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人妻少妇专区 Life

These students thrive where STEM, humanities intersect

From left: Seniors Valerie Battista, Danielle Getz, and Jameson (Max) Morris are this year鈥檚 winners of the Wells Award, given each year to high-achieving students in the Hajim School of Engineering & Applied Sciences who also excel in the humanities.

The Wells Award recognizes engineering students who excel in humanistic disciplines.

Three senior undergraduate students in the Hajim School of Engineering & Applied Sciences are being honored with the Wells Award, given each year to high-achieving Hajim students who also excel in a humanities field, as determined by the highest GPAs at the end of their junior year.

This year鈥檚 recipients are

  • Valerie Battista, a double major in computer science and music who has been a member of multiple University choral ensembles and studies carillon;
  • Danielle Getz, a chemical engineering major and environmental humanities minor focused on tackling climate change;
  • Jameson (Max) Morris, an audio and music engineering major and music minor who performs with multiple ensembles and harbors an interest in music history and theory.

The award is named after Robert W. Wells 鈥39, a mechanical engineering alumnus who became a top executive at Westinghouse鈥攁nd felt strongly that engineers 鈥渘eed the balance of the humanities鈥 to be competent in their field.

Open curriculum gives Battista room to explore software engineering and music

valerie battista.
Valerie Battista

When Valerie Battista found out that students could learn to play the atop Rush Rhees Library, she couldn鈥檛 resist. 鈥淚鈥檝e loved music for as long as I can remember,鈥 she says.

Early on in her studies at Rochester, Battista was selected as a recipient of the Suzanne J. O鈥橞rien Book Award, which recognizes students who excel academically and in leadership roles in their first year at the College. It is often a good predictor of students who will make the most of their opportunities at the University.

Battista learned how to code in 8th grade; an introductory course in Java, soon after she arrived on the Rochester campus, 鈥渨as the springboard to go on to more classes,鈥 she says. Next summer she will begin working as a full-time software engineer for T. Rowe Price in Maryland, working with the same manager she had during an internship last summer.

In addition to her major in computer science, Battista has also been able to pursue her passion for music to the fullest. She has been a member of the University Chamber Singers since the fall of her first year, and she has also sung with the Treble Chorus and the Schola Cantorum, two ensembles that include River 人妻少妇专区 and Eastman students as well as musicians from the Rochester community. She started taking carillon lessons the spring semester of her first year, and despite interruptions due to COVID, she’s been playing the carillon ever since.

鈥淚 came in hoping to minor in music,鈥 Battista says. However, thanks to the University鈥檚 unique open curriculum, 鈥淚 am going to be able to double major in it, because the flexibility of the program here has allowed me to take enough classes.鈥

Getz, a Grand Challenges Scholar, gains added perspective from humanities classes

portrait of danielle getz.
Danielle Getz

Danielle Getz is 鈥渞eally motivated when I have awesome people I am working with, who are passionate and excited,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I love about the 人妻少妇专区.鈥

Getz decided in high school that she wanted to dedicate herself to mitigating climate change. This summer she worked in the of on cutting edge research addressing the problem. Some of her favorite courses in the humanities, she says, have 鈥渕ade me a more intentional and considerate engineer.鈥

During a first-year class she learned about the Grand Challenges Scholars program, which encourages undergraduates to choose one of s and tailor their academic program to address the problem by demonstrating in research, interdisciplinary study, entrepreneurship and innovation, global perspectives, and service.

Getz signed up, and in addition to her major, she is completing a minor in . The humanities courses she鈥檚 taken complement her research in the Porosoff lab by helping her look at environmental problems from different angles, and 鈥渃onsider the people affected, and not just the science,鈥 she says.

After graduation she plans to pursue a PhD, apply for a professorship, 鈥渉ave my own lab, study what I鈥檓 curious about, and lead a good team of students.鈥 But she鈥檚 not ruling out 鈥渨hatever opportunities come my way,鈥 Getz says.

Whatever the pathway, she鈥檚 eager to join the ranks of the people she learned about in high school who are trying to mitigate the effects of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.

鈥淚 want to have a meaningful impact.鈥

Music history and theory enable Morris 鈥to communicate with musicians from many genres鈥

Max Morris.
Jameson (Max) Morris

Jameson 鈥淢ax鈥 Morris knows what it is like to be on both sides of the microphone. He has recorded and mixed tracks of performances by some of the same student ensembles he performs with, including the University鈥檚 rock repertory ensemble, chamber orchestra, and wind symphony, which counts towards his minor in music.

When the COVID pandemic forced the cancellation of in-person concerts, student music ensembles at the 人妻少妇专区 had to find novel ways鈥攐ther than live performances鈥攖o reach their audiences. Individual video and audio soundtracks of each performer had to be pre-recorded, then stitched together into seamless, virtual presentations.

For Morris, an audio and music engineering major and student, the opportunity to work on this technique with senior lecturer Stephen Roessner, a Grammy Award-winning audio engineer, was an invaluable learning experience.

So was the opportunity to explore music more broadly through the music theory and history classes he has taken as part of his minor. He especially enjoyed a class that analyzed the major orchestral pieces that have defined different periods in music history, for example, the Also Sprach Zarathustra tone poem by Richard Strauss.

鈥淚 am much more confident now analyzing music performed on a large scale,鈥 Morris says. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e recording in a studio, obviously you need a lot of technical knowledge, but it also important to really know music, to be able to communicate with musicians from many genres.鈥

After completing his major this year, he will stay at Rochester to complete a master鈥檚 degree in electrical engineering designed specifically for audio and music engineers. He will then head to Nashville, where an internship with the famous Blackbird recording studio this summer cemented his desire to become an audio engineer.


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