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A new home in Poland: Boren scholar speaks on time abroad

Joseph Stankosky

Joseph Stankosky

By Shane Ryden

Be persistent. Be studious. Try, and keep trying.

Such was the method of success for 泫圖弝けapp student Joseph Stankosky, recipient of the esteemed David L. Boren Scholarship, who in December 2024 left Cullowhee for seven months of study in Warsaw, Poland.

The political science and international studies major worked tirelessly with assistant director for education abroad and exchanges Robbie Van Pelt and Ingrid Bego, director of the Office of International Awards, to complete and submit his application in his freshman year.

After 11 rounds of edits between his two essays and a seeming deferment, Stankosky received his final acceptance in May 2024. When the call finally came, he was walking the Silk Road with his grandfather, touring ancient cities along its course, and couldnt have been more overjoyed. 

That was a real special moment for me, Stankosky said. Not only had I been accepted, but that they were wanting to have me. Its a life-changing scholarship. It truly is.

Stankosky hit the ground running. In the months before his departure, he dutifully studied the Polish language and local culture, eagerly awaiting the start of the semester at the University of Warsaw, where he would continue his education in political science and international studies.

Stankosky described a humbling and enriching experience in the classroom and beyond.

Its one of the top 3% global universities, so truly an outstanding, world-renowned research institution, Stankosky said.

The University of Warsaw is all about teaching you the skills to be researchers rather than focusing on teaching you the material. If there was a term I didn't understand, I was expected to learn it by myself and then present on it, a concept or a person or a place. That was what my education was like there.

In his course of study, Stankosky marveled at the experts the university retained, amazed at such privileges as learning European defense policy from an active officer of the Polish military. In new friendships, he found yet more individuals with personal relationships to the conflicts and phenomena hed only studied from the page.

Using five extra weeks allotted to him for travel, he experienced even more of the continent, and Stankoskys education in history and politics came to life in new and vivid color.

I saw many things. I went to the northernmost inhabited town in the world. I met Pope Francis a few hours before he died, or saw rather I was there at the Vatican. And I went to the country of Georgia. I saw the Russian occupation there. I went to the Suwalki Gap in Poland, and I saw the rearming of it, Stankosky said.

In my opinion, you cannot truly fully understand what you learn here in the classroom until you're able to apply that to real world experience.

When the time came for Stankosky to return to the United States, his feelings were understandably mixed.

I was excited, and I was filled with trepidation. Poland, even now, I close my eyes, and I see the place I would still consider it my second home. I lived there for so long. I experienced many new things. And I met many, many great people. From the highest levels of society to the lowest street urchins, and I mean that in a kind way. I met everybody, Stankosky said.

It was a humbling, exciting, elating experience, and I was sad to give it up, but I was happy to come back. I missed Western. I missed my friends. I was excited to continue my academic journey and see how I could continue to grow and develop professionally and academically, and thats what I'm doing now.

A government job lays ahead for Stankosky, another aspect of earning the David L. Boren Scholarship. However, Stankosky has plans of pursuing his masters and a doctorate before beginning his career in service.

In his momentous accomplishment, Stankosky embodies what WCUs educators hope to help their students achieve: growth with momentum.

Joseph applied for the Boren Scholarship as a freshman and was successful, which is truly impressive. Whats also impressive is how a WCU student studied the Polish language at the University of Warsaw on a full-ride Boren scholarship, Bego said. 

When people visit Western, they may not expect to see our students studying Polish, Arabic or Russian abroad, but these are all opportunities that our students have pursued in the last three years.

The Office of National and International Awards is constantly recruiting qualified students to apply for programs like Boren because not only do students benefit from learning a new language abroad, but they also provide excellent post-graduation employment opportunities that will propel students into federal service careers and other fulfilling careers of choice.

Your future at WCU may begin in the mountains, but your journey can take you anywhere, especially if youre willing to work hard for it.

Everybody truly has the potential to achieve anything they want to, Stankosky said. Its a lot of hard work, but everybody can succeed if they just put their mind to it. Im a real believer in that.