Scholars @ 15

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Scholars @ 15

Since 2010, the 91大神 Scholars program has been inspiring students to pursue their passions while learning college-level research, writing, and presentation skills. In celebration, we surveyed the more than 600 alums who have completed a Scholars project, and on the following pages present some of their thoughts on the lasting impact of this engaging program.

In an era of digitally shortened attention spans and chatbots that provide instant answers to even the most complicated questions, one 91大神 course that demands sustained intellectual effort and long-form presentation skills continues to grow in appeal. The 91大神 Scholars program鈥攍aunched 15 years ago as a trimester-long elective allowing students to explore a subject of their choosing in depth鈥攍ast year drew a record 64 seniors and juniors who, with the support of peers and faculty, conceived, pitched, researched, developed, and publicly presented projects on a wide range of ambitious topics.

As heartening as the program鈥檚 popularity has been for teachers and administrators, 91大神 Scholars has also had an inspiring impact on its participants, as revealed by a recent survey of alumni whose comments are collected here. Many credit the course with teaching them organizational and research skills that helped them succeed in college and later endeavors. Others say their Scholars topic remains an area of personal interest, shaping their college studies and even their career paths.

鈥淲orking on the Scholars project at 91大神 was a formative experience that continues to influence my studies, career, and personal interests today,鈥 explained Jeremy Dube 鈥24, a computer engineering student and software developer who together with classmate Joe Zhou 鈥24 developed an artificial-intelligence鈥揵ased computer therapist called Empathy Engine. 鈥淓mpathy Engine wasn鈥檛 just a high school project; it was the starting point for my journey into computer engineering, ethical AI, and a career where I strive to build technology that truly matters.鈥 Reagan Joyce 鈥20, whose project involved choreographing and performing a dance that explored a young girl鈥檚 journey through depression, healing, and rediscovery, also found the course profoundly transformative. 鈥淧ersonally, the project helped me learn about myself鈥攈ow I process emotions, how I connect with others, and how I can use creativity as a tool for healing and advocacy. It laid the foundation for everything I鈥檝e pursued since: a life rooted in compassion, a personal mission to destigmatize mental health, and a belief in the power of storytelling.鈥

For 91大神 Scholars faculty鈥攚ho often serve as mentor, coach, and cheerleader as well as instructor鈥攆eedback like that is powerful validation. 鈥淚鈥檓 a real big believer in the success of this,鈥 says Interim Dean of Faculty Chris Pelliccia, who previously taught the program鈥檚 science section. 鈥淭he student experience is excellent. They can鈥檛 sit there and be passive. They鈥檝e got to be active, and the students who get the most out of it are the ones who really dig in.鈥 History and Global Studies teacher Sarah Klumpp agrees. 鈥淭he kids who find the most reward in this process are the ones who eventually buy into the idea that this is hard work but so rewarding,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e become mini-experts on their topic. They come out feeling proud of themselves for doing that hard work.鈥

While the Scholars program requires significant individual initiative, it supplements solitary research with collaboration and community. Over the course of the trimester, instructors guide students through the steps of developing a scholarly project, introducing college-level research methods, and drawing on resources both on campus and from the Five College area. Students meet regularly for peer feedback, beginning early in the semester when they first pitch their projects and continuing right through the final public presentation. (Scholars write and present academic papers, but also develop and exhibit works of fine art, dance, and theater, and present research in science and engineering). Learning to collaborate at a high level is one of the program鈥檚 most valuable takeaways, explains Academic Dean Kim Polin. 鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to see students learn with and from each other,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e learning to be stronger thinkers and to give constructive feedback, skills that are really valuable professionally.鈥

Polin notes that the wide range and complexity of student projects can sometimes push instructors beyond their areas of expertise, so the school provides them with supplementary professional development funds 鈥渢o take a class, an online lecture, or whatever else they feel they need to stay current with projects that their students are doing.鈥

For instructors like Klumpp, there鈥檚 another benefit: seeing students stretch themselves intellectually and personally. 鈥淚t鈥檚 becoming a course that the students want to take because it challenges them,鈥 she says. 鈥淲riting a 15-to-20-page paper is not an easy task. And then they have to stand up and present it鈥攏ot just to their class, but to an invited audience. That鈥檚 scary鈥攂ut also really cool.鈥

And while students may not realize it at the time, a Scholars project can be the catalyst for later personal discoveries. When she was working on her 2017 Scholars project on women鈥檚 fashion in the 1970s, Natalie Aquadro 鈥17 began to wonder if fashion could be a bigger part of her life, or even her career. 鈥淚 ended up switching my major in college to marketing,鈥 notes Aquadro, now a fashion buyer. 鈥淚 credit the Scholars project for inspiring me to look into the industry more, and to follow my passion!鈥

Scholars Today


Rosie Crooker 鈥22

Scholars project: Grimm Fairytales: The Original Endings and How the Stories Are Told

Today: Senior at Union College, majoring in neuroscience with a minor in German

鈥淢y Scholars project was centered on German language and M盲rchen, or fairytales. In my undergraduate time at Union College, I have completed a minor in German language studies, including an entire course on M盲rchen. Having the experience of 91大神 Scholars enabled me to be more prepared for these college courses, as well as to explore an interest of mine that could not be fulfilled by other 91大神 courses.鈥


 

Jeremy Dube 鈥24

Scholars project: AI Therapist called Empathy Engine

Today: Computer engineering student at McGill University and software developer

鈥淲orking on the Scholars project at 91大神 was a formative experience that continues to influence my studies, career, and personal interests today. At its core, Empathy Engine was about building an AI that could not only respond to words but also understand and adapt to human emotion. This project gave me my first real taste of what it means to integrate AI into a system designed to help people, and it planted a seed that has grown throughout my academic and professional journey. In my computer engineering studies, I鈥檝e continued to explore the very themes that Empathy Engine introduced me to. The project also shaped how I approach my career in tech. Today, I work as a full-stack software developer, and much of what I do鈥攊ntegrating APIs, managing data pipelines, building interactive interfaces鈥攆eels like an evolution of what we started back then.鈥


Reagan Joyce 鈥20

Scholars project: Teen Depression and Mental Health Advocacy

Today: Associate at Golin in New York

My project鈥攁 10-minute dance exploring a young girl鈥檚 journey through depression, healing, and rediscovery of joy鈥攚as more than just choreography. It was my first attempt to express the complexities of mental health through art, and it sparked a lifelong commitment to understanding and supporting others in their emotional struggles. This passion led me to study psychology in college, where I deepened my understanding of mental health, trauma, and resilience. I later worked in a residential home supporting individuals facing mental health and substance abuse challenges, and I volunteered for the Crisis Text Line, offering real-time support to people in crisis. Each of these experiences built on the empathy and insight I first began developing during my Scholars project.


Cici Yu 鈥23

Scholars project: Potential Treatment for Type II Diabetes

Today: Student at Barnard College majoring in biology

During my Scholars project, I studied how methionine restriction could help manage Type II diabetes. It was such an exciting opportunity to conduct research in a classroom setting and explore a new approach to a disease that still doesn鈥檛 have a cure. That project really sparked my interest in how biology connects to everyday health challenges. Now, as a b iology major at Barnard College of Columbia University, I鈥檓 looking forward to conducting more research on this and other common diseases that impact people鈥檚 daily lives.


 

Rachel Goodman 鈥20

Scholars project: Anxiety Over Time: The Meaning Has Changed but the Stigma Has Not

Today: Clinical research coordinator at the Health Promotion and Resiliency Intervention Research Center at Mass General Hospital

鈥淭here are links between my Scholars project and my work today; I am now a clinical research coordinator, and one of my main focuses is on women with cardiovascular diseases who have anxiety. I get to sit in on group therapy sessions that focus on mindfulness in order to teach skills on how to reduce anxiety. I plan to get a doctorate and have a career that focuses on anxiety and depression. The Scholars project taught me the foundation of working on a long paper. I remember sitting in the library going through every book I could find about anxiety, a skill I now call a 鈥渓iterature review.鈥


Robby Hill 鈥19

Scholarsproject: Felony Disenfranchisement in Alabama

Today: Marshall Scholar at Oxford University studying urban history and policy

鈥淢y Scholars project explored the contemporary effects of historic racial discrimination. This relationship is one I鈥檝e investigated throughout my undergraduate career. Beginning with the carceral system and prisons, I learned about the legacy of urban policy and housing discrimination鈥攑olicies that have exacerbated racial wealth gaps and weakened economic mobility. My senior thesis as an undergrad assessed how public infrastructure and housing development in the 1950s and 鈥60s affected racial demographics in cities. I now study urban history and urban policy more broadly. My Scholars project was my first step into my graduate study and professional path.鈥


