldest academic honor society in the United States. Both Ben Kellogg, computer engineering, and Michael Kelly, mechanical engineering, have been elected based on their academic excellence.

Phi Beta Kappa was founded in 1776 by students at the College of William and Mary during the American Revolution. Since then, ΦBK has expanded to 280 chapters throughout the U.S.  Famous members include former president Bill Clinton, actress Glenn Close, and physicist Brian Greene. Students are chosen by a faculty committee and faculty ΦBK members based on the “quality, depth, and breadth” of their scholastic record. Students are expected to have excelled in a variety of courses, including those in the humanities and sciences.  Membership is extremely selective, as only about 10% of students from institutions with ΦBK chapters are elected.

To learn more about the University of Maryland Phi Beta Kappa society, visit: www.ugst.umd.edu/pbk.html.

April 25, 2013


Prev   Next

Current Headlines

Four BIOE Terps Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

Celebrating Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Heritage Month: Karenna Buco

UMD Student Awarded Wings Foundation Scholarship

Celebrating Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Heritage Month

Dean's Circle Spotlight: Investing in Ideas, and Access

Seven Current and Former Maryland MSE Students to Attend 73rd Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting

UMD Eclipse Ballooning a Success

Seven Maryland Students Receive Vertical Flight Foundation Scholarships

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search News

Archived News

Events Resources

Events Calendar