Tag Archives: Current students

Student Leader Spotlight Series: Jennifer Legault, Chair of the HGSAC

Jen and labmate, Angela Grant, modeling an MRI scanner

I couldn’t think of a better position to kick off the Student Leader Spotlight Series than with one near and dear to my heart – the Chair of the Huck Graduate Student Advisory Committee (HGSAC). This year, that title belongs to Jennifer Legault, a fourth year student in the Neuroscience program working in Dr. Ping Li’s lab. Jen’s work both inside and outside of the lab focuses on communication: when she isn’t taking care of HGSAC business or discussing important graduate student issues with the Huck administration, she’s completing her thesis work by using multimodal imaging to study how the brain changes when you learn a second language.

The HGSAC, a relatively new organization that was started in January 2015, is made up of graduate student representatives from the six Huck programs as well as from the BMMB program with the mission of representing the graduate student population as a whole by promoting their interests and advocating on important issues. The goals of the HGSAC include, but are not limited to, acting as a voice of the graduate student body by facilitating communication among students, faculty, and administration; providing career and professional development resources; and facilitating the interaction between the individual Huck programs, as well as with Huck programs and other departmental programs, on both a professional and social level. The HGSAC has numerous leadership positions, including the Chair and Associate Chair, a title held by Colleen McSweeney, also a fourth year student in the Neuroscience program.

The Chair of the HGSAC is a position taken on by the student who is awarded the Graduate Adviser to the Huck Institutes fellowship for that calendar year, so chairing the HGSAC is only part of the responsibility that comes with the fellowship. Other responsibilities include attending weekly graduate education meetings with Huck administration, gathering feedback about Huck-related events for the Huck administration, and organizing the Career Exposure Seminar Series & Events page as well as the Career & Professional Development page.

As the Graduate Adviser to the Huck Institutes fellowship/Chair of the HGSAC are fairly new positions, taking on this leadership role is no easy task. In order to successfully lead this group of graduate students, Jennifer commented that she thinks delegation and teamwork are two necessary skills to possess. “Deciding which tasks are best left for me to perform and which tasks are more appropriate for one or several of my fellow committee members to perform takes up a considerable amount of my time in the beginning but saves me a lot of time later on,” said Jennifer. “I am so grateful to be surrounded by so many competent and dedicated committee members.” As the founder and first Chair of the HGSAC, I wholeheartedly agree with Jen that the key to the success of the HGSAC is the teamwork of all members involved.

Graduate students are already busy with the everyday tasks of classes, teaching, and lab work, so how does one balance an additional leadership role? “Every week, I make a list of things I need to prioritize — some weeks, I will dedicate more time to HGSAC, and other times I might need to delegate more so I can accomplish what I need to do for my research,” said Jen.

Jen is no stranger to taking on leadership positions. She was on two HGSAC subcommittees (social and budget) last year, has taught a general research methods lab course for the past two years, and was a resident adviser for three years as an undergraduate student at Tulane University. When asked what is one characteristic she believes every leader should possess, Jen chose open-mindedness: “I think that great things happen when you have a group of people who think very differently and can all work on a problem together”.

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Jen is no stranger to tough situations – here she is at an extreme adventures course in the Adirondacks!

In my opinion, strong leaders aren’t just born that way – they learn from others and hone their skills as they gain more experience. For Jen, she said that it was her Area Director, Fatou Mbye, in her last year as a resident adviser that had the biggest impact on her as a leader. As an Area Director, Fatou was in a similar position as Jen in that both positions require leading a group of leaders. It was from Fatou that Jen learned the importance of communication, how to address conflict in a group, and how to balance professionalism while still getting personable with those in the group.

For those students who might be thinking about taking on a leadership position themselves, Jen had this advice to offer: learn to delegate properly and don’t be afraid to ask questions or seek advice from other leaders. “If you have a problem that you aren’t sure how to tackle, chances are that someone else has also stumbled upon this problem and might be able to help you. No one is perfect, and most problems don’t have one clear solution. It’s okay to ask for help,” added Jen. For more advice and resources on leadership, check out the HGSAC website, read our blog posts on leadership, and, perhaps most importantly, go out and talk to other leaders as well as your peers to learn about what qualities they look for in a leader.

Catching up with Shu Li, a 2013 Huck Dissertation Research Grant Winner

The Huck Institute sponsors a competitive grant program for graduate students to enhance their research and education. Carrie Lewis profiled the most recent batch of awardees in one of the first posts on The BRIDGE, but I wanted to catch up with some of our previous winners to see how the award has helped enhance their graduate school experience.

I talked with Shu Li, a student in the plant biology program and 2013 recipient of the Huck Dissertation Research Grant (then referred to as the Graduate Student Enrichment fund) to see what she’s up to.

