2007-2008
Arts and Sciences graduate students at Tufts University excelled in a
variety of areas during the 2007-2008 academic year. Below is a listing
of some of their notable achievements:
Art and Art History
During the 2007-2008 academic year, Art and Art History graduate students
delivered research papers at conferences and meetings in, among other
locations, Canada and Massachusetts. These events included the Street
Conference at the University of California, Irvine and Tufts University's
Beyond the Classroom Forum.
In addition, graduate students published articles and received a number
of awards and other honors.
William Arning, curator at MIT's List Art Center, worked on the
Chantal Akerman retrospective titled Moving through Time and Space,
Nina Bozicnik earned a Curatorial Fellowship from the DeCordova
Museum and Sculpture Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts (Nina was also honored
with the Tufts Graduate Student Teaching Award), and Nicole Evans
received a fellowship to attend the Smithsonian Latino Museum Studies
Program in Washington, DC.
Of the students who graduated from the master's-only program, Rhonda
Saad is currently pursuing a Ph.D. (with a focus on modern and contemporary
art of the Arab world) at Northwestern University and John Tyson is
pursuing a Ph.D. at Emory University where he is studying modern and contemporary art.
Biology
During the 2007-2008 academic year, twenty biology graduate students
delivered research-related presentations within the United States and
abroad. These presentations took place at conferences and meetings in,
among other locations, Belgium, New Hampshire, Ohio, and Portugal. These
events included the International Symposium on Avian Endocrinology, the
annual meeting of the Animal Behavior Society, and the Adaptive Motion of
Animals and Machines Conference.
In addition, twenty-eight graduate students published articles in leading
journals and other publications. These students included David DesRochers,
who contributed an article in Ecoscience, as well as Noah Wilson-Rich,
who co-authored articles in Medical Hypothesis and the Journal of
Invertebrate Pathology. These students were joined by Haihua Zhang and
Jocelyn Muller, whose articles appeared in Molecular Cell and the
Journal of Ecological Anthropology, respectively.
Graduate students received outside research funding as well. These students
included Alexander "Sasha" Keyel, who received a National
Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship, Brian Tavernia,
who received support from the Norcross Wildlife Foundation and the Nuttall
Ornithological Society, and Molly Dickens, who received funding from
Sigma Xi (The Scientific Research Society).
Beyond these funding awards, graduate student Minda Berbeco was
accepted into an NSF program in graduate education titled "Debating
Science," and David DesRochers received a travel award from the Society
for Conservation Biology to present his research at their annual meeting.
Chemistry
During the 2007-2008 academic year, fifteen chemistry graduate students
delivered research-related presentations within the United States and abroad.
These presentations took place at conferences and meetings in, among other
locations, California, China, and Louisiana. These events included the American
Chemical Society's National Meeting, Gordon Research Conferences, and the
annual meeting of the Biomedical Engineering Society.
In addition, twenty-three graduate students published articles in leading
journals and other publications. These students included David Rissin,
who co-authored an article which appeared in the Journal of the American
Chemical Society, and Dan Killelea and Victoria Campbell
who co-authored an article which appeared in Science.
In addition, thirty-five graduate students were supported by outside
research funding. These included: Faith Dukes and Ashleigh Baber
who were supported on National Science Foundation (NSF) grants, and Laila
Dafik and Jonathon Tres Brazell who received support from the
National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Students from the department received other honors as well. Heather
Tierney received a Best Poster Award from the Materials Research Society,
and Ragnhild Whitaker and Erin Iski received awards for
outstanding academic performance and contributions to Tufts undergraduate
education, respectively, during the university's annual Graduate Student Awards.
Beyond these individual honors, graduate students from the department
distinguished themselves through their group achievements — the most
notable being Victoria Campbell, Erin Iski, Toni Lamoureaux,
Michelle Lee, and Shannon Stroble, who were recipients of a
Training Tomorrow's Innovators Fellowship as part of the department's Graduate
Assistance in Areas of National Need (GAANN) grant. Shannon Stroble also
spent part of the summer of 2008 at NASA mission control in Arizona analyzing
data from the Mars Phoenix Lander mission.
