Eunice Noel spends her days at Goergen Hall researching corneal cross-linking. She spends her evenings in Gilbert Hall, cooking dishes like teriyaki chicken and Cajun alfredo pasta鈥攁nd making friends.
鈥淚 end up talking to anyone who walks into the kitchen,鈥 the Miami native and University of Florida rising senior says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great way to meet people.鈥
Noel is one of 61 undergraduate students from 14 universities conducting research as part of four summer programs run by the David T. Kearns Center. These include the Xerox Engineering Research Fellows, Ronald E. McNair Scholars, and two new Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) that bring female and underrepresented minority students to Rochester from universities such as Mississippi State, the University of Maryland, Rutgers, and the University of Michigan.
In their labs, Noel and other Kearns Center summer researchers work among one another as well as Rochester faculty and graduate students. In their dorm, they live among one another, forming tight friendships that will be vital as they move on to graduate school and professional careers.
Connecting personally, networking professionally
The students have been randomly paired with their roommates鈥攔egardless of research interest or college affiliation. Noel鈥檚 roommate is Rochester biomedical engineering major Penelope Subervi 鈥19, who is from New York City. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a flashback, like freshmen year all over again,鈥 Subervi says. 鈥淔ortunately, Eunice and I get along great and hang out a lot.鈥
The students are assigned, Harry Potter-style, to 鈥渉ouses鈥 (supervised by a Kearns staff member) that compete against each other in community-building events. They compete on everything from which house is the most punctual to classes and events, to who plans the most social events and posts the most group photos on social media.

Noel says her experience in Gilbert Hall has made it easier to expand her network beyond her lab partners. 鈥淵ou may work with just a few students in the same lab, so having the opportunity to see people in the dorm hallways, kitchen, and even the bathroom while brushing your teeth is a great way to get a conversation in.鈥
Beth Olivares, director of the Kearns Center, says she鈥檚 pleased by what she鈥檚 seen. 鈥淭hey go out to breakfast, the movies, go-karting, or meet up for lunch at the food trucks here on Tasty Tuesdays,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been great.鈥
Exploring a new university鈥攁nd a new city
Stephon Hamill, assistant director at the Kearns Center, sees an added benefit of the social aspects of summer research:
鈥淪ome of the students who don鈥檛 go here can learn about the University from a student who does, or who鈥檚 from Rochester,鈥 he says.
Take, for example, Wes Smith and Moses Bug. They鈥檙e dormmates as well as lab partners in the REU program titled Computational Methods for Understanding Music, Media, and Minds. Smith grew up in Rochester and will be a junior this fall at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. Bug is a rising senior at Brandeis University near Boston.

They both love rap music, which they listen to while in the lab working on their project, 鈥淩econstruction of Live Performances.鈥 In their free time, Smith introduces Bug to different neighborhoods in Rochester, and to the local cuisine.
鈥淚 introduced Moses to his first garbage plate,鈥 Smith says, referring to the iconic Rochester dish that features meat, home fries, macaroni salad, and bread. 鈥淚 love it,鈥 says Bug, a Philadelphia native. 鈥淚鈥檝e already had three.鈥
Noel, too, knew little about Rochester鈥攖he city or the university鈥攂efore embarking on this summer adventure. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a little colder here, and more quiet,鈥 the Miami native says. 鈥淟ots of nature. I like it.鈥
She and some of her new friends have visited the Memorial Art Gallery, a few other museums, and a cozy bistro on University Avenue called Starry Nites Caf茅. 鈥淚t reminded me of the show Friends,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥極K, Rochester!鈥欌
Kearns Center has a field day
Students, pre-college students, faculty, and staff participating in summer programs through the David T. Kearns Center took a break from campus and headed to Genesee Valley Park for the annual Kearns Center field day.




