July 19, 2022
Station1 Frontiers Fellowship Selects Two SMC Students, One Alum
Two Santa Monica College Students & One Alum Selected for Station1 Frontiers Fellowship
STEM Majors Grace Jimenez & Ahmad Rizwan to Intern at Tech Startup Elateq and Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure, Respectively; SMC to UC Berkeley Alum Elliot Hong to Intern at Oakland-Based Climate Trace
SANTA MONICA, CA—The nonprofit Station1—founded by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2016—has selected two Santa Monica College (SMC) students and one SMC alum for its Station1 Frontiers Fellowship (SFF), a fully-funded ten-week education, research, and internship experience focused on socially-directed science and technology.
Selected after a competitive application/interview process and out of hundreds of applicants, environmental engineering major Grace Jimenez will intern at Amherst, MA-based technology startup company Elateq which focuses on the development of advanced electrochemical water treatment technology for the simultaneous removal of pathogens, organic, and inorganic contaminants. Engineering major Ahmad Rizwan will intern at the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure, which focuses on the design and construction of sustainable, resilient, and equitable civil infrastructure that combats climate change, cuts greenhouse gas emissions, creates local jobs, and enhances human wellbeing.
And SMC to UC Berkeley transfer alum Elliot Hong will intern at Oakland-based Climate TRACE, a global coalition of nonprofits, tech companies and universities created to make meaningful climate action faster and easier by tracking greenhouse gas emissions with unprecedented detail and speed.
The nonprofit higher education institution Station1 has been paving pathways of opportunity through a new model of learning and research: socially-directed science and technology. Station1 seeks to interrogate, understand, and shape technologically-driven societal impact towards more equitable, just, ethical, and sustainable outcomes.
As Station1 fellows, Jimenez, Rizwan, and Hong will receive a competitive living expenses stipend and fully-funded instructional costs; participate in exciting internship research projects in emerging fields of science and technology; engage with a shared curriculum focused on socially-directed science and technology; interact with instructors, researchers, and mentors across diverse scientific, technological, and scholarly disciplines and fields; gain leadership, personal and professional experience through the research internship, an inclusive leadership institute, and a formal professional advancement curriculum; receive individualized and customized information, advising, and guidance on academic and career pathways; and as Station1 alumni will become part of a network of exceptional professionals in the Station1 community beyond the program’s completion.
“There are so many ways Santa Monica College has helped me—financially to academically to emotionally,” said Grace Jimenez. “SMC has become my safe space and through the college I have been able to get so many scholarships, internship opportunities, and great networking opportunities. When I got accepted for the Station1 internship, I felt like all the work I've been doing, all the persistence I've had to continue this degree was finally validated and that there were people out there who genuinely saw my potential! Getting this internship has changed my life for the better.”
Ahmad Rizwan, who like Jimenez plans on transferring this coming fall, says that community college was not in his plans. The COVID-19 pandemic had him rethinking options, however, as he realized that the flexible online education option SMC offered would give him the same quality, “on top of SMC being the #1 transfer college to the University of California, Loyola Marymount University, and USC, and all the vast opportunities the college provides.”
“It turns out, I was right,” adds Rizwan, describing how he joined Santa Monica College’s STEM/Science Research Initiative and the SMC EOPS Program the summer he enrolled, and finding ways to network and connect with professor and counselors online. “SMC’s STEM counselors Marian Bagamaspad and Sheridan McArthur helped me get accepted to the College Field Biology Alliance (CCFBA) at UCLA where I published research regarding bird behavior in my local park.”
Rizwan says he didn’t know how to feel about even applying to Station1 Frontiers Fellowship Program. “The thought of being mentored by globally recognized professionals from MIT was intimidating,” he says. “However, when I got accepted, I could not believe how I felt! The thought of being selected from hundreds of applicants seemed crazy to me. I felt excited, nervous, and ambitious, knowing that I was selected for a reason. The long four months of waiting to be accepted was finally over, and I could not believe it!”
Rizwan added that he has had to work hard for such an opportunity. “It took a lot of personal motivation and dedication to be at the point that I am today,” he said. “I am grateful that SMC provided me with the academic grit needed in higher education.”
