UVM Spinoffs Finish First and Second in LaunchVT Pitch Competition

Two University of Vermont spin-off companies, Majorwise and Packetized Energy, finished first and second in the 2017 LaunchVT competition, Vermont’s oldest and largest business pitch contest.

Majorwise, an on-line job platform that connects college students with local employers, was launched by UVM seniors Peter Silverman and Max Robbins in 2015 when the business majors were sophomores. It also has application for state departments of labor, businesses and non-profits.

It is the first student-led company to win LaunchVT. NBC News.com recently profiled the start-up.

Silverman and Robbins received a $30,000 cash prize, which they’ll use to hire more developers, speeding the development of an improved version of the product, and to invest in marketing. They also received $45,000 in in-kind services. 

Second place winner Packetized Energy designs and implements user-friendly systems that homes and businesses can use to balance energy supply and demand in the power grid, helping them manage their costs and allowing the grid to run reliably with renewable energy. 

The company’s three co-founders are all faculty in UVM’s College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences: Mads Almassalkhi, Jeff Frolik and Paul Hines. Its chief engineer, Andrew Giroux, earned both B.S. and MS. degrees in the college.

Packetized Energy will use its $15,000 award to hire a software developer.

According to Richard Galbraith, UVM’s vice president for research, the two winning entries are evidence not only of the talent of the university’s students and faculty, but of the continuing evolution of the university’s culture of innovation and entrepreneurship.

“Both the winners exemplify the ability to identify a need, imagine a solution and make it into reality,” he said. “In the case of Majorwise, that came about through the insight of two UVM students; in the case of Packetized Energy, it was the result of the collaborative efforts of UVM faculty in the College of Engineering and Mathematics. The success of both teams shows that a culture is taking root at UVM that fosters not only pure research but innovation that has commercial application.” 

Another UVM start-up, GreenScale Technologies, was one of the seven finalists in the competition, held May 12 at Main Street Landing in Burlington. Sixty teams entered the LaunchVT competition.

Majorwise earned its way into the finals round by winning the competition’s college round, called LaunchVT Collegiate.

Launch-VT is a program of the Lake Champlain Chamber of Commerce. The annual competition was first held in 2013.   

Source: UVM News

Meet the Class of 2017

On Saturday, May 20 and Sunday, May 21, UVM celebrates its 216th commencement ceremonies. Over the weekend, thousands will receive hard-earned master’s, doctoral, baccalaureate and honorary degrees. Meet just a few of these impressive Catamounts below.

Marylyn Rogel

Marylyn Rogel, who graduates with a BA in sociology and a minor in critical race and ethnic studies, has been a campus leader in social justice. A first-generation college student, Rogel’s first stop post-UVM is Miami, where she’ll begin a two-year stint as an elementary school teacher through Teach for America, which accepts only 15 percent of applicants nationally. “I see it as a way of giving back,” Rogel says. “I was fortunate to have some really committed teachers who set high standards. It made me realize what a positive impact a good teacher can have on students.” Read more.

Ben Grebber

Ben Grebber, an Honors College student majoring in biology with a minor in chemistry and pharmacology, won’t be leaving after commencement. Instead, he’ll join the Larner College of Medicine Class of 2021. He credits UVM’s PEP (Premedical Enhancement Program) with igniting his passion for medicine. While shadowing a gastroenterologist, general surgeon, and primary care physician, Grebber learned how to interact with patients and develop the skills needed to collect patient information and formulate a diagnosis and treatment plan. “One experience during my physician shadowing solidified my interest in attending medical school – my mentor physician allowed me to see a patient on my own,” says Grebber, who also enjoyed early exposure to the College of Medicine’s active learning activities.

Sarah Mantz

Catamount swimmer Sarah Mantz excelled in the pool and the classroom throughout her UVM career. A top student in the Grossman School of Business with a concentration in marketing, she has earned multiple appearances on the America East Commissioner’s Honor Roll and All-Academic Team. Mantz was also all-conference as a swimmer for the past two seasons and leaves UVM as the individual school record holder in the 50 freestyle and as a team member in three relay events. A recent internship with business consulting firm Fletcher/CSI’s Williston office earned Mantz a post-graduation job in research and quantitative analysis. Read more.