Petunia inflata, the model system used to study SI

Shu is a 6th year plant biology student in the lab of Dr. Teh-Hui Kao studying the system of self-incompatibility (SI). Using petunia plants as a model, Shu and her labmates study this intraspecific reproductive barrier that prevents inbreeding and promotes outcrossing. Specifically, she’s trying to unravel some of the mechanisms and proteins that lead to a pistil either rejecting (incompatible) or accepting pollen, leading to fertilization and reproduction.

The SI mechanism involves a complex network of both pollen and pistil proteins.

The SI mechanism plays an important role in the development of hybrid crops and draws parallels to other self/non-self recognition systems, such as T-cell receptors and foreign antigens in adaptive immunity.

 SI isn’t something that most scientists, or even plant biologists, have at the front of their minds.  The Kao lab is a leader in the small field, having focused on the SI system in petunia for nearly thirty years. With few research groups generating results, students in the lab have to take tools from other fields and apply them to their own work. The Huck Dissertation Research Grant has allowed Shu to gain insight and ideas from others in plant biology by funding her travel to the American Society of Plant Biologists’ annual meeting.

Communicating science is not just a tool Shu has used to further her research, but it has become a passion of hers and something she would like to incorporate more into her career down the line. Her “if I wasn’t a scientist” dream is to be a writer.  She relaxes and takes her mind off of experiments by reading, adding “my long-time favorite author is Haruki Murakami, and my favorite book of his is Kafka on the Shore. Currently I am reading Lawrence Block a lot. I admit that I am obsessed with his long-running New York-set series of stories about a recovering alcoholic personal investigator, Matthew Scudder. If you are curious about him, Eight Million Ways to Die is the one I would recommend to read.”

Shu (standing, far right) and other members and leaders of GWIS.
The lab of Dr. Teh-Hui Kao

In addition to travel and communication, the research grant has provided assistance for Shu to complete some mass spectrometry work that she’s currently incorporating into a manuscript; the completion of which is fueled by copious cups of coffee. As any graduate student knows, working on a manuscript requires a certain degree of distraction, which Shu gets from working with the local Graduate Women in Science chapter, drawing, and glancing at a favorite website of hers, 1000 awesome things.

Though Shu has certainly been a successful graduate student, she has faced some challenges, ranging from the language barrier to missing the famous attributes of her hometown, Tianjin, China: food and the Chinese style stand-up show. She’s filled these voids, partially, with the friendship and support of others in the plant biology family and taking advantage of the best State College has to offer, the summer Arts Fest. And even though the rules still perplex her, she’s going to try to catch a football game before she graduates.

Shu had many words of wisdom for younger students, ranging from the mental side (“we all need to be realistic”), to the physical side (“learn how to stay relaxed”), to the practical (“before you pack for graduate school, learn how to cook tasty food in a time and effort efficient way (Oops did I include healthy as a criteria? Never mind, who cares)”). She sums up the feelings of the process of research of research nicely:

“Probably 95% of the time is searching around, collecting pieces of information and trying to figure out the clues from the mess, and it’s easy to feel like you are wasting the time and get frustrated … We have to keep our eyes open all of the time, and once we figure out the most important clue, all the information we collected on the way starts making sense, and tells us the whole story. ”       

MCIBS+ Graduate Research Retreat Recap

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The Molecular, Cellular, and Integrative Biosciences (MCIBS) program is the newest of the Huck graduate programs without being new at all. It was officially organized in 2014 by combining five of our previous graduate programs together — Cell and Developmental Biology, Genetics, Immunology and Infectious Disease, Molecular Medicine, and Molecular Toxicology.

When the MCIBS program was first started, graduate students who were already part of one of the older programs were given the option to stay in their original graduate program or change to MCIBS. Now, we affectionately refer to everyone as being part of MCIBS+. However, with such a “Brady Bunch” group, it’s a bit harder to have that close bond that some of our other graduate programs have. So what’s the best way to get everyone together? Have a retreat!

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Tussey Mountain Resort – location of 2015 MCIBS+ Graduate Research Retreat

Last week, I attended the MCIBS+ Graduate Research Retreat, which is an annual retreat held the week before the Fall semester that is designed to promote scientific and social interactions among the graduate students and faculty as well as to welcome the new students. Faculty and students from the MCIBS program, as well as from the five older graduate programs and the Pathobiology graduate program were all invited to attend, which was held at the Tussey Mountain Resort (just ~10 minutes from campus). I haven’t been able to attend this retreat in the past due to prior obligations, so I didn’t really know what to expect, but I was definitely impressed! Here are the top four things I wanted to highlight:

1. We have some really cool science going on in MCIBS+.

The scientific presentations at the retreat were broken down into five sections: four blocks of four 15-20 minute talks and a poster session at the end of the day. In the first block of talks, Dr. Melissa Rolls, Dr. Graham Thomas, Dr. Gong Chen, and Dr. Patrick Drew discussed the work that their labs do which was all centered around neurobiology. The second block of talks was more immunology focused, with presentations from Dr. Robert Paulson, Ashley Shay (Prabhu Lab), Beng San Yeoh (Kumar Lab), and Stephanie Bora (Cantorna Lab). After lunch, the third block of talks was presented by Dr. Scott Lindner, Avni Upadhyay (Hanna-Rose Lab), Amy Chen (Wang Lab), and Dr. Phil Reno. This block was especially interesting because it also included a presentation from Melissa Long, the Technology Licensing Officer in the Eberly College of Science, who talked about understanding intellectual property and technology transfer. The fourth and final block of talks were given by Dr. Tim Jegla, Dr. William Hancock, Dr. Xin Zhang, and Dr. Frank Pugh.

