Fall 2019 - Spring 2020 Student Spotlights

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Fall 2019 - Spring 2020 Student Spotlights

 

Amanda Leppert-Gomes

This is Amanda Leppert-Gomes, a Senior Anthropology major with minors in Chemistry and Latino and Latin American Studies. She is currently the VP of the Undergraduate Student Anthropology Club and was the PMEL lead for Engineers without Borders' project for bringing clean water to a community in Jancko Marca Bolivia until this semester.  Outside of school, she enjoys hiking, taking ZUMBA classes, and hanging out with the wonderful people she has met at SIU.

This past summer Amanda conducted ethnographic fieldwork under the advisement of Dr. Roberto E. Barrios, the McNairs Scholars Program, and with funding from the REACH award and the Anthropology Department where she had student visitor status at CIESAS-Pacifico Sur. Her research in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mexico looked at the assumptions and social implications of green energy wind farm megadevelopment projects, and how inequity was produced through the way the negotiation process ensued. She also conducted field work as a research assistant for Dr. Roberto E. Barrios for his project with Dr. Antoinette Jackson from USF and their work for the University of the Virgin Islands for FEMA and VITEMA's 5 year hazard mitigation plan in the Virgin Islands this winter break. This project had applied objectives, and it hopes to work on confronting issues of community, resilience, and hazard mitigation among various groups on the islands.

She is looking forward to continue to work on these projects, presenting at the Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting this semester in Albuquerque, the CSAS Annual Meeting, and presentations on campus as she continues to analyze data. After SIU, Amanda wants to go to graduate school studying medical anthropology, although her work intersects various subfields such as anthropology of environment, energy, and development. Her goal is to become an activist scholar and continue to confront issues of inequity in society. Keep fighting the good fight, Amanda! Best of luck with grad school! 


Owen Risse

Owen is a freshman majoring in Aviation Management and hoping to minor in French. Ever since he was a little kid, he has always wanted to be a pilot. Owen's dad, who was a former helicopter crew chief in the Army and Air force, has always inspired him to become a pilot himself. Along with his family and friends, his grandpa is one of his biggest motivators as he always tells Owen to “fly high.”  Owen has always been motivated by the thought of being able to travel the world and experience different cultures while getting to do the thing he loves, fly. In the next ten years Owen strives to be flying for a major airline, or serving our country in the Air Force and flying fighter jets.

Throughout his short time here at SIU so far, he has had the opportunity to create a Veterans Day Lunch, something that he hopes to continue each year. After having a long line of family members who have served our country, it is very important for him to give back to those who serve. Twice a year, he also helps out with family friends at Farmers Insurance to hold an event allowing soldiers/veterans to pick up a brand new free suit or tux. Along with giving back to veterans, Owen enjoys volunteering with his local Jr. PGA in order to help grow the game of golf. Aside from volunteering, he Asian Executive for Kappa Alpha Order, the Vice President of Operations for the Honors Assembly, a part of Aviation Management Society, and the Director of the Veterans Day lunch. Congrats Owen, the University Honors Program is very proud of you!


Cassidy Lounsbury

Cassidy Lounsbury is a third-year student majoring in Microbiology with minors in Chemistry and Spanish. She is studying to pursue a career in medicine with the goal of becoming a surgeon.

She is a member of SIUs NCAA Division 1 Swimming and Diving Team, where she spends the majority of her time in the pool and in the weight room training for her sport. She races mostly sprint events, with the 100-yard butterfly and the 50- and 100-yard freestyle being her favored events. She was awarded Most Valuable Women's Swimming and Diving Student-Athlete three times for maintaining the highest GPA on the Women's Swim and Dive Team. Being a student-athlete has given her the opportunity to push her limits, enhance her time management skills, and conquer adversity.