Connor Payne

Connor Payne, a chemistry major in the Honors College, will go straight into a Ph.D. program at Harvard this fall in chemical biology. He’s fascinated by this intersection, particularly as the fields combine in drug development. Payne presented research on tRNA at the 2017 Student Research Conference, and nominated advisor Robert Hondal, associate professor of biochemistry and chemistry, for the Office of Undergraduate Research’s first Mentoring Award, which Hondal received at the conference

 

Kiana Gonzales

Kiana Gonzales, a linguistics major with a concentration in psycholinguistics, grew up with a unique perspective on language: both of her parents are deaf, so she’s been signing all her life. At UVM, she served as the president of the American Sign Language Club, an orientation leader, a member of the gymnastics team, and treasurer of the Chi Alpha Christian fellowship group. After graduation, she’ll work at the United Nations with the disability policy forum.

George Chrisafis
Biology major George Chrisafis received a Common Good Fund award in summer 2016 through UVM’s Career Center to intern at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. “Common good” sums up the Honors College student’s post-grad plans, too. Now that he defended his thesis on cancer research, he’ll go on to the competitive research program at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, in a lab that focuses on pancreatic and breast cancers, plus ALS. Chrisafis’ ultimate goal: medical school.

Caitlin Drasher
Caitlin Drasher
, a wildlife and fisheries biology major, has spent the last four years volunteering extensively with the Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife; her dedication earned her a Vermont Campus Compact Engaged Student Award. After graduation, she’ll share her experience working with black bears as a wildlife technician with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, helping to manage human-bear conflicts. Having successfully defended her honors thesis, Drasher is considering graduate school, and hopes to continue studying impacts of human development on wildlife, especially large carnivores like black bears. Read more.

Olivia Pena
Among the first students at UVM to graduate with a degree in food systems, Olivia Peña is a member of the Real Food Working group, a committee on campus that helps guide food purchases at UVM. The group recently hit its goal of locally sourcing 20 percent of food on campus, three years ahead of the 2020 target. She also served as a project assistant researching harvest losses in developing countries as part of a climate change, agriculture, and food systems organization on campus. While at UVM, Peña has taught horseback riding lessons, served as an orientation leader, and was a College of Agriculture and Life Sciences student representative. After graduation, she’ll stay on at UVM as a graduate student in the food systems program. Read more about the Real Food initiative.

Jason Maulucci
Jason Maulucci
, former SGA president, will move seamlessly from political science classes into a job in the Vermont Governor’s Office. Maulucci’s been working for the Governor’s transition team for months, while juggling studying and SGA commitments. “I learned more in my role as SGA president and being involved with campus committees that steer decision-making at the university than I could have ever imagined,” says Maulucci, who turned down an internship at the United Nations to accept the post with Gov. Phil Scott. He hopes to eventually attend law school.

Bethany Kelly
Exercise and movement science major Bethany Kelly will work as a medical assistant at a private practice in Burlington after graduation, but it won’t be her first experience with patients. Her clinical training at UVM included helping young adults prepare for the Special Olympics, working with psychiatry patients at the UVM Medical Center, and teaching strengthening exercises to individuals with multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease. “All of my clinical experiences have been ideal training for when I enter the workforce,” says Kelly. With a bit more experience under her belt, Kelly plans to apply to master’s programs in physician assistant studies. Read more about Kelly and clinical experiences at UVM.

Nick Demassi
An economics and political science double major and math minor, Nick DeMassi will join the Peace Corps after graduation to teach math to students in Guinea, Africa. It won’t be DeMassi’s first time sharing his love of numbers; the Honors College grad tutored fellow students in a microeconomics course taught by the late professor Ross Thomson, and served as a teaching assistant for another of his UVM mentors, associate professor of economics Sara Solnick, who is also serving as his Honors College thesis advisor. His research involved a new take on the “ultimatum game,” a classic experiment that provides insights into how humans calculate their economic self-interest. Read more.

