Volunteers are needed for panel moderation, the prize committee, and with conference set up. Please email ohp.con.progress@gmail.com with your preference and availability during the conference dates.
Multidisciplinary Honors Conference
2025 Conference Presentation Schedule
Monday, March 24
1:30 to 2:20 = Land, Place, and Space within the Arts
Cayla Otto, âSustaining the History of the Athens Insane Asylum with Land-conscious Artworkâ
Eliza Russo, âCarved Out: An Exploration of Immersive Design without Actorsâ
Kieran Bakunas, âA Weed Is but an Unloved Flower: Using Art to Make Activism More Accessibleâ
Leanne Abel, âWriting a Novel: Murphy Hallâ
2:30 to 3:20 = Land Histories and Futures in Ohio
Sophia Kuhar, âOut of the Fire, Into the Heat: Heat Resilience in Cleveland, Ohioâ
Rose Mogford, âOur Dearly Departed: Immersive History Tour of the West State Street Cemeteryâ
Elizabeth Savitski, âWindow Pain: A Survey of Avian Window Collisions on 51ÂŇÂ×âs Athens Campusâ
Ella Spremulli, âFrom Home to Hazard: The Impact of Industrial Pollution on Cheshire, Ohioâ
3:30 to 4:20 = Community Expression and Support in Appalachian Ohio
Thomas Faber, âThereâs No Place Like SCO-me: Finding Purpose and Home in the Student Cooperative Organizationâ
Emily Meckler, âBringing Science Olympiad to Appalachiaâ
Levi-Joseph Facun, âThe Impact of the Baileys Trail System on Regional Economic Growthâ
Owen Keller, âMaking SPOTLIGHTâ
4:30 to 5:20 = Knowledge and Identity across Cultural Contexts
EllieAna Shanklin, âThe Implementation of Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) in Climate Change Adaptationâ
Kate Wiselogel, âExploring the Complex Gende and Power Dynamics of the Battle with Grendelâs Mother in Beowulfâ
Quentin Cole, âNorthern Thai Culture and Identity: What is âLannaâ in 2025?â
Bill Putney, âPiracy or the Natural Waves of Cultural Fusion?: A Historical Inspection of White Rock Artists Covering Black Artâ
5:30 to 6:20 = Examining Existence on Different Scales across STEM Fields
Jacqueline Kuroda, âCommissioning of New High-Purity Germanium Detector for the Edwards Accelerator Laboratoryâ
Andrew Pagan, âInvestigating the Evolution of Back-Pattern Polymorphisms in a Lizard Species on Small Islands in the Bahamasâ
Cierra Willis, âSearching for Coydogs: Exploring the Environmental Correlates of Coyote-Dog Introgression in Ohio and Indianaâ
Octavia Hogue, âTemperature Regulation of Virulence in Staphylococcus aureusâ
6:30 to 7:35 = Community and Family Care across Disciplines
Paige Harris, âHeart of Athens Outreachâ
Lydia Smith, âAn Exploration of Pregnancy in Filmâ
Hiley Kresse, âInvestigating the Role of Memorable Messages and Narratives of Motherhood within Generation Zâ
Cami Henry-Seymour, âWorking with Planned Parenthood Advocates of Ohioâ
Angelina Fierro, âHow House Bills 8 and 68 Will Affect Social Workers in the Fieldâ
Tuesday, March 25
1:30 to 2:20 = The Evolution of Honors Education and Experiences at 51ÂŇÂ×
group presentation from Sarah Braun, Lola Morana, Eliza Russo, Kate Wiselogel, and Carissa Woods
2:30 to 3:20 = Community Care in Appalachian Ohio and Beyond
Lily Chongswatdi, âAppalachian String Initiativeâ
Arthur Bargainer, âMiddle School Mayhem: Reflections on the Athens Youth Communityâ
Ava Wood, âSustainable Sisterhood: A Study on Sorority Waste Management at 51ÂŇÂ×â
Cara Finnegan, âMom360: Parenting in the Digital Ageâ
3:30 to 4:20 = Data, Narratives, and Our Ways of Knowing
Natalie Esquivel, âNeoliberalism in Detroit and Flint, Michigan: What the Study of Urban Political Development Reveals about Economics, Inequalities, and Awarenessâ
Thien Pham, ââHow Will I Convey the Story?â: The Role of Storytelling in Publicly Engaged Scholarshipâ
Yashvita Kanuganti, âExploring Mind/Body Dualism in Religious Theoryâ
Emma Ingraham, âFourier and Wavelet Analysis of Bird Vocalizationsâ
4:30 to 5:20 = Health Research across Disciplines
Claire Smith, âAssessing the Therapeutic Potential of a Probiotic Bacteria, Lactococcus lactis, for the Prevention of COVID-19â
Luke Davenport, âInvestigation of Chiral Zirconium Nitride Thin Films and Their Applications in Biosensingâ
Paul Gbadebo, âBinding Isotherm Analysis of TAMRA-Labeled RNA and BHQ2C/U Quencherâ
Nora Anderson, âInvestigating the Role of Supercoiling on Gene Expression in Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureusâ
5:30 to 6:20 = Neuroscience for Social Good across Disciplines
Cameron Reedy, âDiving into American Sign Language Comprehension: A New Perspectiveâ
Lauren Mansfield, âAnalysis of Baseline Concussion Data in University Marching Band Studentsâ
LJ Arnold, âBrain AVM without Bodyguardsâ
