UNH students honored by NSF

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Five UNH students have been honored by the National Science Foundation (NSF) — two with graduate research fellowships and three with honorable mentions.

The NSF (GRFP) recognizes outstanding students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines and supports their pursuit of research-based graduate degrees.

Mariah Arral ’18 and graduate student Richard “RJ” Knecht were each awarded GRFP fellowships. , a master’s student in the , AveryNormandin ’15, who is studying microbial biology at MIT, and TessaArtruc ’18, who received her degree in in May, received honorable mentions.

“The GRFP is one ofthe most prestigious awards for graduate-level study in the STEM and social science fields,” says Jeanne Sokolowski, director of UNH’s Office of National Fellowships. The fellowships include approximately $34,000 per year for up to three years and tuition payment to approved universities, and UNH applicants are supported by the Office of National Fellowships, Office of Research Development and UNH Graduate School.

UNH's Mariah Arral '18
Mariah Arral '18

Mariah Lynn Arral ’18, who received her bachelor’s in in May and will begin her graduate program at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in the fall, is no stranger to research.

“I started doingresearchmyfreshmanyear with in what is now the SEEDS Lab — Surface Enhanced Electrochemical Diagnostic Sensors Laboratory,” she says, explaining she worked on the electrochemical detection ofNG-Hydroxy-L-arginineor NOHA, which has been found to cause cell death incertain breast cancer cells. “During mytenure in the SEEDS Lab, I have helped order and set up equipment for the lab, trained undergraduate and graduate students and led my ownresearch project. The mentorship that Iexperienced with Dr. Halpern has been one of the mostfundamentaland influentialexperiences of myacademiccareer.”

The NSF GRFP is helping Arral continue on her chosen path of becoming a university professor.

“Getting this fellowship has allowed me to choosemy own faculty advisor and get a kickstart on my academic career under a mentor who supports me,” Arral says, explaining that her graduate school mentor at CMU recognized "my dedication tobecoming a professor andlaid out a general five-year plan that aligned with what I wanted my graduatecareer to be like."

At UNH, Arral was a member of the executive board of the and worked as a tutor at .

UNH graduate student RJ Knecht
Richard "RJ" Knecht

Richard “RJ” Knecht is a .

“My research focuses on the ‘paradox of the plankton,’ thequestion ofhow plankton species competing forthe same resources and occupying the sameniche can coexist for extended periods of time,” Knecht explains. “More specifically, my study examines the dynamics of thekeystone zooplankton genus,Daphnia, within Aziscohos Lake in Oxford County, Maine, a lake which has beennoted for its unusual abundance ofcladocerans, the order containingDaphnia.”

Knecht is looking forward to the opportunities the NSF GRFP opens up for him.

“Winning the fellowship provides me some autonomy in choosing a dissertation topic and creates a financial safety net that allows me to stay focused on my research.The fellowship also gives me unique opportunities and the possibility of additional resources only available to fellows,” he says, adding,“I am honored to have won this award and intend to make the most of it!”

Interested in the NSF GRFP? UNH's Office of National Fellowships has the details on this and other opportunities.

Photographer: 
Alex Nguyen '19 | Communications and Public Affairs | an1023@wildcats.unh.edu | 6039668049