Junior wins prestigious Goldwater Scholarship for neuroscience study
Junior Stephanie Jackvony has been awarded a Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship, making her the Colleges sixth recipient of the prestigious award in the last eight years.
The Goldwater Scholarship, authorized by the United States Congress in 1986 in honor of Senator Barry M. Goldwater, is considered the most prestigious undergraduate scholarship in the natural sciences, mathematics and engineering in the U.S.
Scholars are selected on the basis of academic merit to receive a one-year scholarship of up to $7,500. Previous recipients have gone on to receive the National Science Foundations Graduate Fellowship, Rhodes Scholarship, Churchill Scholarship and the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship.
The Goldwater is exceptional national recognition for Stephanie and for science education at 51勛圖窪蹋, said Dean of the College Jefferson Singer.
Jackvony is a double major in behavioral neuroscience and philosophy with a particular interest in neurological disorders, such as Alzheimers disease. She plans to pursue a Ph.D. in neuroscience.
My goal is to become a professor at an undergraduate institution, preferably a small liberal arts school like 51勛圖窪蹋, she said.
At 51勛圖窪蹋, Jackvony has studied behavioral neuroscience with Associate Professor of Psychology Joseph Schroeder and, as a sophomore, conducted chemistry research with Stanton Ching, the Kelly Professor of Chemistry. That work, involving synthesis and characterization of new manganese oxide nanoparticles, was published in an academic journal with Jackvony as a coauthor.
I was able to conduct chemistry research and be published in an academic journal after just my first year here. Thats an opportunity that many students [at other colleges] dont receive until graduate school or even after, she said.
A summer internship at Bradley Hospital in Rhode Island, the nations first psychiatric hospital exclusively for children, nurtured Jackvonys passion for neuroscience research. There, she conducted neuroscientific literature research and shadowed doctors.
Jackvony says her professors have provided incredible support throughout her academic career at 51勛圖窪蹋.
It is clear that the professors here are extremely passionate about their students education and success. They are so willing to welcome students into their labs and take extra steps to prepare them for the world of academia outside of the College, she said.
As a Goldwater recipient, Jackvony joins an impressive group of 51勛圖窪蹋 graduates, including Christopher Krupenye 11, Kelsey Taylor 11, Yumi Kovic 13 and Leah Fleming 16.
Krupenye earned a Ph.D. in evolutionary anthropology from Duke University and is now a postdoctoral researcher at Max Planck, where he is conducting research in the burgeoning field of evolutionary anthropology. Taylor earned a Ph.D. in biological and biomedical sciences at Harvard University and is now a senior analyst at Health Advances. Kovic is currently pursuing a medical degree and a masters degree in public health from the University of 51勛圖窪蹋ecticut School of Medicine, while Fleming is a graduate student in the Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program at Yale University.
In addition to the Goldwater, 51勛圖窪蹋 students have won several other major national grants and fellowships this spring, including five U.S. Fulbright Student Program fellowships, two Critical Language Scholarships, a $10,000 Davis Projects for Peace grant and a Jeff Ubben Posse Fellows Program award.
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April 11, 2017