During her sophomore year, she was granted the REACH Award which funded her independent research project under the supervision of a Principal Investigator. She chose to join Dr. Derek Fishers lab within the microbiology department. Her project focuses on developing a new mutagenesis system for bacteria by utilizing an Eci5 intron from Escherichia coli to interrupt gene sequences, thus inactivating the gene. She will present her findings at the Student Creative Activities Research Forum later this spring.

Cassidy is also a two-year member of Conversation Partners, which is a volunteer organization that pairs a native English-speaking student with a student whose native language is one other than English with the purpose of practicing one another's language. Being a member of this program has not only given her an opportunity to practice her Spanish, but also helped her to make life-long friends and gain cultural experiences that she otherwise would not have had. She hopes that her acquisition of the language and her appreciation of the culture will help broaden her ability to impact the lives of a greater range of people as a physician.

Cassidy has found her time at SIU invaluable. She looks forward to applying all she has gained from her undergraduate experiences to her future in medicine. Great job, Cassidy! The UHP is so proud of you!


Sarah Seymour

Sarah Seymour is junior studying Linguistics with a specialization in ESL/Bilingual Education. She is the secretary of SLing, SIUs linguistics club, a member of climbing club, and a regular at the Wesley Foundation. Sarah works both in Undergraduate Admissions as a telecounselor and on the side as an English language tutor, and in her free time, she enjoys volunteering as a reading partner at the library, exploring Giant City State Park, learning to salsa dance, and reading every romance novel she can get her hands on. After she graduates, she plans on earning a masters in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) before teaching abroad wherever life takes her.

Sarah applied for the Boren major scholarship this week, which allows a student to study and live abroad. This scholarship focuses on building language skills, immersing in a different culture, and doing service! Best of luck with everything and we are so proud of you, Sarah!


Lana Sawar

This is Lana Sawar, a third-year majoring in microbiology. She is currently secretary of the Microbiology Student Organization. Their main volunteering project is to perform a mix of STEM activities for kids at the Carbondale Science Center. She is also in Pre-Professional Health Associations and is a conversation partner for the Center for English as a Second Language. Lana studied abroad in Cuba in June 2018, where her class spoke to Cuban physicians and learned from a healthcare clinic that bases their work around prevention of diseases and cancer. Lana and another Honors student created a comparative analysis of the Cuba and U.S healthcare systems and plan on presenting this research at the Honors Symposium this April.

Lana strives to make at least one person smile or laugh every day. She has an instinctual comprehension of children because they organically show their emotions. This fascination led to her two-year internship at For Kids Sake, a local non-profit that raises money for orphans and students in Bangladesh. Through her time at FKS, she has learned how non-profits organize and manage large fundraising events (Superhero 5K, Art Auction). She also had the chance to make stained-glass artworks with kids that will be sold to raise money for the kids in Bangladesh.

To gain research experience, she joined Dr. Scott Hamilton-Brehms lab in the Microbiology Department last summer. This lab focuses on microbial diversity in geothermal and ancient environments. Lana just applied to the REACH scholarship and is waiting for a response to start a new project next year, as well! She plans on taking the MCAT this semester and will start applying to medical schools this summer. She would like to return to her hometown (Saint Louis) and go to medical school somewhere there. Keep up the great work Lana!


Keegan Shults

Keegan Shults is a senior majoring in plant biology and minoring in environmental studies. He has been gardening since he was really young and has always loved working with plants, so that was the reason he chose his major. During his second semester of his freshman year, he met with who would be his faculty advisor: Dr. Kurt Neubig. Keegan got involved in the Students United in Preserving, Exploring and Researching Biodiversity (SUPERB) Scholarship Program, which provides students the opportunity to do research using natural history collections. He is currently studying interactions between parasitic plants and their plant hosts. More specifically, Keegan is studying the host range of the parasitic plant Agalinis tenuifolia by identifying hosts from DNA sequences.
 
