View allAll Photos Tagged GraduateStudents
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
Wesleyan welcomed 162 graduate students to campus this fall, of which 60 are new.
The new international graduate students hail from Bangladesh, Trinidad and Tobago, the United Kingdom, Nepal, Chile, and Turkey.
Graduate students gathered with faculty advisors for a welcome picnic on Aug 27. (Photos by Prekshaw Sreewastav '21)
Rebecca Christoffel, graduate student under MSU AgBioResearch scientist and associate professor of fisheries and wildlife Shawn Riley, demonstrates the differences between commonly found snakes in Michigan at the MSU Livestock Pavilion.
Christoffel's research has shown that children are more open to recognizing the value of the eastern massasauga rattler than adults are.
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
The Burton Memorial Tower on central campus outside of the Michigan Union in Ann Arbor, MI on September 12, 2017.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Senior Multimedia Content Producer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering
Graduate student Purvis Cornish presents his 3 Minute Thesis. Photo by Robert Jordan/Ole Miss Communications
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
Arctic postdoctoral fellow Lauren Culler shows essential invertebrate collecting equipment to the students. Their challenge was to collect as many different kinds of aquatic and terrestrial invertebrates as possible in under an hour. (Photo by Erica Willstrom)
A grant from the National Science Foundation enabled Dartmouth graduate students and a postdoctoral fellow to travel to Greenland to teach high school students and their teachers about the Arctic environment. Read more
about the program on Dartmouth Now.
Stay connected to Dartmouth:
Winners of the 2007 VIMS Student Awards. From L Karinna Nunez, Steven Baer, Althea Moore, Mark Henderson, David Hewitt, and Andrij Horodysksy.
Nathaniel Sculley, CEE Graduate Student, stores testing water samples from an industrial waste site inside the Cooley Building on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI on February 6, 2020. CEE is working with John Foster, Professor of Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences, to test the efficiency of plasma radiation for the destruction of PFAS.
Low temperature plasma efficiently uses energetic electrons to drive a reactive mix of hydroxyl radical, ozone, UV as well as ultrasound shockwaves dosing the water in a reactive species that shatters the PFAS molecules. Foster’s set up with plasma exposes the contaminated water to high temperatures upward to several thousands of degrees from repetitive bursts of plasma over a short period of time completely disassociating any trace of PFAS in the water sample.
Photo by Robert Coelius/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Members of UMTRI Assistant Research Scientist Monica Jone’s research group run a study to help people avoid and treat motion sickness in autonomous vehicles at the Transportation Research Institute at the University of Michigan on March 4, 2020.
Jones and her group measure baseline metrics such as skin temperature, posture, heart rate, and facial expressions first. These metrics are measured against changes as study participants ride in a vehicle with specific maneuvers to test levels of motion sickness. Jones hopes to understand the fundamentals of human response that will help enable autonomous vehicle manufacturers and future related technologies.
Photo: Joseph Xu/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
Melina Bautista, CEE Research Fellow, collects water samples from the Ann Arbor Water Treatment Plant in Ann Arbor, MI on January 17, 2019.
Bautista collects the samples to determine the effectiveness of water filters that CEE Professor Lutgarde Raskin group works on.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Photographer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences celebrates its graduates at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 15, 2022
Oklahoma State University graduate student Chris Brown has been chosen as a finalist for an innovation award from the American Association of Medical Physicists for his abstract on “Designing a Low Cost Digital Imaging System for Medical Physics Education.” Brown, from Little Rock, Ark., will deliver a presentation on the topic at this year’s AAPM conference set for August in Indianapolis. The abstract was chosen from a list of several hundred submitted for this award. news.okstate.edu/press-releases/2181-graduate-student-fin...
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
A contingent of Duke physicists traveled to Baton Rouge in late October to attend the Southeastern Section of the American Physical Society conference.
Professors Kate Scholberg, Ayana Arce, and John Thomas gave invited talks, and professors Roxanne Springer and Anton Tonchev organized sessions. Graduate student Taritree Wongjirad presented a poster, as did undergrads Ashley Jones, Farzan Beroz, and Wes Johnson. Undergraduates Travis Byington, Laura Dodd, Joshua Loyal, and Jim Mallernee gave talks.
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
Lucinda Li, Graduate Student Research Assistant at Civil and Environmental Engineering, transports a container of Urine Derived Fertilizer (UDF) to peony beds at the University of Michigan Nichols Arboretum at 1610 Washington Heights in Ann Arbor, MI on Wednesday April 28, 2021.
UDF is fertilizer produced from diverted and sanitized human urine that can be used on plants and for agriculture. Well-researched methods such as pasteurization and activated carbon filtration are used to remove pathogens and pharmaceuticals present in urine.
Photo: Robert Coelius/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Laura Engberg, and her mother, Nancy Forsstrom,'14, chat with Dan Cowdin and Sister Jane Gerety while at the Graduate Studies Reception at Salve.
Michigan Engineering Graduate Students attend the Graduate Student Orientation at the Power Center for the Performing Arts in Ann Arbor, MI on August 29, 2018.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Arctic postdoctoral fellow Lauren Culler demonstrates the use of an aspirator for collecting terrestrial invertebrates. (Photo by Erica Willstrom)
A grant from the National Science Foundation enabled Dartmouth graduate students and a postdoctoral fellow to travel to Greenland to teach high school students and their teachers about the Arctic environment. Read more about the program on Dartmouth Now.
Stay connected to Dartmouth:
Ciara Sivels, NERS alumnus, has her graduation stole put on by her PhD advisor Sara Pozzi, Professor of Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences, at the Rackham Graduate School Exercises at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on May 3, 2019.
Sivels is the first Black woman to receive her doctorate from the Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences department at the College of Engineering, and returned to Ann Arbor specifically to attend her graduate student graduation ceremonies after graduating the previous semester.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
A contingent of Duke physicists traveled to Baton Rouge in late October to attend the Southeastern Section of the American Physical Society conference.
Professors Kate Scholberg, Ayana Arce, and John Thomas gave invited talks, and professors Roxanne Springer and Anton Tonchev organized sessions. Graduate student Taritree Wongjirad presented a poster, as did undergrads Ashley Jones, Farzan Beroz, and Wes Johnson. Undergraduates Travis Byington, Laura Dodd, Joshua Loyal, and Jim Mallernee gave talks.
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
Michigan Engineering Graduate Students attend the Graduate Student Orientation at the Power Center for the Performing Arts in Ann Arbor, MI on August 29, 2018.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Members of UMTRI Assistant Research Scientist Monica Jone’s research group run a study to help people avoid and treat motion sickness in autonomous vehicles at the Transportation Research Institute at the University of Michigan on March 4, 2020.
Jones and her group measure baseline metrics such as skin temperature, posture, heart rate, and facial expressions first. These metrics are measured against changes as study participants ride in a vehicle with specific maneuvers to test levels of motion sickness. Jones hopes to understand the fundamentals of human response that will help enable autonomous vehicle manufacturers and future related technologies.
Photo: Joseph Xu/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner