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Alumna Kaja LeWinn ’98 Receives President’s Medal for Science and Innovation
In conjunction with the medal ceremony, LeWinn delivered the Presidential Distinguished Lecture, titled “Achieving equity in child mental health and neurodevelopment: integrating insights from epidemiology, neuroscience, and psychology.” The following day, Berger-Sweeney joined LeWinn on stage in the Washington Room for a conversation about their work as scientists and leaders. During the discussion, LeWinn offered tips on optimizing neurodevelopment in young children. “Establish a protective, nurturing environment, and an environment with a lot of cognitive stimulation,” she said. “There’s the most evidence for [the benefits of] language exposure, so I always just tell parents, you should just talk to your baby. There are things like that that I think can make a big difference.” Kaja LeWinn ’98 Receives President’s Medal for Science and InnovationKaja LeWinn ’98 in conversation with President Joanne Berger-Sweeney. While she acknowledged larger systemic inequalities at play, LeWinn said certain policy changes and investments could help support families and their children, with the greatest impact felt when children are youngest. “There are already great programs shown to do wonderful things that are very evidence based, [such as] home programs to help new parents learn about infant development and parenting,” she said. “These are like Head Start, but more resourced, more intensive, and more attuned to individual needs… Setting people up with a foundation to succeed really seems to be the most effective thing to do.” In response to a question from a student in the audience about how to encourage more students of color to pursue STEM fields and to provide them with support, Berger-Sweeney talked about her work to increase the number of faculty members of color at every institution she joins. “You have to change an entire ecosystem to really have an influence,” she said, “but one thing I was absolutely sure would make a difference was if we could bring in more people of color as STEM faculty members, where students could see themselves in those positions.” After the discussion, LeWinn met with students in the Underground Coffeehouse for coffee and casual conversation, and later took part in the Psi Chi/Nu Ro Psi induction ceremony. Kaja LeWinn ’98 Receives President’s Medal for Science and InnovationKaja LeWinn ’98 delivers the Presidential Distinguished Lecture. Driven by a conviction that all children should have the opportunity to realize their full potential, LeWinn’s research integrates perspectives from epidemiology, psychology, and neuroscience to identify the modifiable physical and social exposures that matter most for child neurodevelopment and mental health in underrepresented and understudied populations. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Trinity with a major in behavioral neuroscience, LeWinn went on to earn a doctoral degree in social epidemiology from the Harvard School of Public Health. She was then selected for the prestigious Robert Wood Johnson Health and Society Scholars program, which brought her to San Francisco. LeWinn is a leader of several regional and national epidemiological studies, including the National Institutes of Health-funded ECHO Consortium, which follows more than 30,000 U.S. children and their families. She has authored more than 130 peer-reviewed publications, and her work has been featured in The Atlantic, NPR, Fortune, and other news outlets. The President’s Medal for Science and Innovation Advisory Committee, which includes prominent STEM faculty at Trinity College, leads the process to select recipients, and recommends to the president highly qualified candidates who have made significant advancements through STEM fields. Recipients are not necessarily graduates of Trinity but have made lasting contributions to their field. The introduction of the award earlier this year supports the College’s goal of elevating Trinity’s standing in the sciences nationally. The inaugural recipient in spring 2024 was Eric R. Fossum ’79, H’14, the John H. Krehbiel Sr. Professor for Emerging Technologies at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College, director of Thayer’s Ph.D. Innovation Program, and vice provost for entrepreneurship and technology transfer at Dartmouth. Fossum—a winner of the prestigious Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering—invented the CMOS active pixel image sensor used in almost all cell-phone cameras, webcams, many digital-still cameras, and in medical imaging, among other applications. Learn more about the President’s Medal for Science and Innovation here.
Video: An Inside Look at Trinity Fine Arts Professor’s Exhibit at the Venice Biennale
Since 1895, La Biennale di Venezia—the Venice Biennale—has been the most prestigious and influential showcase of contemporary art in the world, with millions of attendees. This year, Pablo Delano, the Charles A. Dana Professor of Fine Arts at Trinity College, was among the international artists invited by curator Adriano Pedrosa to present their work in the Central Pavilion.
Trinity Professor Named Inaugural Fellow for Research Project on Puerto Rican Archives
Amanda J. Guzmán, assistant professor of anthropology and co-director of Trinity’s Center for Caribbean Studies, is one of 13 research associates for the inaugural year of CENTRO’s five-year Rooted + Relational initiative. The project seeks to foster a dynamic intersection between academia, arts, culture, and community-driven research.
Trinity College Professor to Lead National Center for the Defense of Academic Freedom
In recognition of today’s higher education landscape that includes government intervention, celebrity extremists, personal attacks on social media, and foreign interference, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) recently launched a new center and appointed as its director Isaac Kamola, associate professor of political science at Trinity College.