Keegan had the opportunity to study abroad last summer in Costa Rica by taking a course in Tropical Botany. In addition to his research experience, this caused a career shift for him towards restoration ecology. He believes that earth's ecosystems provide invaluable services and resources to humans, and they need to be protected and restored. Keegan plans on pursuing a master's degree so that he may be better prepared for the field he wants to go into. He has applied to Florida Institute of Technology for this coming fall semester and is taking another study abroad course in Paleoecology this July, where he will be traveling to Ecuador for two weeks. Eventually, he would like to do conservation/restoration work in the Andes Mountains of South America.
 
Keegan has been an active member of the Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity (Beta Psi chapter) for two and a half years, and currently serves as treasurer. This semester, he is doing an internship at Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge where he will be documenting the wildflowers that are found within the park. Great work, Keegan! You make the University Honors Program and SIU very proud! Keep up the great work!


Emma Johns

Emma Johns is a senior studying Physiology with minors in Chemistry and American Sign Language. Some of her more notable experiences involve giving campus tours with Saluki Ambassadors and helping start the campus RSO, Timmy Global Health of SIU. This afforded Emma her first international experience and helped develop her interest in working with medically under-served areas and medical relief efforts.

She served as former president of the SIU United Nations Association, where she was awarded the Build a Better World Grant and Stand Up for Human Rights Grant on the club’s behalf. In 2018, she was honored as a UNA-USA Emerging Leader and later as a UNA-USA Global Health Fellow.

Emma studied abroad in Ecuador studying health climates of indigenous jungle communities, in England studying J.R. Tolkien’s literature and the clinical variants of Alzheimer’s Disease, and in southern Spain to further learn Spanish. She is also a University Innovation Fellow and created the SIU Global Ambassadors program.

Emma previously served as SIU's representative to the Illinois Board of Higher Education to improve the quality and experience of public and private higher-ed institutions across Illinois. She was appointed by the Illinois State Senate to serve as the sole student commissioner on the Illinois Student Assistance Commission. Emma works with eight other commissioners and the ISAC team to allocate over $425 million worth of aid every fiscal year.

After graduation, she will be starting medical school in the fall. She would like to thank the Honors Program for their continued support and guidance and urges younger students to pursue opportunities that give them fulfillment. She said, "Make the most of your time at SIU! You won’t regret it!"


Makayla Smothers

This is Makayla Smothers, a transfer junior at Southern Illinois University. She is majoring in Exercise Science and was accepted on the Deans list for Fall 2019. Attending SIU has allowed her new opportunities in life including RSOs, The University Honors Program, and being a part of the Americorps program. The RSOs Makayla is currently in are: The Organization of Sports and Exercise Science (OSES) and the Pre-Health Professions Association (PPA). Both organizations have allowed her to branch out and meet new people who are hardworking and self-driven. Attending SIU has also given her many hours of volunteer work, as well. Her favorite volunteer work and job that she has been doing throughout the 2019-2020 school year is being an Americorps leader.

Her Americorps leader position allows her to volunteer at a local grade school and work with kids of all ages. She helps in the reading room and focuses on helping kids (ranging from kindergarten to 5th grade) to learn and adapt to new techniques with reading, writing, and spelling. Americorps has definitely helped shape Makayla for her future career. Her goal after SIU is to get accepted into a graduate physical therapy program and eventually start a career as a physical therapist. Makayla truly believes what helps motivate her each and every day is knowing how much knowledge she is gaining at SIU and that she will be using it in her future occupations! Great work and we are so lucky to have you here, Makayla!


Gage Mofield

Gage Mofield is a Senior here at SIU majoring in Zoology with a specialization in Wildlife Biology and Conservation and double minoring in Environmental Studies and Sustainability.; Gage has been involved with avariety of activities since he began his journey here, including being the Public Relations officer for the Spoken Word RSO, volunteering as a Saluki Ambassador, working as a student caller for the SIU Foundation, working as a lab technician in the Meksem lab through the Plant & Soil Science department, and being a field technician in Dr. Marjorie Brooks Aquatic Ecology & Biogeochemistry lab, working under the Sustainable Eco-Recreation project on Campus Lake.

