Trinity College
President’s Medal for Science and Innovation
February 28, 2024
Hartford, CT
Trinity article on the
inaugural award of the medal
(and reposted below)
Trinity College President
Joanne Berger-Sweeney at the podium and EF
Medal and Citation
Lunch livestreamed interview
with the fabulous Shirley Malcom of AAAS
View from the lunch
interview hot-seat in Hamlin Hall at Trinity College, Hartford, CT USA
ANNOUNCEMENT POSTED
Alumnus and former Trinity College Trustee Eric Fossum ’79, H’14
will receive Trinity College’s inaugural President’s Medal for Science and Innovation during
the Spring Bicentennial Symposium: Reflection and Action on
February 28, 2024.
Fossum is the inventor of the
CMOS image sensor “camera on a chip” used in almost all smartphones and
webcams, as well as in medical imaging and more. He is the John H. Krehbiel Sr.
Professor for Emerging Technologies in the Thayer School of Engineering at
Dartmouth College, where he also serves as director of Thayer’s Ph.D.
Innovation Program and vice provost for entrepreneurship and technology
transfer.
“Since our founding in 1823,
Trinity College has been proud of its commitment to the study of science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) in a liberal arts environment,”
said President Joanne Berger-Sweeney. “As a place for problem solvers and
innovators, Trinity has a commitment to the sciences that has only grown over
time in recognition of the value the sciences provide toward our understanding
of an ever-changing world. More directly, innovation is in our DNA. The
interdisciplinary nature of a liberal arts education teaches a uniquely broad
and effective approach to problem-solving.”
FOSSUM AT JPL.
To highlight the significance of the sciences at Trinity during
the College’s Bicentennial year, Berger-Sweeney—a
neuroscientist herself—created the President’s Medal for Science and
Innovation. The medal recognizes a prominent, internationally renowned
individual in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics who has
influenced STEM with marked success and who represents the liberal arts ideal
of empowering humanity through the sciences. As Trinity enters its third
century of excellence, the introduction of this award supports the goal of
elevating Trinity’s national standing in the sciences.
The President’s Medal for Science
and Innovation Advisory Committee, made up mostly of
prominent STEM faculty at Trinity, leads the selection process, ultimately
recommending a small pool of highly qualified candidates to the president of
the College. Recipients may be—but are not required to be—alumni of the College
and should be renowned in their field.
FOSSUM SPEAKS TO
TRINITY COLLEGE STUDENTS.
Fossum was born in Hartford Hospital, grew up attending public
school in Simsbury, and spent Saturday mornings at the Talcott Mountain Science
Center, where he now serves as a Trustee. He majored in physics and
engineering at Trinity and went on to earn an M.S. and a Ph.D. in engineering
and applied science from Yale University. Fossum has worked at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) at the California Institute of Technology and is a
member of the National Inventors Hall of Fame and the National Academy of
Engineering.
As a self-described serial
entrepreneur, Fossum co-founded Photobit Corporation in 1995 and later served
as chairman and CEO of Siimpel Corporation and as a consultant with Samsung
Electronics. He more recently co-founded and chaired the Dartmouth spinoff
Gigajot Technology Inc. In recognition of his work, Fossum has won numerous
awards, including 2017’s prestigious Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering,
considered by many as engineering’s Nobel Prize. He also has published more
than 330 technical papers and holds more than 180 U.S. patents.
Fossum is a former member of
Trinity’s Board of Trustees and has returned to campus over the years to speak to students about science,
technology, entrepreneurship, and innovation. Trinity awarded him an honorary
doctor of science degree in 2014.
Interviewed by The
Trinity Reporter in 2011, Fossum said, “It is sometimes hard
to explain . . . that engineering is a very creative field. People tend to
think about the math and physics behind engineering as the core elements, but
actually they are just tools engineers utilize to invent creative solutions for
society. I think the goal of graduating broadly educated, free-thinking
engineers fits in rather well with a liberal arts environment.”
FREEMAN A. HRABOWSKI III
The ceremony presenting the inaugural medal to Fossum also will
feature the Presidential Distinguished Lecture by
2023 National Academy of Sciences Public Welfare Medal recipient and University
of Maryland, Baltimore County President Emeritus Freeman A. Hrabowski III. Hrabowski’s
research and publications focus on science and math education, with special
emphasis on minority participation and performance. He was named in 2012 by
President Obama to chair the President’s Advisory Commission on Educational
Excellence for African Americans.
Earlier in the day, Fossum will
take part in a conversation with Shirley M. Malcom, senior advisor and director
of SEA Change at the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In
her career of more than 40 years at the association, Malcom has worked to
increase access to education and careers in STEM, as well as to enhance public
science literacy. She served on President Clinton’s Committee of Advisors on
Science and Technology and received the 2003 Public Welfare Medal of the
National Academy of Sciences.
SHIRLEY M. MALCOM
With no scheduled classes or other competing activities
scheduled for the day of the Spring Bicentennial Symposium, the entire academic
community will have an opportunity to engage in critical dialogue. The
interconnectedness of Trinity’s academic divisions (i.e., arts, humanities,
mathematics, natural sciences, and social sciences) will enhance a daylong
exploration of moments of innovation, both technological and theoretical, in
the hopes fostering understanding and diverse ways of thinking.
For the schedule and more details
about the Spring Bicentennial Symposium, click here.