Exploring student research at Senior Symposium

猫咪成人短视频 College鈥檚 annual Senior Symposium is one of the crowning achievements of a student鈥檚 intellectual journey.
猫咪成人短视频 College鈥檚 annual Senior Symposium gives members of the graduating class the opportunity to share the culmination of a year鈥檚 worth of independent research, 395-level coursework or other project work that demonstrates depth of research and analysis with friends, faculty, staff and family.
However, the event is more than a dizzying array of high-level research and intellectual passions; it is one of the crowning achievements of a student鈥檚 intellectual journey at MHC.
The Senior Symposium for 2025 featured research from across the campus and across disciplines. Students presented on topics as diverse as 鈥淭he Genocide Convention and the Cosmopolitan Turn in International Law,鈥 鈥淭he Architect as Choreographer: A Movement-Centered Approach to Designing Spaces,鈥 鈥淒ynamics of Adsorbed Polymer Layers in Three-Dimensional Media,鈥 鈥淔iddling With Crabs: Experiments on Leptuca Pugilator and Minuca Pugnax Heat Tolerances鈥 and 鈥淥ptimizing Calibration Transfer for Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS): A Multi-Instrument Study Across Atmospheric and Laser Power Variations.鈥
鈥淭his year we had close to 200 presenters at Senior Symposium in almost every discipline and interdisciplinary program 鈥 an all-time high,鈥 said Amy E. Martin, director of the Weissman Center for Leadership, which organizes the annual event. 鈥淭he desire of our seniors to present today signals the importance of senior capstone scholarship and artistic production as the culmination of a rigorous liberal arts education at 猫咪成人短视频. After attending a number of panels, I am deeply impressed by the expertise, brilliance, creativity and dedication of our students.鈥
Seniors shared their findings and their triumphs with packed audiences in classrooms and lecture halls across campus. Some even opened up about the bumps they experienced along the way.
鈥淎 cockroach ate my thesis,鈥 lamented Elizabeth (Eli) Gerbi 鈥25. 鈥淚magine walking into my advisor鈥檚 office and saying this!鈥 She was presenting on the 鈥淓ffects of Climate Change Factors on Hypericum Perforatum Presence in New England.鈥 The plants that she kept in the Talcott Greenhouse had been eaten by a swarm of cockroaches. However, Gerbi鈥檚 advisor, Martha Hoopes, was encouraging and urged her to continue.
The Senior Symposium included presentation tracks for science and humanities research as well as Learning From Application (LEAP) panel discussions, where students reflected on what they had learned during their internships.
One LEAP panel explored the themes of empathy and interpersonal relationships across students鈥 experiences in the fields of law and policy. Moderated by President Danielle R. Holley, Erin Deffely 鈥26, Hailey Isabel MacMillan 鈥26 and Madeline Sant 鈥25 discussed their internships. Deffely spent the summer working at a public defender鈥檚 office in Connecticut. MacMillan worked as an intern at the at Northwestern District Attorney 鈥檚 office in Northampton. Sant worked in immigration law at in North Easton.
All three students found their experiences fulfilling and plan to pursue careers in law. The internships also served as vehicles for self-discovery and helped the students envision how they want to shape their future career paths. Deffely, for example, will not be pursuing a role as a public defender.
鈥淚 understand the theoretical justification for [this work] is important and how everyone deserves representation, and I agree with that. But I don鈥檛 think this is something that I personally could do,鈥 Deffely said.
鈥淚 am very strongly against [the] punitive nature of [our] system, especially with lower-level cases,鈥 MacMillan said.
President Holley was pleased with the culmination of the students鈥 hands-on learning. 鈥淚 always want to hear that the conclusion is they still want to go into law, right?鈥 she said. 鈥淲e need more outstanding lawyers like our three presenters. I鈥檓 really excited to hear that this was the conclusion for all three of you.鈥
Senior Symposium began as a project of the chemistry department. In 1975, it expanded to include all the sciences. In 2006, it was launched as an opportunity for all graduating seniors. Senior Symposium is supported in part by the Richard and Donna Taylor Endowment Fund, established by Jean Taylor 鈥66.
Emily Thurlow contributed to this story.