UConn Year of Graduation (Undergraduate): 2012
Undergraduate Major(s): Psychology
Currently Employed By: University of Bridgeport, PA student
Updates: My little girl is turning 3 this year! Unbelievable how fast children grow! I just finished my first term of PA school at the University of Bridgeport, it was tough but I worked hard and it paid off. Just trying to balance grad school and motherhood and loving it.
Month: May 2015
Take Two for Your Thesis Video Competition Winners
Congratulations to the winners of the 2015 Take Two for Your Thesis Video Competition! These videos are fantastic examples of the scholarly and creative work that UConn Honors students complete all across campus.
FIRST PRIZE: Elizabeth Rider (English), “Institutionalized Female Madness in American Literature from 1950-1999”
Thesis supervisor: Regina Barreca
What’s one piece of advice you have for future Honors seniors?
Make sure you set hard deadlines for yourself to complete your thesis throughout the semester; this will allow you time to really pay homage to the writing process and revise, revise, revise.
SECOND PRIZE: Roshni Patel (MCB), “Calcium-Sensing Receptor (CaSR) +986 G>T Associates with Habitual Physical Activity Levels and Muscle Size and Strength Response to Resistance Training Among Healthy Adults”
Thesis supervisor: Linda Pescatello
What’s one piece of advice you have for future Honors seniors?
Don’t rush to commit to something you may not like, take the time to investigate different fields and try new experiences to discover what you are truly passionate about!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PRnSXNk9_g&feature=youtu.be
THIRD PRIZE: Julianne Norton (Individualized: International Relations), “The Red Heifer: A Graphic Novel on Holocaust Postmemory”
Thesis supervisor: Francoise Dussart
Video credit: Cristobal Ortega
What’s one piece of advice you have for future Honors seniors?
Explore all the opportunities at UConn! If you haven’t yet applied for funding for your project, then you should definitely go learn more about the Office of Undergraduate Research.
2014-15 Faculty Member of the Year Award: Mark Boyer
Mark A. Boyer is a Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor, Director of UConn’s Environmental Studies program, and a Scholar-in-Residence for the Center for Environmental Science and Engineering. This is his twenty-seventh year at UConn. His research areas include global politics, climate change as it links the global to the local, and innovative pedagogy.
Starting July 1, he becomes Executive Director of the International Studies Association, with ISA’s headquarters relocating to UConn from the University of Arizona. He is past editor of International Studies Review (2008-2012) and International Studies Perspectives (2000-2004). He was also a 1992-1993 Pew Faculty Fellow in International Affairs and a 1986-88 SSRC-MacArthur Fellow in International Peace and Security.
As an educator, Mark works closely with students at all levels, including undergraduates and graduate scholars. He appreciates the unique experience of working with Honors students, specifically during their early years. “It’s simply more fun, and more intellectually challenging, to help provide the foundation for future scholarship, intensive learning, and even career development than it is to refine what is already a decided path into the future.”
Mark holds a B.A. in political science from Wittenberg University and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Maryland. He is well published in his field.
2015 Distinguished Alumni Award: Robert LaBarre
Robert LaBarre has enjoyed a thirty-seven-year career as an industrial mathematician at United Technologies Research Center. He is currently Principal Mathematician and Group Leader, System Dynamics and Optimization, responsible for fifteen Ph.D. research scientists. In 2010, he was elected to the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering.
Dr. LaBarre received his Bachelor of Science (University Scholar) and Master of Science degrees in mathematics from the University of Connecticut in 1976 and 1978, respectively. In 1987, he began working part-time on a Ph.D., which he completed in 1992, also in mathematics from the University of Connecticut.