Child Development
During the 2007-2008 academic year, child development graduate students
delivered research-related presentations within the United States and abroad.
The presentations took place at conferences and meetings in, among other
locations, Illinois, Italy, and New York. These events included conferences
for the American Education Research Association, the European Association for
Research of Adolescence, and the Society for Research on Adolescence.
Graduate students also published articles in leading journals and other
publications. These students included Joan Riley Driscoll, who co-authored
an article in the journal Infant and Child Development, as well as
Elizabeth Norton and Maryna Vashchenko, who contributed articles
to Mind, Brain, and Education and the Clinical Social Work Journal,
respectively.
On the funding front, Elizabeth Norton received a National Science
Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship and Iris Ponte was the
recipient of an American Education Research Association Dissertation Grant.
These students were joined by Mona Abo-Zena, who received funding
through the Society for Research on Adolescence's Young Scholars Program,
Alicia Doyle Lynch and Kristen Fay, who participated in an
Advanced Training Institute at the University of North Carolina — Chapel
Hill with support from an American Psychological Association Fellowship, and
Yibing Li, who participated in an Advanced Methodology Training
Institute at the University of Virginia, also with support from an American
Psychological Association Fellowship.
Drama
During the 2007-2008 academic year, drama graduate students delivered
research-related presentations throughout the United States. These presentations
took place at conferences and meetings at, among other locations, Louisiana,
Missouri, and Virginia. These events included the Kennedy Center's American
College Theatre Festival, the American Society for Theatre's Research Conference,
and the Mid-America Theatre Conference.
Drama graduate students also published articles in leading journals and
other publications. These students included Sean Edgecomb, who contributed
articles to the anthologies We Will Be Citizens: New Essays on Lesbian and
Gay Drama and Performance Studies: The Key Concept, and Meron
Langsner who authored five articles which appeared in, among others,
Puppetry International and the Electronic Journals of Martial Arts
& Sciences. Langsner also received a National New Play Network playwright
residency (one of only three individuals in the United States to be recognized
with this honor) and a Massachusetts Council on the Humanities Grant for Playwriting.
Graduate student Virginia Anderson was a sponsored fellow at the
Centers for Disease Control's National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis,
STD, and TB Prevention. She also completed her second term as president of the
American Society for Theatre Research's Graduate Student Caucus and directed
the musical "Cabaret" at Tufts' Arena Theatre.
Education
During the 2007-2008 academic year, fourteen education graduate students
delivered research-related presentations within the United States and abroad.
These presentations took place at conferences and meetings in, among other
locations, Hawaii, Minnesota, the Netherlands, and New York. These events
included the annual conferences of the National Center for Technology and
Engineering Education Research and the Association of Teachers of Mathematics
in New England, as well as the annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society
and the International Congress on Mathematical Education.
In addition, several graduate students published articles in leading journals
and other publications. These students included Mara Martinez and William
Church, who co-authored articles which appeared in The International Journal
on Mathematics Education and the International Journal of Engineering
Education, respectively.
Education graduate students received outside research funding as well.
Gabrielle Cayton received a dissertation grant from the American Educational
Research Association and the Institute of Education Sciences, while Araceli
Ortiz earned both a 3M Ingenuity Grant and a Motorola Foundation
Innovation Generation Grant. These students were joined by Rory Kondrad
(who received a Roothbert Scholarship) and Aaron Price (who received
funding to be a visiting scholar at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago, Illinois).
English
During the 2007-2008 academic year, English graduate students delivered
research-related presentations throughout the United States. The presentations
took place at conferences and meetings in, among other locations, Illinois,
New York, Texas, and Washington. These events included the International Conference
on Narrative, the Victorian Literature and Culture Seminar, and the Modern Language
Association Convention.
In addition, graduate students published articles and received a number of
awards and other honors. These students included Barbara Orton, who
contributed a selection of poems to the Yale Review, and Jason Clemence
who had an article selected for publication by Media and the End of the World.