Dr. Gong Chen presenting his lab’s research.

If you know anything about any of the presenters mentioned above, you can understand the depth of different topics covered at the retreat, which for me, kept it interesting. We got to hear about everything from studying axon regeneration in Drosophila to microbiota to malaria to studying gene regulation on a genomics scale. No one dove too much into the nitty-gritty of their science (which, you can’t really do in 15-20 minutes) but rather gave an overview, which I really appreciated. “It was great to learn about the research going on in different departments other than my own,” added Dr. Adam Glick, MCIBS Program Associate Chair, Molecular Medicine emphasis area representative, and lead organizer of the retreat. “Each year we have had a different group of faculty presenting, so there is usually something new for everyone. I think there is great potential for stimulating cross departmental and cross-discipline collaborations.”

With over 100 participating faculty in the MCIBS program, it’s no surprise that there’s so much exciting and different science happening just in our graduate program, but this was the first opportunity I had to sit down and hear about so much of it at once! Pretty cool stuff. “One other thing I liked was being able to introduce a new faculty member (Dr. Xin Zhang) to everyone in addition to the new students. I am hoping we can continue to do this in the future!” said Dr. Melissa Rolls, MCIBS Program Chair.

2. This retreat was a great opportunity for first-year students to learn more about the research going on in different labs to help them better decide who they want to do their lab rotations with.

As mentioned in the previous point, the MCIBS program has over 100 participating faculty, so deciding what labs to rotate in can be a pretty daunting experience for first-year students. However, I’m sure the overview of research from sixteen different labs in the oral presentation blocks helped to ease some of that stress! Additionally, this gave the first-year students the opportunity to hear about all kinds of research that they might not have known even existed just by word-of-mouth or reading about various faculty online. Hillary Figler, second-year IID student and President of the MCIBS GSA, attended the retreat this year and said going last year as a first-year student helped her to find her current lab home. “I met my PI, Dr. Edward Dudley, at the MCIBS retreat my first year. I ended up rotating in his lab and then eventually joining it, and that may not have happened without the retreat!” said Hillary.

First-year MCIBS students with MCIBS program chair, Dr. Melissa Rolls

L to R: Cheng Xu, Justine Alexander, Dr. Melissa Rolls, Alex Weiner, Sreenidhi Srinivasan, Xiaoheng Cheng, and Jacob Brittingham

3. The graduate students who presented for their labs did a phenomenal job.

As mentioned in the first point, the blocks of oral presentations were given by both faculty and graduate students. Typically when graduate students give seminars, it’s all about his/her individual research. However, at the retreat, the graduate student presenters were speaking for their entire lab, so while they may have spent a couple of minutes talking about what they do personally, the majority of their talks were about the various projects going on in the lab, types of models used, etc. I thought this was pretty great. Graduate students should know about all the research going on in their lab, but that isn’t always the case, and I thought the graduate students that presented did an amazing job.

Stephanie Bora (Immunology and Infectious Disease), Ashley Shay (Molecular Medicine), and Beng San Yeoh (Immunology and Infectious Disease) each presenting their lab’s research

Graduate student presenters included: Ashley Shay (Prabhu Lab), Beng San Yeoh (Kumar Lab), Stephanie Bora (Cantorna Lab), Avni Upadhyay (Hanna-Rose Lab), and Amy Chen (Wang Lab)

4. There was plenty of time for socializing.

Carrie Lewis (MCIBS) and Drew Fister (Genetics) at the poster session

Sixteen 15-20 minute oral presentations and a poster session is A LOT of science talk for one day, but the day was broken up well with two 30-minute snack/coffee breaks and an hour-long lunch. This gave graduate students and faculty plenty of time to get up, stretch their legs, and just talk to each other. At each break, I felt like I talked to a different group of people. I also thought that the venue choice for the retreat made this a little easier, too — we weren’t in some classroom or auditorium, so it felt a bit more relaxed.

The day ended with a poster session with about 10-15 posters set up from various graduate students. I presented a poster, and for the entire hour, I don’t think I stopped talking! I’ve presented posters at conferences before, but it was even cooler to present to my fellow graduate students and faculty. I got some great insight into my experiments from faculty that I normally wouldn’t discuss my data with.

 

Special thanks to Dr. Adam Glick, MCIBS Program Associate Chair and Molecular Medicine emphasis area representative, and Dr. Melissa Rolls, MCIBS Program Chair, for organizing this retreat!

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