The innovation engine for new materials

Future Faculty Workshop: Creating Leaders of Tomorrow

July 2012

The MRL was proud to host the 5th Future Faculty Workshop from July 15-17th, 2012. By specifically addressing broadening participation issues, over 40 graduate students and post-doctoral scholars from across the United States joined with 12 leading academics to create the leaders of tomorrow and  provide mentorship to aspiring underrepresented minority students in the broad areas of Chemistry,  Chemical Engineering  and Materials Science.

This  2  day  workshop provided mentorship to aspiring underrepresented minority students with ambitions to become independent  academic  researchers  in  the  broad areas of  Chemistry,  Chemical  Engineering  and Materials Science. The workshop was held at the University of California, Santa Barbara from the evening of Sunday July 15 to Tuesday evening July 17, 2012. Eminent professors from around the country were in attendance to provide mentoring and the goal was to maintain a student/faculty ratio that was less than 4:1. This was the 5th workshop in this series and the previous workshops were held at MIT (2008, 2011), Carnegie Mellon University (2009), and the University of Massachusetts Amherst (2010).

Organizers:

 

Professor Ram Seshadri

Materials Research Laboratory

UC, Santa Barbara

 

Faculty Mentors:

 

Professor Kenneth R. Carter

Polymer Science

UMASS, Amherst

 

 

Professor Malika Jeffries-El

Chemistry

Iowa State University

 

Professor Timothy M. Swager

Chemistry

MIT

 

Professor Thomas Epps

Chemical Engineering

University of Deleware

Professor LaShanda Korley Macromolecular Science

Case Western Reserve University

Professor Craig Hawker

Materials Research Laboratory

UC, Santa Barbara

Professor Joseph DeSimone Chemistry

UNC, Chapel Hill

 

Professor Christine Ortiz

Materials Science and Engineering

MIT

Professor Richard McCullough

Chemistry

Carnegie Mellon University

Professor Paula T. Hammond Chemical Engineering

MIT

Professor Gregory N. Tew

Polymer Science

UMASS, Amherst