Mawrters Making Their Mark
MAYA AJMERA ā89
Inducted into American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Maya Ajmera, president and CEO of the Society for Science and executive publisher
of Science News, was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in fall 2023āone of 270 new members chosen from 1,200 nominations. The academy was founded in 1780 to recognize accomplished individuals and engage them in addressing the greatest challenges facing the nation.
Founded as Science Service in 1921, the Society for Science has been dedicated to expanding scientific literacy, access to STEM education, and scientific research for more than 100 years. Before joining Society for Science in 2014, Ajmera founded and led the Global Fund for Children, which invests in community-based organizations worldwide to advance childrenās rights. She is also an award-winning author of over 20 childrenās books.
āI look forward to working with the academy members to address some of the most pressing issues facing our world,ā Ajmera says.
JACQUELINE MACDONALD GIBSON ā86
Heads Engineering Department at NC State
Jacqueline MacDonald Gibson is head of the Department of Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering at NC State University in Raleigh, a position sheās held since August 2022. Previously, she chaired the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health at Indiana University, Bloomington, and taught environmental engineering at UNC Chapel Hill. Before launching her academic career, she was a senior engineer at The RAND Corp., a nonprofit public policy research organization.
Gibsonās work bridges environmental science, human health, infrastructure, and public policy. āMy research seeks to illuminate what individuals, communities, and policymakers can do to make the biggest and most lasting improvements in public health by improving the quality of our environment,ā she says.
FRANCESCA MARIANI ā91
Honored by USC for Outstanding Teaching
Francesca Mariani, an associate professor in the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, received the 2023 Associates Award for Excellence in Teaching. This is USCās highest honor for outstanding teaching.
Serving as the director of USCās first-of-its-kind masterās program in stem cell biology and regenerative medicine, Mariani also co-directs the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) COMPASS program for aspiring undergraduates and oversees a parallel initiative, CIRM EDUC4, catering to post-graduates. These programs help students prepare for careers in stem cell science through mentoring and hands-on research. Marianiās own work focuses on the role of stem cells in large-scale cartilage and bone regeneration.
Reflecting on her commitment to student interaction, Mariani says, āInteracting with students is not just about sharing knowledge; it can be a transformative conversation that empowers students to carve meaningful paths in the intricate journey of life.ā
T. PEACHES VALDES ā99, M.S.S. ā03, M.L.S.P. ā03
Leads Admission and Financial Aid at Wellesley
T. Peaches Valdes is dean of admission and financial aid at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. After earning her degrees, she worked in the ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ admissions office until 2017ārising to the position of dean of undergraduate admissionsābefore moving on to Hamilton College. She joined Wellesley at the start of the 2022-23 academic year.
āWhen I thought about where my next step would be, I thought about what felt like home,ā Valdes says. āAnd to me, returning to one of the Seven Sisters felt like home.ā
ISABEL PLAKAS ā19
Selected by the U.S.-Ireland Alliance as Mitchell Scholar
Isabel Plakas ā19, who is pursuing a masterās degree in nursing at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, recently became the first Mawrter to receive a George J. Mitchell Scholarship. Plakas was one of only 12 individuals selected to be a 2025 scholar out of nearly 350 applicants.
Named to honor former U.S. Senator George Mitchellās contribution to the Northern Ireland peace process, the scholarship program is designed to introduce and connect generations of future American leaders to the island of Ireland, while recognizing and fostering intellectual achievement, leadership, and a commitment to community and public service.
Plakas will begin studying addiction recovery at Trinity College Dublin this fall.
āI started doing harm reduction work in 2018, when I studied abroad in Spain through ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļās collaboration with Hamilton College,ā she says. āWhen I returned in the fall, I took
a course by Dr. Anne Montgomery at Haverford that looked at the overdose crisis in the United States, specifically Philadelphia. I learned about harm reduction, which challenged preconceived notions I had about drug use and the war on drugs.ā
After graduation, Plakas moved to Boston to do research but found herself unfulfilled.
āI recalled meeting a ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ alum named Sarah Mackin (ā07) during my senior year at ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ who did harm reduction work in Boston. I reached out and began volunteering at the syringe exchange she ran. I will always be grateful that she accepted me into the community and mentored me.ā
Plakas soon got a job next door as a harm reduction specialist at Boston Health Care for the Homeless. āDuring my first week, a nurse told me, āYouāre either going to love it or hate it, and youāll know right away,āā Plakas says. āI loved it.ā
After three years, Plakas left to go to nursing school at Hopkins, but ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ has continued to find her. āI work at Sex Workers Promoting Action, Risk Reduction, and Community Mobilization (SPARC), a drop-in center for female and nonbinary sex workers in southwest Baltimore,ā Plakas says. āThe team here is incredible, and during an outreach shift last year, I was excited to learn that my coworker Dr. Sangeeta Iyer is also a ±¬ĮĻ¹Ļ graduate (Class of 2002).ā
At Hopkins, Plakas has received the Nursing Scholar Award from the National Association of Hispanic Nurses, and she serves as co-president of Nursing Students for Harm Reduction.
Published on: 03/10/2024