He completed an internship at Giant City State Park, as well as a Sustainability Fellowship through the Sustainability Hub here at SIU. He was also awarded an Environmental Ambassador award in the Spring of 2019, was inducted into Gamma Theta Upsilon, SIUs Geography and Environmental Studies Honor Society chapter, and was the recipient of the Michael W. Wolff Scholarship for the College of Science this Fall of 2019 for his interest and involvement relating to Environmental Studies and Wildlife Habitat Conservation.

Currently, Gage works as an Adoption Counselor for Wright-Way Rescue in Murphysboro, Illinois, and will hope to continue to work with all kinds of animals and wildlife as he continues on into the future.; He currently plans on serving in Americorps before going to obtain his Masters, and would like to work in the Nonprofit Sector after achieving these goals. He would like to thank UHP for all of their services they have provided him during his duration at SIU, as he becomes the only person other than his Mom (an SIU alum!) on either side of his families to obtain their Bachelors degree. Congrats Gage, and best of luck!


Yasmin Ibrahim

Yasmin Ibrahim is a senior majoring in Biological Sciences with a specialization in Biomedical Studies and minors in Chemistry and Microbiology. She has been involved in a few different organizations on campus, notably Saluki Ambassadors, Chancellor's Scholar Program, Ronald E. McNair's program, and doing research in the College of Science under multiple faculty members.

Yasmin has done research at SIUC since she was a junior at Carbondale Community High School. Since then, she has worked with Dr. Sukesh Bhaumik in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Dr. James A. MacLean III with the School of Medicine, and currently with Dr. Derek J. Fisher in the Microbiology Program.

In Spring 2019, Yasmin had the opportunity to study abroad in Ghana. She was gone for about 5 months and had an absolutely amazing time! She was able to go through a direct program so she interacted directly with Ghanaian students and faculty members at the university. Yasmin ate great food and made great friends that she continues to stay in touch with. Yasmin was able to travel all over Ghana as well as travel to two other African countries (Togo and South Africa)! If she could, she would stay an extra semester just to do it all over again.

Yasmin plans on graduating in May 2020 and continuing her education. She is in the process of applying and interviewing for PhD programs in Molecular and Developmental Biology with a focus in Reproductive Sciences. From there she would like to work at a university like SIU where she is able to teach and conduct her own research.


University Honors Program student sophomore, Brooke DiGiacomo, wants to share her experience volunteering with the Touch of nature Center for the Saluki Service Day and the Saluki Food Pantry!
The University Honors Program recognizes the hundreds of other students who are actively involved in the community here at SIU and in Carbondale. If you would like to see your service opportunities be featured, for more information and ways to get involved yourself, or to see what other great things UHP students are doing in the community, visit the University Honors Program office in Morris Library!


Josie Arnett

Josie Arnettis a senior going for a dual degree with majors in Advertising and Spanish, and minors in Marketing and American Sign Language. She is the President of Saluki Ambassadors, which is the group that is in charge of giving campus tours to prospective students; she also works in the Undergraduate Admissions office and help students schedule their visits. As a Resident Assistant on campus at Wall and Grand, Josie gets to work with friends and get to create events and pun-filled bulletin boards for her floor.

Throughout her time at SIU, she has really enjoyed the opportunities she had to study abroad. Josie was able to go on the Costa Rica trip through the honors program, as well as spend a summer in Spain where she was able to immerse herself in the language and culture.

Josie truly enjoys being a part of the University Honors Program. It has provided her with so many great opportunities and she has been able to meet some amazing people through it. Great job, Josie! The Honors Program is very proud of you!


Bella Weymer

This is Bella Weymer, a senior with double majors in Math and Physiology and minors in chemistry and Italian. She is pre-med, and currently going through the interview process for med school! Bella has been involved in a plethora of activities. Some of them include including working as a tutor, volunteering as a Saluki Ambassador, participating in the Chancellor's Scholar Program, and doing research in the Department of Physiology in SIU's School of Medicine, to name a few.

