2011 grad wins Hertz Fellowship
During her first year of earning her PhD in chemical biology at the University of California, Berkeley, 2011 Calvin grad Cheri Ackerman applied for a . The fellowship, bestowed by the Hertz Foundation, supports gifted leaders in the applied sciences and engineering. It is awarded to 15 to 20 applicants out of 600.
Ackerman was among the finalists chosen to undergo two rounds of interviews for the award: one conducted by a technical interviewer and another conducted by an experienced scientist or engineer.
鈥淚t can be a pretty nerve-wracking process,鈥 Ackerman admitted. 鈥淎 lot of people talk about the Hertz interview as one of the worst things you can go through in grad school.鈥 As she was praying about the interview, Ackerman got a sense that her purpose in the application process was to represent God鈥攏o matter what the outcome. 鈥淚t was pretty clear that God was going to be there, and He would give me peace,鈥 she recounted. 鈥淚 got to the interview, and it went so smoothly.鈥 When she landed the second interview, Ackerman again prayed and again heard the message: 鈥淕od was (saying), 鈥楪o into that interview, and glorify me, and show those interviewers that you鈥檙e my daughter.鈥
A great gift
When she learned she was one of the for 2012鈥2013, Ackerman was eager to give credit where it was due: 鈥淚 can definitely see that it鈥檚 not something I鈥檝e necessarily earned,鈥 she said. 鈥淵es, I worked hard for it. Yes, I researched. But I look at it as a gift from God.鈥
The $250, 000 Hertz Fellowship will pay Ackerman鈥檚 Berkeley tuition for five years and provide her with a sizeable stipend. The idea behind the award is to free up young minds to innovate, said Ackerman: 鈥淵ou get to pick the projects you work on and to pursue ideas that might seem crazy.鈥
The fellowship is a rare opportunity in the current landscape of science funding, said Calvin chemistry professor Eric Arnoys: 鈥淲ith a lot of funding, you have to be confident that things are going to 鈥榳ork,鈥 or you might not see funding again,鈥 he said.
Ackerman impressed Arnoys even in her first year at Calvin, when he interviewed her for a research position: 鈥淪he was asking me questions about my work that I may have gotten from someone in my field or someone who was visiting for a seminar 鈥 ,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he鈥檚 the type of person that the award should go to. She鈥檚 extremely bright. She鈥檚 curious. She鈥檚 persistent.鈥 (Ackerman was Calvin's sole for 2010鈥2011.)
Arnoys is equally impressed by his former student鈥檚 character: 鈥淏oth in her words and her actions, there鈥檚 no secret what she believes, but she鈥檚 also humble,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he treats everyone as equals.鈥
Creating chemical tools
Having completed three research rotations at Berkeley, Ackerman is pausing to sketch out the topic of her PhD research. She鈥檚 interested in creating new chemical tools that allow biologists and chemists to ask new questions about biology. 鈥淎 lot of the questions that we can answer are limited by the technology that鈥檚 available to answer those questions,鈥 Ackerman said. 鈥淢y research goal is to expand that technology in order to allow us to ask and answer those new questions.鈥 Ackerman will be working under the direction of Dr. Christopher Chang, studying how copper is localized and transported within living organisms.
After Berkeley, she鈥檇 like to do postdoctoral work and, eventually, teach at a research university. Right now, she鈥檚 weighing the trade-offs that come with that kind of career. 鈥淚t eats up the amount of time that you can actually be home鈥攂eing with your family and investing your time in your church. You definitely have to know what you鈥檙e getting into. You just have to know if you鈥檙e willing to invest the time,鈥 she said.
Ackerman wants more of a work-life balance: 鈥淚n academics, a lot of people see their value in terms of, 鈥楬ow many awards have I won?鈥 鈥楬ow many papers have I published?鈥 And I鈥檓 happy to know that my worth comes from who I am in God.鈥
She learned how to be an academic and a Christian from her Calvin professors: 鈥淎nd if I hadn鈥檛 gone to Calvin, I might not have learned it,鈥 Ackerman said. 鈥淚 can almost hear their words in my ear: 鈥榊ou are more than your work.鈥櫬 That鈥檚 really what winning this fellowship is for me. It鈥檚 a spiritual journey as well as being an academic or career journey.鈥