Spotlight on Graduates: Reflections and Advice from Trinity’s Class of 2024
Through a wide variety of experiences both inside and outside of the classroom, this year’s graduates all followed their own interests as they forged unique paths. Several senior Bantams reflect on their most memorable academic and extracurricular opportunities, how their time at the College helped prepare them for what comes next, and their advice for current and future Trinity students.
Trinity Students Revive Model United Nations Club After COVID
Model UN teaches students how to understand current political and human rights issues, debate and represent different positions, and articulate complex arguments, all of which are skills applicable to various fields. The club’s recent success at conferences can be attributed to the hard work of a determined group of student leaders.
Trinity College Provides Backdrop for Film
The film crew for a feature-length Tollywood production recently descended on Trinity College, capturing footage of iconic campus locations and using student volunteers for several scenes.
Core of Trinity College’s Campus Named to the National Register of Historic Places
The National Park Service designated an 11.4-acre rectangular area anchored by the Long Walk and Chapel as the Trinity College Long Walk Historic District with national importance.
Trinity Students Advocate for Sustainability on Campus at GreenFest
“The main goal of this event is to celebrate and promote sustainability, specifically at Trinity College,” said Aurora Trani ’24, co-president of Green Campus. “We want to encourage people to take actions to be more sustainable in their daily life.”
Building on 53 Years, Trinity’s Rome Program Continues to Thrive
For more than 50 years, the opportunity to study at the Trinity College Rome Campus on Aventine Hill has led students to immerse themselves in the culture and language of Italy and to do so from the comfort of a ‘home away from home.’ Trinity’s oldest global study program marked its anniversary with a celebration in Rome.
Queer Resource Center
Trinity College’s Queer Resource Center (QRC) serves as the campus hub for LGBTQ+ life, providing community-building opportunities, campus education, support services, and advocacy.
The International House: Supporting Students Far from Home
Coming to Trinity as a first-year student from Afghanistan, Hanifa Darwish ’22 found support at the college’s International House, which promotes the appreciation of diversity on campus. “The iHouse helps international students adapt to life at Trinity and introduces all students to international cultures through events, discussions, and trips,” she says.
Trinity College Campus is Designated an Arboretum
Trinity’s tree-lined campus invites people to interact with the natural environment, an activity that was formally acknowledged with the new designation of the College as an arboretum.
Trinity College Joins Elite Research Collaboration to Explore the Cosmos
Trinity College was recently accepted to the LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory) worldwide scientific collaboration, enabling a new physics faculty member to continue researching ways to optimize the detectors that track gravitational waves and new astrophysical phenomena.
Alumni Student-Athletes and Former Coaches Named to Athletics Hall of Fame
The Class of 2024 inductees are Hannah Brickley ’14, Lanier Drew ’80, Bea Gratry ’05, Ryan Martin ’92, Pat McNamara ’78, and storied coaches Daniel E. Jessee and Ray Oosting.
Trinity College Again Earns Top Marks as an LGBTQ-Friendly College
For the second year in a row, Trinity College earned a five-star rating in an independent national assessment of LBGTQ-friendly colleges and universities.
Trinity College Recognized for Robust Student Voter Engagement
The prestigious liberal arts institution earned a bronze award from the nonprofit ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge for achieving a student participation rate between 20 and 29 percent in the 2022 midterms.
Scholarship Opens Doors for Hartford Students
“For some, Trinity might not seem financially possible,” Board of Trsutees Chair Lisa Bisaccia ’78 said in her remarks. “But with the gift of financial aid, it becomes possible for more students from Hartford to create better lives through education.”
Engineering Majors Receive NASA CT Space Grant to Develop Wave Energy Converter
The team is building a scalable triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) wave energy converter, which harnesses power from waves in bodies of water. This semester, the team is creating prototypes of its TENG device using Trinity’s 3D printers, building circuitry components, determining how best to harvest and store the energy, and running computer simulations of how it all would work, before physical testing begins.
Trinity Faculty Member Receives Fulbright to Conduct Research in Poland
In collaboration with researchers at Poland’s National Research Institute (NASK) under the supervision of the Ministry of Digital Affairs, Associate Professor of Computer Science Ewa Syta plans to develop a long-term strategy for the implementation of a digital identity wallet for Poland. “This is a critical component of the EU’s initiative to create a universal digital identity ecosystem, where electronic transactions can have the same legal validity as traditional paper-based transactions,” Syta said.
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News Highlights
View All NewsA Look Back at 2024
Trinity College marks the end of 2024 by reflecting upon moments from the past year. Along with news of a presidential transition and the conclusion of Trinity’s Bicentennial celebrations, highlights of the year included academic and social events that brought the entire community together.