Around 1,450 Cornell undergraduate, master鈥檚 and doctoral students completed their studies this month. They include students across Cornell鈥檚 colleges, from humanities scholars to scientists. The December Recognition Ceremony was canceled on Dec. 14 due to COVID-19 restrictions; those who hoped to attend are invited to return for Commencement in May 2022. In the meantime, with an eye on their futures, some of those anticipating graduation shared their Cornell experiences:
Creating community, here and abroad
A love of language 鈥 particularly for the Korean language and culture 鈥 guided Kemi Adewalure 鈥22 toward an Asian Studies major in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频. Since she finished that major鈥檚 requirements early, she found a second major: American Studies, where she concentrated on race and ethnicity.
Last summer, Adewalure interned at the White House鈥檚 Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. Her colleagues were nice and quite funny, she said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 expect people in government to be humorous,鈥 she said.
While her future plans are uncertain, Adewalure enjoyed her Cornell experience.
After making friends at the Carol Tatkon Center for First-Year Students during freshman year, she took a job there in her second year to help others. She never left. 鈥淚 really enjoy the way we help the community, but also the way in which we have a community among ourselves,鈥 she said.
Later in her undergraduate experience, Adewalure worked for the Asian American Studies Resource Center 鈥 at the Top of the Rock 鈥 in Rockefeller Hall.
Adewalure proudly helped to organize the popular 鈥淏eComing鈥 lunchtime lecture series this semester. 鈥淪tudents shared the process of becoming who they were,鈥 she said, 鈥渆specially within their identity as Asian, Pacific Islander or Desi.鈥
In a fraction of a second, boom!
Since spring, Grace Wu 鈥21, M. Eng. 鈥22, has been developing a way to make electrical workers less vulnerable to arc flashes. These electrical explosions may be more than 35,000 degrees Fahrenheit in a fraction of a second and send 2,000 people a year to medical burn units.
Electrical workers can wear specially designed, breathable clothing to prevent second- and third-degrees burns. But beyond burns, Wu said, these explosions also create dangerous gases. 鈥淣o one really has created anything that addresses the toxic gases that are released,鈥 she said.
That鈥檚 where Wu comes in. She has been working in the laboratory of Juan Hinestroza, the Rebecca Q. Morgan 鈥60 Professor of Fiber Science & Apparel Design in the College of Human Ecology, to attach metal-organic frameworks to personal protective clothing. Think of metal-organic frameworks as nanoscale cages made with metals like copper, built into clothing to limit exposure 鈥 and save a person鈥檚 health and lungs 鈥 to toxic gases during arc flash explosions.
鈥淟ong-term health risks can result from arc flash incidents,鈥 Wu said. 鈥淕etting burns on your body happens directly and immediately, and proper clothing can address that. But things like respiratory problems can develop over time.鈥
After receiving her bachelor鈥檚 degree in fiber science in May from CHE, she is earning her master鈥檚 degree in engineering, focusing on materials science, from the College of Engineering.
Wu will be starting a new job in New York City at the Good Housekeeping Institute, testing consumer products.
鈥淭he idea of helping people really draws me in,鈥 Wu said. 鈥淚 love problem-solving. I love building things. Through the course of the pandemic, I have realized that I鈥檓 very human- and consumer-centered.鈥
鈥楪reener, cleaner technology鈥
In a world moving quickly toward electric vehicles, Mumtaziah 鈥淶ia鈥 Faaz, M.Eng 鈥22, thinks about improving energy storage and the need for battery elements.
To obtain those elements, she looked to the ocean. Faaz worked with the Symbiotic Engineering and Analysis Lab 鈥 or SEA Lab 鈥 in the to study how to sustainably extract resources from the ocean. Specifically, she worked on SMORE 鈥 the Symbiotic Machine for Ocean uRanium Extraction 鈥 where her research showed that SMORE could extract battery components lithium and cobalt.
Before coming to Cornell, Faaz had never been to the U.S. and had never seen snow. She skied at Greek Peak in Cortland County and sledded down a campus hill.
Faaz first heard of the university halfway around the world, in her home country, Indonesia, by watching 鈥淭he Office鈥 鈥 which featured Ed Helms, the actor who played fictional Cornellian Andy Bernard.
But Faaz chose Cornell for its environmental reputation. She graduates with a master鈥檚 degree in materials science and engineering, and she has accepted a position from Intel Corporation in Portland, Oregon. 鈥淚 want to apply my work to develop greener, cleaner technology,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is the number one green campus in the U.S.鈥
鈥業t became more than a hobby鈥
When industrial engineer Christian Mercado, M.F.S. 鈥22, moved to Washington, D.C., from Puerto Rico, in 2010 for a consulting job, he soon became a foodie.
鈥淚n Washington, I was exposed to a lot of cultures, different people and international foods,鈥 said Mercado, who grew up and was educated in Puerto Rico. 鈥淚 had a group of coworkers who were into food, especially with Washington being metropolitan and multicultural. We tried different types of food and it became an obsession to learn how to replicate and cook those foods.鈥
Mercado started posting about it, writing online about recipes and methods. 鈥淚 kept reading and kept posting and it became more than a hobby,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 worked on this out of passion.鈥
So when his wife, Mariely Medina, Ph.D. 鈥20, started earning her doctorate in food microbiology from Cornell, he constantly pestered her with questions about brewing, yeasts and temperatures. She looked at him and said, 鈥淚 think that you need to go to school and study what I鈥檓 studying.鈥
So he did. He helped to create the recent 鈥淕orges Libe-ation鈥 red ale with the Big Red Brewing graduate student organization earlier this fall, and he helped to create delicious potable spirits with maple syrup. 鈥淚've always been fervent about beer and food,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hy not make it into a career?鈥
Mercado will earn a master鈥檚 degree in food science, focusing on beer, fermented foods and food security.
鈥楿ncomfortable 鈥 works for my growth zone鈥
With sweet tea in hand, Zain Khoja 鈥22 does not search for the easy path. 鈥淐ornell is a good fit for me,鈥 Khoja said. 鈥淭he university gave me several opportunities to encounter things that made me uncomfortable 鈥 which works for my growth zone 鈥 placing me perfectly, professionally and academically, where I can grow the most.鈥
On campus, he joined the Cornell App Development (AppDev) project team for developing difficult mobile and web applications. He鈥檚 helped create useful apps on campus and organized extracurricular classes that benefit other students to hone their own programming skills. In fact, he鈥檚 served as an AppDev course instructor for more than a year, training about 60 student colleagues. During the last spring semester, he was the group鈥檚 president.
Khoja, from Dallas, Texas, has seen the world. He鈥檚 strolled the streets of Florence and Milan, and he has visited Egypt鈥檚 pyramids. His favorite place is Sendai, Japan, which is not a tourist destination, but rather where people simply go about their lives.
鈥淚鈥檓 inspired by people from different walks of life,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd from my own experiences exploring the unknown.鈥
After graduation with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in information science through the Cornell Ann S. Bowers College of Computing and Information Science, Khoja will start his postgraduate career as a product designer in New York City for Ramp, a finance automation platform.
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