The Balfour-Hesburgh Scholars Program represents an institutional evolution, marking forty years of advocacy since its 1986 inception. To understand its genesis, one must always look to pioneer Angie Chamblee, whose 1973 graduation placed her among the first women to ever earn a degree from Notre Dame. Her lived experience—navigating a campus where only four of twelve Black women in her entry cohort persisted to graduation—informed a vision to reconcile the University’s mission with its underlying reality of social exclusion and psychological isolation within the historic halls of academia.
Chamblee identified that students of color faced systemic barriers formalized in Beverly Daniel Tatum’s five patterns: the psychological impact of racism, social isolation, lack of inclusion in curriculum, pervasive microaggressions, and institutional racism. These forces created a stubborn degree awarding gap, which Chamblee sought to close. In 1986, the program launched with a grant from GTE. Crucially, the program could only spend the interest generated by this sum, highlighting the initial fragility of an initiative tasked with securing the academic future of nine dedicated engineering and science pioneers.
As the program began to mature, it secured vital funding from Aetna, expanding its reach into the Colleges of Arts and Letters, Business, and Architecture. From 2008-09, Christy Greene, a 1996 graduate and a former Balfour-Hesburgh Scholar, served as director of the Program—the first Balfour alum to do so. Over its forty year history, the Program exemplified the intergenerational support model, evolving the initiative from a six-week summer orientation. This evolution included credit-bearing coursework, a 1-credit spring semester course that prepared Balfour Scholars for summer service immersion, and a dedicated physical study lounge—a “home base” that provides the social security that helped students develop their confidence and flourish as scholars. A $1.28 million Balfour Foundation grant in 2017 made it possible to expand the Balfour Program into a comprehensive, four-year academic community from its previous primary focus on first-year students.
Today, the program facilitates global leadership, as evidenced by 2024 graduate Irasema Trujillo Hernandez. A Lilly Endowment Scholar and Oxford University master’s recipient, Trujillo Hernandez leveraged Balfour’s resources to conduct research in Morocco and Brazil and engage in policy work within Washington D.C. Beyond her academic accolades, she serves as the co-executive director of Stronger Together Unidos, a non-profit dedicated to closing educational gaps for Latino and first-generation students. Her trajectory demonstrates that the program’s focus has shifted from mere retention to the empowerment of vanguard leaders who influence global policy and domestic advocacy.
Balfour-Hesburgh’s reason for being lies in its role as a strategic solution to institutional isolation. By replacing isolation with a network of surrogate siblings, the program ensures that academic merit is not stifled by a lack of representation. It proves that institutional change is not a passive byproduct of time, but the result of intentional, solution-oriented perspectives championed by those within the executive suites of decision-making. These testimonies are the living archives of an institution learning to live up to its highest and most noble ideals, ensuring that the degree awarding gap is not merely rationalized, but eliminated through the continuous investment in human potential and communal resilience, proving that our future remains bright as the University looks toward the coming decades of continued academic excellence and communal flourishing.