Education and Outreach Coordination
- UD CHARM and Princeton’s PCCM coordinated with the Chicago MRSEC to host three virtual events (Soft Matter for All, Rising Stars, and a Professional Development Workshop) to highlight early career, high-impact research and ignite discussion for graduate students and postdocs pursuing academic and non-academic career paths
- A common application was used for Soft Matter for All (PCCM/CHARM) and Rising Stars (Chicago); each organizing team prioritized a list of speakers and negotiated final selections; both events were run independently
- The professional development workshop was led by CHARM and PCCM in coordination with Chicago
- Soft Matter for All and the Professional Development Workshop were facilitated by postdocs and grad students from PCCM, CHARM, and UD EmPOWER (a graduate peer-mentoring group)
Soft Matter for All
- This event was designed to celebrate diversity in soft materials research through the promotion of exceptional science
- Prof. Julia Kornfield (Caltech) delivered a powerful keynote on the mentorship that impacted the research highlights across her career, followed by scientific talks from 7 postdocs and 8 graduate students; these speakers represented 14 academic institutions across North America
- Early career research talks spanned rheology and colloidal, biological, and polymeric soft matter
Professional Development Workshop
- The event was kicked off by two keynotes: Prof. Tim Long (ASU) reflected on his professional pathway linking academia and industry, and Prof. Jen Heemstra (Emory) reminded our attendees that self-care is essential for strong performance
- Two panels covered non-academic (policy, industry, government, and entrepreneurship) and academic paths, and provided attendees with the opportunity to ask questions and share knowledge
Center for Hybrid, Active, and Responsive Materials
UD CHARM advances foundational understanding of new materials driven by theoretical and computational predictions paired with cutting-edge experiments to enable the integration of unconventional, ultra-small, building blocks.