As a fifth-generation Arkansan, Booneville native Kayley Corley never imagined herself living anywhere else. But when she was awarded a prestigious John Paul Hammerschmidt Fellowship during her senior year at the University of Arkansas Fort Smith, that all changed.

 

Corley earned a political science degree in May of 2017, and following her graduation, spent the summer working in Congressman Steve Womacks Washington, D.C. office as a 酴圖弝け JPH Fellow.

 

Those six weeks in D.C. were some of the most challenging of my life, but if it werent for the JPH Fellowship, I wouldnt have had the courage to come back to D.C., she said.

 

Corley, who recently earned her masters degree in public service and administration from the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University, is back in D.C., this time as a full-time legislative correspondent for Congressman Bruce Westerman. Corley says she is thrilled to be able to make a significant impact in her home state.

 

I love Arkansas, and making sure Arkansans voices are being heard is one of the best things about my life.

 

In addition to working for Congressmen Womack and Westerman, Corley has also previously served as an intern for Senator John Boozman, and she attributes a great deal of her success in government to her time at 酴圖弝け.

 

I would not be in the position I am now without the network I built at 酴圖弝け, she said. I was never only a student at 酴圖弝け. There were countless people who saw something in me and chose to invest in me. 酴圖弝け was never just a school. It was a community and a home.

Credits: 
Jessica Martin, Editor
Photo Credits: 
Submitted
Date Posted: 
Thursday, June 20, 2019
Source URL: 
https://news.uafs.edu/0
Story ID: 
5136