These students were joined by Ashley Shelden, who was awarded a year-long
graduate fellowship from Tufts University's Center for the Humanities, and Laurel
Hankins, who received a Tufts Graduate Student Council (GSC) Outstanding
Contribution to Undergraduate Education Fellowship. In addition, Kristina
Aikens and Margaret Toth received Advanced Graduate Student Awards
from the Tufts English Graduate Organization (TEGO), and three fellow students
(Erin Kappeler, Anne Moore, and Ashley Shelden)
earned Tufts Graduate Institute For Teaching (GIFT) Fellowships.
History
During the 2007-2008 academic year, history graduate students delivered
research-related presentations throughout the United States. The presentations
took place at conferences and meetings in, among other locations, California
and Illinois. These events included the joint national meeting of the American
Culture Association/Popular Culture Association and the Journal of Film and
History Conference.
In addition, graduate students published articles and received a number of
awards and other honors. These students included Jodi Larson, whose
article on postwar campaign songs was not only selected for publication by
the Journal of Popular Culture but received its William E. Brigman Award
for Outstanding Graduate Student Paper. Larson was joined by Neilesh Bose,
who received a Diversity Dissertation Fellowship from the Center for Citizenship,
Race, and Ethnicity Studies (CREST) at the College of Saint Rose in New York, and
Sarah Waheed, who received a Council of Library and Information Resources
(CLIR) Mellon Research Grant.
Mathematics
During the 2007-2008 academic year, mathematics graduate students delivered
research-related presentations within the United States and abroad. These
presentations took place at conferences and meetings in, among other locations,
Canada, Switzerland, and England. These events included the annual meeting of
the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) and the International
Congress on Industrial and Applied Mathematics.
Graduate students from the department received a number of travel grants to
attend conferences and meetings. These students included
Jamison Wolf and Meredith Brown, who received National Science
Foundation (NSF) travel grants to attend both the Levy Conference in Denmark
and Cornell University's Probability Summer School, and Cristian Gonzalez
Martinez, who received summer research funding as a Marie Curie Early Stage
Researcher at Oxford University.
In addition, graduate students from the department published articles in
leading journals and other publications. Both Erin Munro and Malena
Espanol co-authored articles, respectively, in BMC Neuroscience and
the SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing: Copper Mountain Special Issue,
and Gianluca Caterina submitted a paper to Physica A. Erin
Munro was also honored by SIAM for her work as president of the
organization's Tufts student chapter and was one of only 41 people in the United
States to receive a NSF Mathematics Postdoctoral Fellowship.
Music
During the 2007-2008 academic year, several music graduate students delivered
research-related presentations or performed musical compositions within the
United States and abroad. These presentations/performances took place at
conferences and musical events in, among other locations, Australia, Brazil,
and Massachusetts. Some of these events included the Art of Record Production
2008 Conference and the World Dance Alliance of the Americas Conference, as
well as a 24-hour music marathon which was organized by graduate students
Phil Acimovic and Elliot Cless.
Several students graduated from the master's-only program and are currently
pursuing their Ph.D.'s. These students included Marc Gidal (who's
pursuing a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology at Harvard University), Cinzia
Scafetta (a Ph.D. student in musicology at the University of Birmingham
in the United Kingdom), Samuel Dorf (who's a musicology Ph.D. student
at Northwestern University), and Julie Raimondi (who, along with
fellow graduate Katie Stuffelbeam, is pursuing a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology
at the UCLA).
Occupational Therapy
During the 2007-2008 academic year, occupational therapy graduate students
delivered research-related presentations at conferences and meetings throughout
the United States. These events took place in, among other locations, California
and Massachusetts and included the annual conferences of the American
Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) and the Massachusetts Association for
Occupational Therapy (MAOT).
Graduate students from the department received a number of awards and other
honors. These students included Jan Hollenbeck, who received a grant
from the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, and
Twyla Fink, the recipient of a Joy Ann Sambur Greisen Scholarship.
