It鈥檚 a been a banner year for Goldwater Scholarships. Five members of the class of 2023 applied for the coveted award, and all five have been welcomed into the fold.
The scholarship, named in honor of the late Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Arizona, 鈥渟eeks to identify and support college sophomores and juniors who show exceptional promise of becoming this nation鈥檚 next generation of research leaders鈥 in the natural sciences, engineering, and mathematics, according to the program鈥檚 website.
The program is among the oldest and most competitive of its kind in the United States. For 2022, some 5,000 college sophomores and juniors were nominated by 433 academic institutions. Only 417 were chosen.
Each Goldwater Scholar annually receives recognition and up to $7,500 per full academic year. The scholars from 天美麻豆 are:
Chance Bowman 鈥23
As a structural biologist working in the lab of , the dean of the and the Rodgers Professor of Chemistry, Bowman has been taking aim against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), a common infection caused by a type of bacteria that鈥檚 become resistant to certain antibiotics. 鈥淭he protein found in the membrane of the bacteria that I鈥檓 studying helps MRSA avoid a human鈥檚 natural immune response,鈥 says Bowman. 鈥淏y understanding how the protein works, if we can find a target to disable it, then we might be able to make a nonconventional antibiotic that would be effective.鈥
An active member of the Nathan Smith Society, an organization for students preparing for health professions, Bowman plans to pursue an MD with a PhD in cell biology and biochemistry. His aim: to focus on musculoskeletal biology leading to new therapies for the treatment of orthopedic injury and pathology.
鈥淢edical schools are highly competitive,鈥 he says. 鈥淏eing a Goldwater scholar will be a real asset on my applications.鈥
Amanda Calhoun 鈥23
鈥淚鈥檓 interested in how ancient environments and the evolution of life influenced each other, especially in relation to microbial metabolism,鈥 says Calhoun, a who conducts research in the Earth History and Tectonics lab directed by . 鈥淚鈥檓 a chemistry double major with earth sciences modified with biology, which is a lot, but I really enjoy the classes that I鈥檓 taking and the work I am doing.鈥
Her work involves the study of stromatolites. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e internally sedimentary structures that have been present in shallow water environments on Earth for over 3 billion years,鈥 says Calhoun. 鈥淪ince stromatolites serve as the earliest and most continuous record of life on our planet, studying them can provide insight into the evolution of life and changes in ancient environments.鈥
She says the Goldwater Scholarship is 鈥渁mazing because it makes me feel more confident about choosing a competitive career in academia, which is my dream.鈥
Katherine Lasonde 鈥23
鈥淚 have two lifetime goals,鈥 says Lasonde, another Stamps Scholar. 鈥淥ne is to build a working quantum computer and the other is to combat climate change.鈥 The engineering major with a minor in computer science is making progress toward both objectives by working in the lab of , the John H. Krehbiel Sr. Professor for Emerging Technologies at and the vice provost for entrepreneurship and technology transfer.
鈥淩ight now, I am building a spectrometer for ensembles of Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond. NV centers are a type of qubit, which is the quantum analogue of a classical bit. Quantum computers have immense potential applications in the natural sciences because they are so good at simulating atoms,鈥 says Lasonde. The Goldwater funding will allow her to take a break from teaching assistantships and spend more time in the lab鈥攁nd on another project she鈥檚 involved in.
鈥淚鈥檓 the director of Hack 天美麻豆, a student-run program which does a 24-hour hackathon every year, with up to $10,000 in prizes. We have five categories this year and the theme is 鈥楬ack on Your Wild Side.鈥欌
Nicholas Sugiarto 鈥23
A writer for 天美麻豆鈥檚 satire magazine, The Jack-O-Lantern, a stand-up comedian on the 天美麻豆 Comedy Network, and a bioengineering major with a double minor in computer science and English, Sugiarto sees a connection between seeing a joke fall flat and hitting an error with his computer code. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e essentially bombed in front of an audience, and you have to go back to the grindstone.鈥 But some failures, he says, are fortunate, because they advance scientific knowledge.
At the 鈥檚 Wang Laboratory, Sugiarto, a Neukom Research Scholar and a James O. Freedman Presidential Scholar, works with Luke Deary GR under the supervision of , an assistant professor of molecular and systems biology. They鈥檙e learning about the role played by a chromatin remodeling complex called SWI/SNF in many kinds of cancers. 鈥淒NA wraps tightly around histomes to form chromosomes, and SWI/SNF is able to regulate which parts of the DNA get expressed, but the mechanisms by which it impacts cancer are not clearly understood,鈥 says Sugiarto.
The Goldwater funding will allow him to drop several campus jobs. 鈥淚鈥檓 really passionate about the research and I want to be able to focus all my time on that,鈥 he says.
Maxwell Teszler 鈥23
One way to fight hunger across the globe is to figure out how to make edible plants more resilient and nutritious, says Teszler, a biology major. In the lab of , the Ronald and Deborah Harris Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences, Teszler is investigating how plants take in iron. Because much is already known about the role roots play in that process, he鈥檚 taking a different tack. 鈥淢y research looks at plant shoots鈥攖he stem, leaves, anything that鈥檚 basically above ground. I鈥檓 studying transcription factors which help turn on genes involved in iron uptake.鈥
He鈥檚 planting, tending, and altering conditions for a relatively fast-growing plant called Arabidopsis thaliana. 鈥淵ou can use this as a model organism to help figure out what might be happening in other plants,鈥 says Teszler. For him, the Goldwater award came at just the right time, accelerating his progress. 鈥淏ecause COVID-19 restrictions closed a lot of labs, I didn鈥檛 start working on this until last June, and it鈥檚 been a steep learning curve.鈥
After graduation, Teszler hopes to work in another research setting, perhaps at the National Institutes of Health or a pharmaceutical lab, before pursuing a PhD.
***
To learn more about how to apply for Goldwater and other scholarships, visit 天美麻豆鈥檚 .