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Michigan State University student Roberto (Marcos) Garcia has earned the nationally competitive Beinecke Scholarship. Garcia worked with the Distinguished Student Awards Office to become MSU’s sixth Beinecke Scholar since the program launched in 1975. This year, he is one of 16 awardees out of 93 nominees from institutions across the country.

Marcos Garcia at a research event.
Third-year Honors College student Marcos Garcia.

The Beinecke Scholarship Program provides funding for third-year students pursuing research-focused graduate study in the arts, humanities and social sciences. The scholarship provides $35,000 in graduate education support.

“Engagement with the pressing issues of the day has always been MSU’s approach to our research, education and outreach missions,” said MSU President Kevin M. Guskiewicz, Ph.D. “Marcos Garcia personifies that ideal with his impressive undergraduate research record and his continuing work to address the critical and persistent issue of homelessness. We applaud his accomplishments and his dedication, which make this recognition with the prestigious Beinecke Scholarship very well-earned.”

“Marcos is a positive force of community impact,” said Honors College Dean Glenn Chambers “He has leveraged opportunities in the Honors College like the Giving Back Awards and Diversity Research Showcase to grow as a changemaker. He will continue to make a difference as a Beinecke Scholar.”

Garcia is a third-year Honors College student majoring in sociology through the College of Social Science and English through the College of Arts and Letters. He is part of the Social Science Scholars Program, a research-focused cohort and is also a member of the Associated Students of MSU.

“I am deeply honored to have been chosen as a recipient of the Beinecke Scholarship,” Garcia said. “I see this as an opportunity to pursue a career studying and advocating for one of America’s most neglected and devalued social groups: the unhoused.”

“It also provides a moment to reflect on the people who have invested in me,” Garcia continued. “I want to thank Dr. John Waller for believing in me and providing guidance throughout the application process. I also want to thank Khadja Erickson, the Tenant Resource Center of Mid-Michigan and Dr. Stephen Przybylinski for allowing me to work with them and help actualize my passions.”

Research and community work for the unhoused

“Marcos is dedicated to understanding why nearly 800,000 people across America are unhoused on a typical night,” said his mentor, Associate Professor John Waller. “As a researcher, intern and volunteer, he has gained the ideal preparation for an academic career that makes intellectual contributions and helps to inform policy.”

Waller said Garcia is “undertaking original research on the factors that put people at risk of losing their homes. A superb student with a genuine commitment to housing justice, Marcos will be the best kind of academic social scientist.”

Garcia has conducted five research projects focusing on underrepresented and vulnerable populations. He is currently a research assistant for Assistant Professor Stephen Przybylinski on an independent project that examines risk factors for homelessness in mid-Michigan.

Garcia has served as a research assistant to Assistant Professor Donovan McCarty, director of the MSU College of Law Housing Justice Clinic, on a project analyzing housing laws. As part of that work, Garcia is co-designing an artificial intelligence chatbot to provide accurate legal legal guidance to tenants at risk of eviction.

Previously, Garcia served as a research assistant for Associate Professor Heather McCauley on a project focused on Michigan’s homelessness crisis and potential solutions. He also conducted independent research on the complexities of the Latino votethe Latino vote under the supervision of Academic Specialist Michael Ristich. Findings from these projects were presented at campus forums and conferences.

Marcos Garcia sitting in the audience during an award show.
Marcos Garcia attending the 2026 Honors Giving Back Awards.

Garcia has received multiple honors for community engagement. He was named a 2025-26 Newman Civic Fellow and one of four students nationwide to earn Campus Compact’s Student Leadership Award. Garcia recently earned second place in the Honors Giving Back Awards for his work on housing insecurity with the Tenant Resource Center of Mid-Michigan.

Originally from Lansing, Michigan, Garcia attended Waverly High School. He worked with the MSU Distinguished Student Awards Office to apply for the Beinecke Scholarship.

This story originally appeared on the Honors College website.

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