She has been conducting research in an endocrine lab under Dr. Buffy Ellsworth for four years and has presented her poster titled "Expression of the Sodium Channel Subunit, Scn4a, is Reduced in the Absence of FOXO1" at the Illinois Symposium for Reproductive Sciences in October, 2018. She also presented"PROX1 Plays a Role in the Development of the Anterior Pituitary Gland" at the Undergraduate Research Forum in Spring2018. Their research focuses on how the pituitary gland develops in terms of forkhead transcription factors in an effect to better understand pituitary disorders and how they come about in humans.

Last semester (Spring 2019), Bella had the opportunity to study abroad in Rome, Italy. One of the most rewarding parts of her time abroad included an internship working at a pediatric hospital where she served as a translator between patients and physicians/nurses. Many of them had traveled to Italy to receive medical care from places like Spain, and many of them had little interaction with anyone besides their family as nobody else spoke their language. Bella reminisces, "It was so rewarding seeing their faces light up with joy when Iwas able to communicate with them at least a little!".
Good luck, Bella!


Allison McMinn

Congratulations Allison McMinn, from the College of Engineering, for being SIUs 45thAnnual Lincoln Laureate awardee. Each fall, an outstanding senior from each of the four-year degree-granting institutions of higher learning in Illinois is awarded the Student Lincoln Academy Medallion and thereby becomes a Student Laureate of the Lincoln Academy of Illinois. Allison has impressive academic achievements, strong leadership skills (on and off campus), partakes in meaningful community involvement, and has a commitment to creating a supportive environment for women engineers and motivating young girls to pursue careers in the STEM fields. She will be honored on November 16thin the Hall of Representatives at the Old State Capitol in Springfield at the 45th Award Ceremony. Congratulations, Allison! We are so proud of you!

We also wanted to take the time to mention Paige Metz, who is an Honors student and was a nominee for the College of Science. We were impressed by her outstanding academic record and her nature as an introvert who leads by reason and knowledge as well as her publication and presentation record.Congratulations to you, Paige!


Anne Preston

This is Anne Preston, a Transfer Junior majoring in Marketing and minoring in Recreation. For the past 6 summers she worked as a summer camp counselor at a few different locations across the U.S. including YMCA Camp Erdman in Oahu, Hawaii, YMCA Camp Chief Ouray in Colorado, and YMCA Camp Greenville in South Carolina. While in community college, she studied abroad for fifteen days in Italy with culinary students. Richland Community College lacked any sports clubs, so after twenty-nine years, she made sure to start up intramural sports and even coached the volleyball team.She also previously interned for Richland Community College as their marketing department intern.

Anne is involved with two different RSOs at SIU including the Women's Business Association and Student Recreation Society. She is also part of AORE (Association of Outdoor Recreation Education) and the 2019 Campus Challenge. Most recently, she has volunteered for the Sustainability Office and for the campus Comic-Con. Ideally, She would like to do any volunteering that benefits the school, community, or environment.Currently, Anne is working at Touch of Nature as a Marketing Assistants well as an Underway Adventures Trip Assistant.

In the future, Anne would like to market for an outdoor recreation company like, Patagonia, REI, Columbia or the YMCA. She plans to move outside of Illinois and start her life elsewhere.

Great work and thank you for your adventure and inspiration, Anne!