Marion CundariEngineering grad Marion Cundari is paving the way toward a sustainable future. She’s accepted a job as an energy engineer at Opinion Dynamics, a firm in her native Massachusetts, advising clients (including utilities) on energy-saving opportunities. Her ultimate goal: to help facilitate an industry-wide shift toward renewables and fossil fuel alternatives. “I’ll be applying many of the skills learned over my years at UVM,” says Cundari. 

Andrew Dazzo
Andrew Dazzo
started an internship at Wells Fargo in the summer of 2016 with 200 other college students. His hard work helped him stand out; it was impressive enough to land him a full-time job at the prestigious bank after graduation. While at UVM, Dazzo served as a Student Government Association (SGA) representative, and helped develop the Catamount Innovation Fund, which offers funding and expertise for budding student entrepreneurs to “turn their idea into a successful business,” says Dazzo. Read more about Dazzo and the Catamount Innovation Fund.

Vanessa Avalone
Vanessa Avalone
, a biology major and French minor, is among three Fulbright awardees from UVM who will spend a year on an English Teaching Assistantship. Avalone first got involved at tutoring here at UVM. “I really enjoyed teaching,” she says. The grad has been funded to teach in Malaysia starting in January; until then, she’ll be studying for the MCAT, with her sights set on attending medical school in the future. In the last five years, more than 100 UVM students and alumni have won or been finalists in prestigious scholarship and fellowship competitions ranging from the Fulbright to the Rhodes. Read more about the 2017 winners.

Kaelyn Burbey
Kaelyn Burbey
 received the ROTC Legion of Valor Bronze Cross Award, given annually for achievement of scholastic excellence in military and academic subjects. Nationally, just thirteen cadets receive the award. An Honors College environmental engineering major/mathematics minor, Burbey now begins four years of active duty with the U.S. Army and hopes to work with the Army Corps of Engineers someday. “A lot of our ROTC training induces stress, so that it pushes you to be adaptive and think on the fly,” she says. “That is, obviously, applicable almost anywhere in life.”

 Grace Weisbecker

Grace Weisbecker, senior in athletic training and Honors College student, was a varsity pole vaulter and hurdler for the Catamounts. A spring break trip to hot spring-rich Iceland sparked a research project on whether a warm soak might be a good warm-up for athletes. She exhibited her findings at the 2017 Student Research Conference. Next stop: a master’s program at Ithaca College for athletic training, with the long-range goal of becoming a professor someday. Read more about Weisbecker’s research and other student projects from the 2017 conference.

Dewey Sheehan

Dewey Sheehan knows what an internship can do. After interning with Under Armour for the past two summers, the business administration major/applied design minor worked remotely for the brand for the past year on top of academic work. He’ll go on to work with the company on footwear development. While at UVM, Sheehan was the joint winner of the Senior Award for Excellence in Marketing.

Photos in this story by Kevin Coburn, Brian Jenkins, Sally McCay, Tomoki Nomura ’20, Tom Rogers, Andy Duback and Ian Thomas Jansen-Lonnquist.

Source: UVM News

UVM’s 216th Commencement Sunday; Ceremonies to Be Held on University Green

The University of Vermont will celebrate its 216th commencement exercises on Saturday, May 20, and Sunday, May 21. The University Commencement Main Ceremony, where the president will confer baccalaureate degrees, will take place on Sunday, May 21, on the University Green, beginning with the procession at 8:20 a.m. The College of Arts and Sciences ceremony will follow the main ceremony. Graduates and guests are urged to dress appropriately for the weather. Tickets are not required for these ceremonies.

President Tom Sullivan will confer degrees on an estimated 3,228 graduates, including 2,620  bachelors, 386 masters, 106 doctoral and 116 medical degree recipients. Among expected degree recipients are students from 40 states and 97 international students from 21 foreign countries. Approximately 1,116 graduates are from Vermont. The graduating class includes an expected 343 students of color.

The Graduate College Commencement Ceremony, where master and doctoral students will be hooded and presented with their diploma, will take place on Saturday, May 20, in the Multipurpose Facility in the Athletic Complex at 12:30 p.m. Tickets are not required for this ceremony.

The College of Medicine Commencement Ceremony, where graduates will take their professional oath, will take place on Sunday, May 21 in Ira Allen Chapel at 3 p.m. This ceremony is ticketed.