As an industrial mathematician, he has made numerous original contributions supporting the businesses of United Technologies Corporation, many used in our everyday lives. His cryptographic methods can be found in automotive key fobs and keyless door locks. He co-developed a stochastic optimization methodology resulting in a widely used, computationally efficient gradient-free scheme. His work in algebraic graph theory—recognized with a UTC Senior Vice President Award—provides an understanding of uncertainty propagation through complex systems. Additionally, Dr. LaBarre’s work in stochastic analysis led to the generation of bounds on elevator dispatching times—recognized by a UTRC Outstanding Achievement Award. His work in unstructured grid generation provided a time-efficient, density-varying methodology that was shown to accommodate second-order accurate numerical solutions to divergence form partial differential equations. He has authored or co-authored more than forty technical papers and has been awarded six patents by the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
Dr. LaBarre also makes a difference for people. He has mentored two generations of industrial mathematicians at UTRC; taught graduate and undergraduate courses as an adjunct faculty member during a twenty-year span at RPI-Hartford, UConn, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute; participated on three Ph.D. advisory committees (two currently completed); and been an active member of the Mathematical Sciences Advisory Board at WPI. He has participated in summer NSF-sponsored programs helping high school mathematics teachers understand mathematics outside of the educational framework. He has worked in the community by mentoring Honors Algebra students at East Hartford High School, and he has interacted with some of the best and brightest high school students around the world via the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair as a judge for the UTC student awards program.
Bob and his wife Mary (UConn ’79, B.S. in Animal Science), live in Ashford and have been married for thirty-five years. They have three adult children: Kyle (UConn ’06, B.S. in Finance); Kelly (UVM ’08, B.S. in Medical Laboratory Science); and Brenna (Cornell ’12, B.S. in Computational Biology), who is currently working on a Ph.D. in BioInformatics at the National Institutes of Health (in conjunction with Boston University). His experience playing soccer in high school and at UConn have instilled a long association with the game at all levels, which continues feverishly to this day.
2015 Distinguished Alumni Award: Patricia Friar
Patricia Friar retired from General Electric (GE) with more than twenty-six years of finance, human resources, and executive development experience. She was the Senior Vice President of Human Resources for GE’s Consumer Finance – Americas business with responsibility for more than 15,000 employees in the U.S., Canada, India, Mexico, South/Central America, and Puerto Rico. In this role she became Quality and Process Management certified and shrewdly deployed her financial and process skills to deliver more than $100 million in productivity to the business. In addition, she led the HR due diligence processes and integration for more than twenty business acquisitions, which contributed to business income growing from $75 million to $1 billion net income.
Prior to this role, Pat served as the first global Diversity Leader for GE Financial Services, where she partnered with the CEO’s leadership team in creating environments, practices, and educational experiences to accelerate business and personal growth in increasingly global markets. Pat’s efforts were featured in the December 2002 cover story of Working Woman magazine.
Prior to the Diversity leadership role, Pat was the Human Resources Leader for GE Capital’s Global Finance, Treasury, and IT functions, reporting directly to the SVP of Human Resources and the Chief Financial Officer simultaneously. She led all generalist, recruiting, and succession planning functions, as well as leading both the Connecticut Area Financial Management Program and the Information Technology Training Programs.
Before joining GE Financial Services, Pat worked at GE Neutron Devices in St. Petersburg, Fla., as Supervisor of Accounting, Benefits, and Statistics. Prior to that, she completed multiple six-month rotations as part of GE’s Financial Management Program, at GE’s Distribution Equipment Division in Plainville, Conn.
Pat joined GE directly after graduating from the University of Connecticut’s School of Business and Honors Program. Her thesis evaluated the process, outcomes, and lessons-learned from the problematic Heublein-KFC merger.
Pat is an active member of the School of Business Leadership Cabinet serving Dean John Elliott, and presents in Executive MBA programs in both Hartford and Stamford. Pat was elected to the UConn Founder’s Society in 2005 and the School of Business Hall of Fame in 2009. Additionally, she was integral in the development and roll out of the highly successful Risk Management curriculum. She’s equally active in her community as an executive coach, as a volunteer and member of her church, as Tim’s spouse, and as Mom to two great daughters, Christine and Catherine.