Blake Clark

Blake Ann Clark is a freshman here at SIUC majoring in Dental Hygiene. One of the main things that has motivated her in the past is her desire to make a difference and help others. In addition, some people that have motivated her throughout her life are her family, friends, and faith. These things and people continue to motivate her every day. She is currently a member of the Student Leadership Honors Society, as well as the first inaugural women's soccer team at SIUC. Blake is honored and humbled to have been given the opportunity to make history with this amazing first year program. A few places she enjoys volunteering at are the Marion Lighthouse Homeless Shelter, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital, Herrin House of Hope, and tutoring at local elementary schools. This year, Blakealso got to be a part of the amazing NubAbility camp in Duquoin, Illinois. NubAbility Athletics Foundations mission is to encourage, inspire, and teach limb different youth various different sports. The entire SIUC women's soccer team attended this event and were able to teach many different children how to play the sport her team loves, soccer. She said, "It was so awesome to be able to be a part of such an astonishing organization."A few of her short-term goals are to keep up her grades, succeed on the soccer field, and in the spring, apply for an on-campus job. Blake'slong-term goals are to graduate college with a meaningful degree, search for a job locally and be hired somewhere where she can truly make a difference! Keep up the great work Blake and good luck!


Kira Holtsclaw

Kira is a junior pursuing a dual degree in Mechanical Engineering and Biomedical Sciences. She works on campus as a tutor to student-athletes in the Troutt-Wittmann Academic Center. Kirais the President of Tau Beta Pi, which is the universally recognized engineering honor society. She is also the treasurer of the Society of Physics Students. She enjoys her time with all her RSOs; however, her heart lies with the first RSO she joined as a freshman, the Society of Women Engineers (SWE) of which she is the Vice President. SWE has surrounded Kirawith a supportive group of like-minded women and men who volunteer, go to social events, and attend professional conferences together. She is looking forward to a great time at the SWE National this year in Anaheim, California. Kira is very thankful that SIU has such a wide variety of groups where she could find friends for not just these four years, but for life. Kiraplans to pursue a graduate degree for Biomedical Engineering and then go into a career which helps improve peoples lives who need affordable biomedical equipment like prosthetics or joint replacements, pacemakers, hearing aids, etc. She wants to be a part of the process that genuinely helps those in medical need. Kira would like to thank her friends and family for always being so encouraging throughout her academic career.Way to go Kira! You make SIU and the UHP proud!


Haley Hostetter

Haley Hostetter is a civil engineering major with minors in mathematics and history. She has had several internships in the past, but most recently worked under the National Science Foundations Natural Hazards Engineering Research Infrastructure REU program at the University of California, Berkeley. This is a highly competitive undergraduate research program that focuses on natural hazards engineering and includes a network of 10 universities. Within this program, Haley was afforded the opportunity to research earthquake simulation models and even publish a paper! In addition, she was able to present her research at UC Boulders Natural Hazards Workshop and UT Austins Research Symposium. This experience in the San Francisco Bay Area has prompted Haley to pursue a graduate degree in structural engineering with an emphasis on seismic design, and she will be applying to graduate programs this fall.

On campus, Haley is an active member of the American Society of Civil Engineers where she has served as the fundraising chair and vice president, and currently is the secretary. Haley is also a member of Tau Beta Pi, the Engineering Honors Society. Outside of the engineering field, Haley actively volunteers with SIT Service Dogs, a local service dog training and breeding program that has placed dogs across the United States. Haley has documented over 300 volunteer hours with the program, and has learned an immense amount about people with disabilities community and herself. Haley is extremely grateful for all of the opportunities presented to her at SIU, including the diverse academics and RSOs she am a part of. The UHP is proud of you, Haley! Keep up the great work!


Elise Hickey

Elyse Hickey is a senior at SIUC, pursuing a Zoology - Philosophy double major, with a minor in Art Education. She is also a certified yoga instructor. During the school year, Elyse volunteers as an educator for the Saturday Young Artist Workshop program, which offers art classes on weekends to local youth. She spends her summers working as an Art's and Earth camp counselor at Camp Orkila, on Orcas Island, off the coast of Washington State. Here she leads lessons and activities in various forms of art, archery, yoga, forest ecology, and marine biology. In her free time Elyse likes to explore the outdoors and to artistically manifest the energies she encounters.

 


Sarah Dintelmann

Sarah Dintelmann is currently a senior double majoring in Crop, Soil, and Environmental Management and AgriBusiness Economics. Sarah is involved in numerous organizations including Agronomy Society, Alpha Gamma Delta, and is currently serving on Agricultural Student Council and the Ambassador team.