A recognition ceremony for Honors College Scholars will take place on Saturday, May 20 at 3:00 p.m. in Ira Allen Chapel.

Individual college/school undergraduate ceremonies, where degree candidates will receive their diplomas, will take place throughout the day on Sunday, May 21. View the full Commencement weekend schedule.



Preeminent journalist and author James Fallows will give the commencement address at the University Main Ceremony. He brings his keen perspective and highly respected voice to a wide range of topics across the spectrum of American and international politics and culture. A national correspondent for The Atlantic for more than 35 years, Mr. Fallows writes authoritatively on national security policy, U.S. foreign policy and international relations, global and domestic economics, the development and application of technology, and emerging trends in American civic life.


Five others will receive honorary degrees at the ceremony: Diane Greene, Martha Pattee Heath, David R. Nalin, M.D., Alexander Nemerov, and Patrick Wong. Learn more about these recipients.

Tickets are required for the College of Medicine Ceremony, Grossman School of Business, College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences, and the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources ceremonies regardless of weather.  Learn more about ticketing for each of the ceremonies.

The main ceremony and each college’s ceremony will be webcast live on the following website: http://live.vpt.org/uvm/.

Street closing information

The following street closings are planned in conjunction with Commencement: from Friday, May 19, at 7 p.m. through Sunday, May 21, at 8 p.m., University Place will be closed from Colchester Avenue to Main Street, and South Prospect Street will be closed from College Street to the University Health Center entrance. In addition, on Sunday, May 21 from 5 a.m. to 6 p.m., South Prospect Street will be closed from Colchester Avenue to Main Street, and College Street will be closed from South Prospect Street to South Williams Street.  In addition, the northernmost west-bound lane on Main Street from University Heights to South Prospect Street will be closed from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Shuttle buses will run between ceremony sites and parking areas. A parking map is available on the Commencement 2017 website. Guests are encouraged to carpool when possible and take shuttles from hotels when provided. Parking on residential streets is prohibited.

More information about commencement weekend is available on the Commencement 2017 website: www.uvm.edu/commencement.

Source: UVM News

Faculty Feature: Ellen Marsden

A fish that changes the shape of its skull sounds like something out of a science fiction novel. But professor of fisheries Ellen Marsden and a dedicated student researcher discovered that sculpin do just that. 

Marsden has taught fisheries courses in the Rubenstein School and conducted research on Lake Champlain for more than 20 years.

About Faculty Feature:

What makes our faculty members tick? In this video series, get up close and personal with our professors. Hear them talk about their passions, their paths to UVM and why they love what they study, from the mysteries of Lake Champlain’s sculpin to the stories of homeless children in Pakistan. 

Source: UVM News

Got Invasives? Comprehensive New Website Could Help Stop Their Spread

When it comes to invasive species, most Vermonters are familiar with the state’s big three: the Asian longhorned beetle, the hemlock wooly adelgid and the emerald ash borer, all of which menace the state’s forests.

But what about the countless other invasives gaining a foothold in Vermont – from starry stonewort to the sirex woodwasp to the Asian clam – that could also damage the state’s ecosystem and economy?

A comprehensive new website three years in the making, Vermont Invasives, aims to familiarize Vermonters with this expanded cast of invaders, as well as boost their knowledge of the three forest pests, with the goal of curtailing their spread and even eliminating some. 

“Many Vermonters want to make a difference in stopping the growth of invasive species,” said Gwen Kozlowski, education and outreach coordinator at UVM Extension, which partnered with the Vermont Agency of Agriculture Food & Markets and the Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation to create the site.

“The new website will make it much easier for them to identify invasive species and take action,” she said. “We need homeowners and people from the community to be out front on this issue working in partnership with the professionals.”

“Report It”

The website is ablaze with color photos and loaded with precise descriptions of the growing number of invasive species that threaten Vermont’s landscape. Divided into two sections, water-based invasive species and land-based invasive species, it contains photo galleries of of 49 terrestrial plants, 17 forest pests and 10 aquatic invaders. 