Vanan Yahnian, SMC’s STEM Manager, stated that SMC has been partnering with Station1 since 2019. Former participants include Kelvin Martinez & Mariamawit Jembere (2019), and Justin Hong (2021), and SMC alum Nhut Nguyen (2019) who was selected after transferring to a four-year university.
“We are thrilled that this prestigious, forward-thinking program has selected Grace Jimenez and Ahmad Rizwan, as well as UC Berkeley transfer/alum Elliot Hong” said Dr. Kathryn E. Jeffery, SMC’s Superintendent/President. “They exemplify the excellence and promise of SMC’s students who work hard despite so many obstacles, and represent those who will change the landscape of a hopefully more diversified STEM industry in the near future.”
In addition to Station1, SMC’s STEM students have interned at NASA-JPL, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, UCLA’s Undergraduate Research Center, USC’s Mangul Lab, UC Berkeley, Cal Poly Pomona, Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI), Base11 (which has placed students at UC Irvine, Caltech, USC, & the Smithsonian). Santa Monica College offers options for study in numerous STEM fields including biology, pre-medicine biology, chemistry, earth science, computer programming, physics, engineering, mathematics, and much more.
The U.S. Department of Education—through its Hispanic-Serving Institution (HSI) STEM and Articulation Program—awarded Santa Monica College a third consecutive five-year grant totaling nearly $5 million dollars ($4,944,951) specifically for its Engage, Succeed, and Advance in STEM (ESA-STEM) project. Through this grant, SMC will serve Hispanic and lower-income students majoring in STEM by providing outreach events, STEM Makerspace programming, establishing an application-based program called “Maximizing Achievement in STEM”—“MÁS” in short (for “more” in Spanish)—for underrepresented STEM students, among other activities. To learn more about SMC’s STEM program, visit smc.edu/STEM.
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About Santa Monica College:
Santa Monica College is a California Community College accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges (ACCJC) of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC). For 31 consecutive years, SMC has been California’s
leading transfer college to UCLA, UC Berkeley, and other University of California campuses. The college also tops in transfers to the University of Southern California and Loyola Marymount University and is the top feeder west of the Mississippi to the Ivy League Columbia University. In addition to the Film Production Program, more than 110 career training degrees and certificates at SMC—in fields ranging from the traditional (Accounting, Early Childhood Education, Nursing) to the emerging (Sustainable Technologies, Technical Theatre, and a baccalaureate degree in Interaction Design)—offer professional preparation for students interested in directly entering the job market, transferring to a four-year school, or upgrading specific skills. SMC provides news and cultural enrichment through its NPR radio station KCRW (89.9 FM), the Broad Stage at the SMC Performing Arts Center, and lifelong learning through distinctive programs such as its Emeritus Program for older adults.
About Station1:
Station1 is a new nonprofit higher education institution, founded by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2016, that is paving a pathway of opportunity through a new model of learning and research - socially-directed science and technology. This model integrates science and technology with humanistic fields and the social sciences in order to interrogate, understand, and shape technologically-driven societal impact towards more equitable, just, ethical, and sustainable outcomes. Core to the Station1 model is broadening access and opportunity for students of color, those from low income households, and those who are first generation to college. To advance this mission, Station1 designs and delivers transformative education, research, innovation, and collective impact programs and initiatives employing unique hybrid methods powered by leading and emerging digital infrastructure. Station1 collaborates with partners world-wide, including socially-minded startup companies, established industry, the social and public sectors, and academia. To learn more, visit station1.org.
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Santa Monica College environmental engineering major Grace Jimenez has been selected by the nonprofit Station1— founded by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2016—for its fully-funded ten-week Frontiers education, research, and internship experience. Jimenez will intern at Amherst, MA-based technology startup company Elateq.
SMC engineering major Ahmad Rizwan will intern at the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure as a Station1 Frontiers Fellow.
SMC to UC Berkeley transfer Eliot Hong (who will intern at Oakland-based Climate TRACE) was also selected out of hundreds of applicants for the prestigious ten-week Station1 Frontiers internship program, which was founded by MIT researchers.