Hollenbeck and Fink were joined by Melinda Morgrage and Kimberly
Smith, both of whom received support through the Bekenstein Family Endowment,
Alicia Zeh-Dean, who received a Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship
and Public Service Civic Engagement Fellowship, and Jane Crimmins,
the recipient of the Marjorie B. Greene Award, which is given annually by
the department to a student who has demonstrated outstanding achievement
in the areas of leadership and involvement in student and professional activities.
Physics
During the 2007-2008 academic year, physics graduate students delivered
research-related presentations at conferences and meetings throughout the
United States. These events took place in, among other locations, Illinois,
Minnesota, and Texas, and included the Physical Electronics Conference, the
North American Thermal Analysis Society Meeting, and the AVS National Symposium.
Several graduate students published articles in leading journals and other
publications. These students included Daniel Cherdack, Matthew Hare,
and Benjamin Whitehouse, all of whom co-authored articles in
Physical Review D.
In addition, physics graduate students received outside research funding
or other honors. Graduate students Daniel Cherdack (who also received
a Burlingame Fellowship), Matthew Hare, and Samuel Hamilton all
received funding from the United States Department of Energy, while Huipeng
Chen (who also received a North American Thermal Analysis Society Travel
Grant) and Lei Yu received support from the National Science Foundation
(NSF) and the Petroleum Research Fund, respectively.
Psychology
During the 2007-2008 academic year, twenty-three psychology graduate students
delivered research-related presentations within the United States and abroad.
These presentations took place at conferences and meetings in, among other
locations, California, Canada, Georgia, and Texas. These events included the
annual meetings of the Psychonomic Society, the Society of Psychophysiological
Research, and the American Association of Blacks in Higher Education, as well
as the Social and Affective Neuroscience and International Infant Studies conferences.
In addition, twelve graduate students published articles in leading journals
and other publications. These students included Evan Apfelbaum, who
contributed an article to the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,
as well as Nicole Jurdak and Kathryn Handwerger, who co-authored
articles in Nutritional Neuroscience and the Journal of Traumatic
Stress, respectively.
On the funding front, Nicholas Rule, Negin Toosi, and Kathryn
Handwerger received National Science Foundation (NSF) pre-doctoral fellowships.
These students were joined by Kristin Pauker (a Jacob Javitz Fellowship
recipient) and Jasmine Yap (who received a National Institutes of Health
(NIH) National Research Service Award grant).
Students from the department were honored in other ways. Evan Apfelbaum
received a travel award from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology
(SPSP) and Neil Cohn was honored with the 2007 M. Thomas Inge Award for
Comics Scholarship. In addition, the American Association of Blacks in Higher
Education honored Kristin Dukes with its doctoral student award and
Emily Slocombe received a graduate student travel award from the Society
for Psychophysiological Research.
Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning
During the 2007-2008 academic year, urban and environmental policy and planning
graduate students delivered research-related presentations at conferences and
meetings within the United States and abroad. These events took place in, among
other locations, Maine, Pennsylvania, and Spain and included conferences held
by the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association (NESEA) and the International
Society for Third-Sector Research (ISTR).
In addition, several graduate students received funding or other honors.
Graduate students Holly Elwell and Ryan Fattman were selected
as Rappaport Public Policy Fellows by Harvard University's Rappaport Institute,
and Kara Hubbard was awarded a Baltimore City Mayoral Fellowship. These
students were joined by Abby Lindsay, who received a research fellowship
from the Tufts Institute of the Environment.
Beyond these individual honors, graduate students from the department were
also recognized for their group work, the most notable being Alison Corwin,
Soledad Gaztambide, Abby Lindsay, and Jessica Miller who
received a "Best Application of the Planning Process" award from the
American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP).
Students who graduated from the master's-only program in 2007-2008 are
working in a number of different areas, including Danielle Lipes (a
Town Planner/Conservation Agent in Swampscott, a suburb of Boston, Massachusetts),
Melissa Peters (who is working as an Environmental Planner for Camp
Dresser & McKee, Inc. of Chicago, Illinois), and Craig Nicholson
(a Project Manager for Ajax Partners, LLC of Lexington, Massachusetts).
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