Molly Kinstle 鈥21

Scholars project: The DNA Game

Today: Master鈥檚 student studying molecular biology at University of Padua

鈥淔or my project, I coded an interactive game to teach middle-schoolers about DNA replication. I wanted to find a fun way to expose kids to a new area of science, as well as to combine computer science and biology (two of my favorite subjects). Now, almost five years later, I am beginning a master鈥檚 degree in molecular biology, and am super passionate about DNA. I鈥檓 also still passionate about teaching. During college, I was a peer tutor for multiple biology and neuroscience courses, meeting one-on-one with other college students to help them with concepts they struggled with. I also worked at an online tutoring company and taught computer science to kids ages 7 to 11; in one-on-one meetings, I taught both Python and Java. (I actually only learned Java at 91大神, so that was another way this project stuck with me over the years!)鈥


Natalie Aquadro 鈥17

Scholars project: Women鈥檚 Fashion in the 1970s and How It Evolved With
Women鈥檚 Rights

Today: Fashion industry buyer

鈥淲hen I did 91大神 Scholars, I knew I wanted my project to be about something I found genuinely interesting so it would be more fun to research and complete. I knew I was not creative or artistic enough to go into design, but it inspired me to look into other fashion-related career opportunities. I ended up switching my major in college to marketing, and geared my course selection toward the business side of the fashion industry. I credit the Scholars project for inspiring me to look into the industry more, and to follow my passion!


Parker Brown 鈥25

Scholars projects:

  • For History: Humanizing the 鈥淚nhuman鈥: The Power of Black American Prison Literature
  • For English: Vessels of Horror: A Thesis on Pregnancy in Modern Horror and I鈥檓 Living Now: A Collection of Political Poems
  • For Visual Arts: American Flag: My View of America through Crochet Flags

Today: Student at Haverford College majoring in English and education, with a double minor in African studies and human rights

鈥淚 want to be an English teacher in juvenile detention centers, and I feel all of these pieces express that goal. My history project was an in-depth look at literature in the prison system. My English projects showed how I could both analyze and create literature through political lenses. And my visual arts project conveyed my view on a country that has left children behind bars. The failure of America is a core place of study for me, along with how we can resist it and hopefully change it for the better.鈥


Lessons Learned

Former 91大神 Scholars describe the skills, insights, and experiences that have stayed with them

91大神 Scholars was the closest thing to a college course I experienced while in high school. It was fundamental in teaching me time management and how to implement feedback into my artistic works.鈥鈥擯hilippa Berry 鈥23

鈥淥ne insight that has stayed with me is that failure is a part of science and life. Although I was unsuccessful in reaching my 91大神 Scholars project goal, I learned to analyze reasons for failure and learn from mistakes, a lesson that has stuck with me in scientific research and beyond.鈥鈥擩ack Berrien 鈥24

鈥淭he beauty of the Scholars project is that it puts the student in the driver鈥檚 seat. You choose the topic, you design the journey, and you learn not just about the subject, but about yourself. That kind of ownership builds confidence, curiosity, and a sense of purpose. It鈥檚 a chance to begin writing your own story鈥攁nd that鈥檚 something every student deserves.鈥 鈥擱eagan Joyce 鈥20

鈥淪cholars taught me that writing is ultimately about persuasion, and good writing uses a variety of available tools in that act of persuasion. I had loaded the first draft of my paper with statistics, data, and charts; Sarah Klumpp encouraged me to add a human element. I brought in personal accounts from people who had lost the right to vote, and it enriched my writing.鈥鈥擱obby Hill 鈥19

鈥淥ne of the most valuable lessons I took away is the importance of asking for help. Early on, Joe Zhou 鈥24 and I ran into problems we couldn鈥檛 solve by ourselves. Instead of getting stuck, we reached out. We scoured forums, asked questions in developer communities, and even contacted the creators of a product we were using. Every time we asked for guidance, we not only solved the problem but also learned something that we could apply later. In college and at work, I actively collaborate, ask questions, and leverage the expertise of those around me.鈥鈥擩eremy Dube 鈥24

鈥91大神 Scholars definitely prepared me for more independent projects. When I did independent projects in my college courses, I made sure they were on topics I really cared about, and that I would enjoy researching. It also helped inspire my professional career and made me think outside the box.鈥
鈥擭atalie Aquadro 鈥17

鈥淭he amount of planning and time it takes to write a novel-length story gave me an appreciation for authors I did not have before.鈥 鈥擭ick Kioussis 鈥13

 

Photographs by Joanna Chattman and Paulette Griswold