They are Scholars, Hear Them Roar

2017 class of Petit Undergraduate Research Scholars most diverse in program history

Historically speaking, women have been underrepresented in professions heavy in science technology, engineering, and mathematics (the STEM fields). You wouldn’t know it to look at the 2017 class of Petit Undergraduate Research Scholars.

This year’s class – tied for the largest number of students, 22, with last year’s class – features 16 women, a record number in the program’s 18-year history.

Since it was established as a summer research experience in 2000, the program has supported hundreds of top undergraduate researchers who have moved on to successful careers in research, medicine, and industry. But it has never supported this many women at one time. That first year, six of the seven scholars were men.

Oh, how times have changed.

“It’s empowering to be surrounded by motivated women who aren’t going to stop moving forward in STEM just because the field has been traditionally male dominated,” says Madeline Smerchansky, a third-year student in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, who has been doing undergraduate research for about a year.

“But I’m excited about the Petit Scholars program because of how independent it will allow me to be in the lab,” she adds. “I think it will help me solidify my post-graduation plans while providing valuable experience and networking in the research world.”

The Petit Scholars program, open to all Atlanta area university students, basically gives scholars room to breathe intellectually. What makes the program unique is that it provides for a full year of research in state-of-the-art labs of the Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience.

“The scholars will work alongside graduate students or postdoctoral mentors in labs across the spectrum of bioengineering and bioscience,” explains Raquel Lieberman, the Petit Institute researcher who serves as faculty mentor for the program.

“The sustained research effort over the course of a year will enable the Petit Scholars to contribute to a research project in a substantive way,” adds Lieberman, an associate professor in the School of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

This year’s group of students come from three different universities (while most come from Georgia Tech, two students are from Morehouse and one is from Agnes Scott).

They represent nine different majors, reflecting the multi-disciplinary approach the Petit Institute takes toward research. The largest group (six students) is majoring in biomedical engineering (BME) in the Coulter Department.

“I’ve been interested in becoming a biomedical engineer since I was a sophomore in high school and my math teacher brought in real data from a hospital for us to work on,” says Isabelle Stasenko, one of the BME undergrads. “I loved the idea of doing the math and research behind the medicine, and I still do.”

Stasenko figures the the program will help confirm if a career in research is the right path for her. In the meantime, the Petit Scholar experience is a source of empowerment for her.

“It’s exciting to have so many powerful women pursuing and excelling in engineering fields,” she says. “Georgia Tech was originally an all-boys institution, so to see the number of women growing like this is amazing.”

Another BME undergrad, Rebecca Keate, says she knows a rare opportunity when she sees one: "As a second-year undergraduate, I recognize that a lot of students are not granted the same opportunities as I am, to have such a sophisticated research experience at a powerhouse like Georgia Tech."

But she admits to being tired of hearing that she, as a woman, is, “prone to be less successful in any STEM program. I disagree with this opinion. I refuse to believe that my intelligence is any less than a man’s. And as an engineer, I hope to be held to the highest standards, regardless of being a woman.”

Here they are, the 2017 Petit Scholars (plus, their school, their mentor, and the Petit Institute researcher’s lab they’ll be spending the year in):

• Ashley Alexander (Georgia Tech, Dong-Dong Yang, Frank Rosenzweig)

• Cedric Bowe (Morehouse, Vineet Tiruvadi, Rob Butera)

• Mi Hyun Choi (Georgia Tech, Joshua Lee, Frank Hammond)

• Hassan Fakhoury (Georgia Tech, Quoc Mac, Gabe Kwong)

• Sarah Ghalayini (Georgia Tech, Moustafa Ali, Mostafa El-Sayed)

• Daniel Gurevich (Georgia Tech, Ilija Uzelac, Flavio Fenton)

• Connor Huddleston (Georgia Tech, Zhenglun “Alan” Wei, Ajit Yoganathan)

• Rebecca Keate (Georgia Tech, Shlomi Cohen, Jennifer Curtis)

• Siyi “Sophie” Li (Georgia Tech, Aline Yonesawa, Mike Davis)

• Amelia Matthews (Georgia Tech, Sam Tonddast-Navaei, Jeff Skolnick)

• Esperance Mugabekazi (Agnes Scott, Sang-Eon Park, Robert Gross)

• Michelle Myrick (Georgia Tech, Inseung Kang, Aaron Young)

• Franck Nijimbere (Morehouse, Bo Broadwater, Harold Kim)

• Chiagoziem “Chichi” Obi (Georgia Tech, Udita Brahmachari, Bridgette Barry)

• Renee Puvvada (Georgia Tech, Katily Ramirez/Michael Bellavia*, Todd Sulchek)

• Celeste Runnels (Georgia Tech, Nicholas Kovacs, Loren Williams)

• Arushi Saini (Georgia Tech, Osiris Martinez-Guzman, Amit Reddi)

• Amanda Schaefer (Georgia Tech, Emily Jackson, Hang Lu)

• Madeline Smerchansky (Georgia Tech, Kirsten Parratt, Krishnendu Roy)

• Isabelle Stasenko (Georgia Tech, Efraín Cermeno, Andrés García)

• Moya Tomlin (Georgia Tech, Dustin Huard, Raquel Lieberman)

• Corey Zheng (Georgia Tech, Seung Yup “Paul” Lee, Erin Buckley)

 

LINKS:

Petit Undergraduate Research Scholars

 

CONTACT:

Jerry Grillo
Communications Officer II
Parker H. Petit Institute for
Bioengineering and Bioscience

For More Information Contact

Jerry.grillo@ibb.gatech.edu

Jerry Grillo
Communications Officer II
Parker H. Petit Institute for
Bioengineering and Bioscience