One of the site’s most important features is its “Report It” function, which allows citizen reporters to upload photos they’ve taken of potential invaders and send them directly to experts at the state, an effort that could be vital in providing intelligence on the Asian longhorned beetle, which is not yet in the Vermont, and the emerald ash borer, which has not yet been found.              

The site also provides information on how to manage invasive species that are here and outlines concrete steps to prevent new ones from entering the state. A key preventive measure:  firewood, which can contain the larva of invasive pests under its bark, should never be transported more than 50 miles from its source.

Reason for optimism

While stopping the spread of invasive species can seem like a daunting challenge, there are a growing number of success stories, Kozlowski says.  

Thanks to a strong outreach effort and citizen involvement, for instance, the Asian longhorned beetle been eradicated in Chicago. Early detection of the emerald ash borer combined with yearly pesticide treatment can save affected trees.

Closer to home, a team dedicated to managing invasive plants in Vermont’s southwestern state parks and forests, the Habitat Restoration Crew, has worked with student volunteers from Castleton Village School to successfully remove invasive honeysuckle and buckthorn and replant with native species.

Other success stories can be found on the website of the Vermont Association of Conservation Commissions.

Spring is a good time to put the new website to use, Kozlowski said. The early leaf-out and flowering of the season make invasives stand out.  

Vermont Invasives was funded with a grant from the Vermont Community Foundation. The Vermont Agency of Natural Resources and Department of Environmental Conversation also contributed to its development. 

Source: UVM News

Vermont Researchers Speed Up Tree Aging Process To Create Old Growth

Scientists at the University of Vermont are engineering trees to look and act like old-growth forests–and their new research has promising implications for storing carbon in the fight against climate change. National Public Radio’s program Here & Now sent a reporter to visit UVM’s research forest with professor Bill Keeton. Listen to the story here, (at 5:10 in the broadcast). The research was also covered by WBUR in Boston, Vermont Public Radio,the NRDC website, and other outlets.

Source: UVM News

Stephen Hawking’s Strange Law of Entropy is Making Atoms on Earth Act Like Black Holes

A bizarre discovery by University of Vermont physicist Adrian Del Maestro has been attracting international attention from science reporters and magazines—including Wired, IFLScience!, Science News, Science Daily and others. Del Maestro and his colleagues revealed that cold helium atoms in lab conditions on Earth abide by the same “entanglement area law” that governs the behaviour of black holes.”It points to a deeper understanding of reality,” Del Maestro said in Wired.

The story also got picked-up by ABC Radio National, a news outlet of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The ABC’s daily news program, RN Drive, covered the UVM research on their science spot, “Research Filter.” Listen here (at 3:05 minutes).

Source: UVM News

Men’s Basketball in National News

The University of Vermont men’s basketball team garnered national media coverage during its run to the NCAA Tournament and first-round matchup against No. 4 Purdue. The New York Times, The Washington Post, Chicago TribuneUSA Today, The Boston Globe, ESPN, Sports Illustrated and other media pursued intriguing storylines focused on the teams’ chances in the NCAA Tournament, first-year student Josh Speidel’s inspiring journey, and head coach John Becker.

Source: UVM News

Meditation, Nutrition, Fitness: One ‘Party School’ Tries To Tame The College Brain

National Public Radio published a story on its NPREd site on UVM’s Wellness Environment, or WE, a substance-free community unique in higher education with amenities that promote mindfulness, exercise and nutrition that also includes a neuroscience course all WE students are required to take called Healthy Brains Healthy Bodies. A WE story was also broadcast on WGBH, Boston’s flagship public radio station. 

Source: UVM News

#Lovepizza? How Twitter Exposes Your Guilty Pleasures

Media around the globe took interest in the Lexicocalorimeter—an invention created at the University of Vermont. This online tool measures the caloric content of social media posts—like tweets—and “can be a powerful public health tool,” says UVM’s Peter Dodds, a scientist who co-led the invention of the new device and a study about it that was published in the journal PLOS ONE. Coverage followed— including stories in the Times (of London), Men’s Journal, Mashable, Tonic (Vice’s health news site), Yahoo News, the Irish Examiner, NRC (Netherlands daily newspaper), and many other outlets.

Source: UVM News