Leah Fraker, âR is for Rohypnol: The Physiological and Social Effects of âRoofiesââ
6:30 to 7:35 = Impacts of Representation and Misrepresentation across Cultures
Eleanor Cruz, âGabriel GarcĂa MĂĄrquezâs âA Very Old Man with Enormous Wingsâ and Contexts of Immigrationâ
Emily Hall, âBehind the Iron Curtain: East German Intelligence and the Soviet Influenceâ
Hali Bridges, âRediscovering Black Histories in Spain: Cultural Contributions and Overlooked Legaciesâ
Julianna Rittenberg, âDonât Let the Hate Distract You: Anti-LGBTQ+ Attacks as a Tool of Campaign Disinformationâ
Lily Waskiewicz, âMyanmar: Disinformation, Hate Speech, and the Rohingya Muslim Genocideâ
Honors at 51ÂŇÂ× is hosting our second annual conference for honors studentsâ work in progress. Submissions for presentation proposals are now open! The deadline to submit proposals is Tuesday, February 25, 2025.
Prizes will be awarded at the conference for creative questions and innovative ideas.
About the Conference
So much great work is created through a process. That process might involve questioning, discovering, retooling, and navigating challenges. This conference celebrates the journey of creative, research, and community engagement.
We welcome presentations on research projects, community engagement, and creative activities that are either complete or works in progress, meaning that we welcome presentations on work at various stages, from those just starting out and looking for feedback to those with conclusions and results they want to share. These projects may be, for example, a research study on water quality, an exploration of how you are preparing for a musical performance, or reflections on your leadership of a student group.
We welcome presentations lasting 7-10 minutes using PowerPoint or similar formats.
The Big Picture
Our theme this year is, "The Big Picture." Each presentation will need to address in some way the broader cultural, environmental, political, scientific, and/or social contexts that make your project meaningful and timely to a general audience of your peers.
Your presentation should also share the methods you're using or thinking about using to explore these issues, and any challenges you have encountered or anticipate encountering along the way.
A Celebration of Multidisciplinary Connections
This conference also celebrates multidisciplinary connections. We welcome undergraduate students of all years, fields, and majors. We especially encourage first-year honors students to attend and/or present works in progress at this conference as a way to connect with other students, faculty, and staff who share your interests.
Presentations will be grouped into panels on related topics across disciplines. Presenters will also have the opportunity to hone their presentation skills in advance of the conference through preparatory workshops.
Submit a Proposal To Present
To apply, submit your complete proposal to ohp.con.progress@gmail.com by February 25, 2025 at 11:59 p.m. EST. The subject line of your email should be: CFP Submission (your last name/surname).
Please attach a Word document with your maximum 250-500-word proposal, including:
- Your name, major(s), minor(s), and year (e.g., first year, sophomore, junior, senior)
- Project title and any project mentors
- Main question(s) the project endeavors to answer
- An explanation of âthe big pictureâ surrounding your project, or the social, scientific, environmental, cultural, and/or political contexts that make your projectâs goals and questions meaningful to a general audience of your undergraduate peers
- Tools, methods, and resources you are using or plan to use to approach answers
- Challenges anticipated or already faced
- If applicable, conclusions and results, even if partial
Past Awardees
Learn more about past awardees and their projects by clicking on the year.
2024 Awardees
- Best Presentation by a Student with Senior Class Standing: Quinn Bennett, âCO2 Mineralization Reactor Design and Testingâ
- Best Presentation by a Student with Junior Class Standing: Gabriel Morgan, âDecoding Infectious Disease in Appalachian Ohioâ
- Best Presentation by a Student with Sophomore Class Standing: Anna Miller, âUnderstanding the role of Sirt5 in obesity-associated osteoarthritis development in the hip jointâ
- Best Presentation by a Student with Freshman Class Standing: Matthew Doron, "Reimaging Renaissance: Three Elizabethan Comedies, One Forestâ
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Register to Volunteer
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Questions?
If you have questions, please email Chris Lewis at christopherlewis@ohio.edu and/or Amy Strieter at as074121@ohio.edu.