Three pioneering women at Georgia Tech who lead postdoctoral education and highlighting their impactful contributions and dedication to supporting postdoctoral scholars.
Marc Ebelhar, graduate student success specialist and academic professional in the Office of Graduate Education, has been named Georgia Tech’s 2024 “Putting Students First Award” recipient.
Two grad students share the importance of developing women-centered communities and provide their insight into developing a community. 
Go out and fail. That was what Mo Jarin set out to do as part of a seven-week boot camp she was awarded through the entrepreneurial-focused U.S. National Science Foundation’s Innovation Corps program (NSF I-Corps). 
Jarin’s dedication and accomplishments have garnered recognition, including winning prestigious awards. Most recently, Jarin’s research titled, “Operando investigation of the synergistic effect of electric field treatment and copper for bacteria inactivat
Researchers in Nga Lee (Sally) Ng's lab. Photo by Joya Chapman
Their awards total more than $9.5 million in funding, the most Georgia Tech has ever had in the program.
We asked our postdocs whom they would like to extend their thanks. Their responses revealed the profound impact of collaboration, mentorship, and peer support. 
Friday's Three Minute thesis produced four graduate student winners, each earning research travel grants.
Follow Mo Jarin’s Quest for Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Personal Triumphs in the World of Environmental Engineering
Photographed from left to right: Alexandra Patterson, Jeffery Pattinson, Malika Senthil, Karina Bhattacharya, Mo Jarin, Kantwon Rogers, Raghav Tandon, Shreyas Srivathsan, Vinodhini Comandur, Wenting Shi.

Not photographed: Anamik Jhunjhunwala and ValeriaJuarez.
Twelve scholars have emerged as finalists from Georgia Tech's Three Minute Thesis competition, showcasing their research prowess after triumphing over 65 talented candidates in six preliminary rounds, poised to captivate audiences with concise presentatio