Sarah is an Undergraduate Researcher in the Department of Plant, Soil, and Agricultural Systems under Weed Scientist, Dr. Karla Gage. They are working on a 50-year study that looks at the interactive effects of tillage and fertility practices on weed communities and the weed seedbank. Most of Sarah's work has been conducted in the greenhouse to evaluate the weed seedbank. She has had the opportunity to present this work at various poster contests as well as extension events to share this work with farmers across Southern Illinois.

Sarah has had 3 internships over the course of her college career. Her first internship was at the SIU Belleville Research Center. Her second internship was with Syngenta Golden Harvest as a Developmental Sales Intern in Southern Illinois and Southern Indiana. This past summer, Sarah relocated to Raleigh, North Carolina, where she was a Sales Development Associate with BASF Agricultural Solutions. She got to learn about new crops such as cotton, peanuts, potatoes, and even clary sage (pictured).

After graduation, Sarah hopes to enter a trainee position with a large chemical/seed company and learn how to manage an effective sales territory, where she can help growers make the best financial and agronomic decisions for their operations. Great work! SIU and the UHP are proud to have you!


Justin Grady

Justin Grady is currently a senior in Mechanical Engineering with a minor in Mathematics. Justin spent his summer working for Boeing in Huntsville, Alabama and New Orleans, Louisiana as a flight system avionics intern. At Boeing, Justin was working on the NASA Space Launch System Rocket which will be used to return humans to the moon by 2024 and eventually take the first humans to Mars. While in New Orleans, Justin was able to assist in the installation and testing of electrical systems on what will be the largest single-stage rocket component in history.

At SIU, Justin has been involved with the Saluki Formula Racing team that designs and builds an F1 style race car from scratch. He looks forward to taking the vehicle to competition this spring. He is also serving this year as the Engineering Student Council President. Justin looks forward to pursuing a career in the aerospace industry. He would like to thank all of the friends and faculty at SIU that have supported him over the past three years. Amazing work, Justin! SIU is proud to have you!


Connor Eigelberger

Connor Eigelberger is a high achieving mechanical engineering major, with a minor in mathematics. In his future, he desires to lead his own engineering firm. In both the classroom and off campus, Connor has been very busy. Currently, he is in Jacksonville, Florida working as the Brewery Engineering Co-Op, for Anheuser Busch where he will remain throughout the fall semester. Previously, he has interned for Architectural and Industrial Project Management firms in St. Louis, Missouri and Aspen, Colorado. The vast variety of skills he was able to develop through these opportunities have guided him in becoming a well-rounded engineer. On campus, Connor is an active member of the Leadership Development Program, a nationally recognized organization that strives to create the next generation of S.T.E.M. leaders. Aside from this, he also routinely volunteers for the Boys and Girls Club in Carbondale and T.A.S.K.S. in his home town of Fenton, Missouri.


Jadin Tanner

Jadin S. Tanner is currently a senior pursuing his degree in Civil Engineering. In addition to engineering, he is also deeply interested in surveying. Thus, he is also currently attending Parkland Colleges Certificate of Land Surveying program - a required experience needed to test for the Professional Land Surveyor and Professional Engineer exams. While at SIUC, he would like to complete research that involves water/waste design or ground motion research. Jadin is employed at John H. Crawford and Associates, a Civil Engineering and Professional Land Surveying firm. He recently received the IPLSA Foundation Scholarship at the IPLSA 2019 Banquet. In addition to this, he has also received the Elliot/Wittenborn Scholarship through the Williamson County Farm Bureau and, most recently, both the Mid-Illinois Concrete and Excavation Scholarship and the HomeBuilders of East Central Illinois Scholarship through the Parkland College Foundation. In doing this, he looks to enter the work force as a valuable employee that can work tandem in both surveying and engineering, reducing the need for outside aid on projects. Good luck with everything, Jadin!