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  • Annual University-Wide Three Minute Thesis Competition celebrates and awards graduate students and postdoctoral scholars

    Graduate students and postdoctoral scholars from across The Ohio State University condensed years of research into three‑minute presentations Feb. 4 during the 2026 University‑Wide Three Minute Thesis Competition, hosted by the Graduate School at the Ohio Union.

    The Three Minute Thesis, commonly known as 3MT, is an international academic competition originally developed by the University of Queensland to strengthen researchers’ ability to communicate complex ideas to non‑specialist audiences. Participants are challenged to explain the significance of their research clearly, concisely and compellingly in three minutes using only a single static slide.

    Mary Stromberger introducing the three minute thesis behind a podium on a stage
    Mary Stromberger, vice provost for graduate education and dean of the graduate school
    Matt Page, senior assistant dean for graduate student experiences speaking behind a podium
    Matt Page, senior assistant dean for graduate student experiences

    At Ohio State, the university‑wide competition serves as the culmination of college‑level 3MT events and brings together finalists from across disciplines. Before the event, a panel of preliminary judges selected a set of participants for the university-wide competition. This year's preliminary judges were Trachy Roach Gadkari, Ph.D. technical services manager, Components – Fuel & Lubricant Solutions at BASF, James Cray, Ph.D. associate professor in Biomedical Education and Anatomy and Susan Yoon, Ph.D. associate professor in the College of Social Work.

    The 2026 competition was led by Karin Jordan, assistant dean of graduate development and engagement with introductions and event support from Mary Stromberger, vice provost for graduate education and dean of the graduate school; Matt Page, senior assistant dean for graduate student experiences and additional support from the Office of Postdoctoral Scholars and Graduate School staff.

    ZTHree 3mt judges sitting in a row of seats
    Dr. Rachel Kajfez, Department of Engineering Education, Ellen Patricia, ERIK – Office of Responsible Research Practices and Joe Walter, Nestlé Quality Assurance Center

    The in-person judging panel consisted of three professionals selected for their experience evaluating research communication and interdisciplinary scholarship. Judges assessed presentations using standardized Three Minute Thesis criteria, focusing on comprehension and content as well as engagement and communication. The 2026 University‑Wide Three Minute Thesis Competition judges were Dr. Rachel Kajfez, Department of Engineering Education, Ellen Patricia, MS, CIP, ERIK / Office of Responsible Research Practices and Joe Walter, Nestlé Quality Assurance Center.

    Under official 3MT rules, presenters are limited to a maximum of three minutes, with time beginning when a speaker starts moving or speaking. Exceeding the time limit results in disqualification. Presentations must be delivered as spoken word, and participants may use only one static PowerPoint slide with no animations, transitions, audio or video. No props or additional media are permitted. Judges assess presentations based on clarity of research explanation, logical structure, accessibility to a general audience and the speaker’s ability to engage listeners.

    Group of 3mt participants in two rows on a stage
    2026 University-Wide THree Minute Thesis Competition partcipants

    Graduate student finalists represented a wide range of Ohio State colleges and research areas. Participants and presentation titles included:

    Jason A. Christman presenting on a  stage in front of a presentation
    3mt participant Jason A. Christman
    Opal Moore presenting on a stage in front of a presentation
    3mt participant Opal Moore
    Ayushi Das presenting on a stage in front of a presentation
    3mt participant Ayushi Das
    Charis Stanek on a stage presenting in front of a presentation
    3mt participant Charis Stanek 
    • Danica Matovic of the Department of Neuroscience – “Brain Circuits and Temperature Regulation.”
    • Jason A. Christman of the College of Optometry – “The Leaky Pipe of U.S. Vision Care.”
    • Cameryn Cooley of the Department of Psychology – “Black Americans’ Perceptions of Cognitive Change Strategies.”
    • Ayushi Das of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology – “Pancreatic Cancer and Its Deathly Hallows.”
    • Min Hai of the Division of Pharmaceutics and Pharmacology, – “Dose Like a Master Chef.”
    • Cheng‑Yu Hung of the Fisher College of Business – “The No‑Choice Option in Conjoint Analysis.”
    • Opal Moore of the Division of Environmental Health Sciences – “Quantity Over Quality: How Low‑Cost Sensors Can Be Beneficial in Underserved Communities.”
    • Md Nayem Hasan Munna of the School of Environment and Natural Resources – “Same Soil. Different Futures.”
    • Zoe Phillips of the Department of Physics – “Integration of Molecular Qubits into 2D Heterostructures for All‑Electrical Readout.”
    • Elenore Rimmerman of IGP Biophysics – “ Vascular Visions: Novel Imaging in Peripheral Artery Disease.”
    • Charis Stanek of the College of Social Work – “‘For Me, They Were a Strength’: How College Students Make Meaning of Their Mental Illnesses.”
    • Srinivasan Subramaniyan of Electrical and Computer Engineering – “Correlation‑Aware Scheduling for Minimizing Capital Expenses.”
    • Ahmad Ilderim Tokey of the Department of Geography – “How Exposed Are You? Risk in What You Can Access.”

     

    Mary Stomberger presenting the 1st place certificate to Ayushi Das on a stage
    Mary Stromberger presenting Ayushi Das with a 1st place certificate.
    Mary Stromberger presenting Charis Stanek with a 2nd place certificate.
    Mary Stromberger presenting Charis Stanek with a 2nd place certificate.

    At the conclusion of the graduate student competition, Ayushi Das was named first‑place winner with their presentation titled, “Pancreatic Cancer and Its Deathly Hallows”. This first place distinction means that Ayushi will represent Ohio State at the Midwest regional competition that will happen later this spring at the Midwest Association of Graduate Schools annual conference. Ayushi also received the People’s Choice Award, determined by audience votes during the event. Charis Stanek earned second place in the university‑wide graduate student competition with their presentation on “‘For Me, They Were a Strength’: How College Students Make Meaning of Their Mental Illnesses.”

     

     

     

    The event also featured a university‑wide Three Minute Thesis competition for postdoctoral scholars. Postdoc participants included:

    • Tomaz Neves Garcia, PhD of the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry – “What if Capturing CO₂ Could Power Clean Hydrogen?”
    • Andrew Perry, PhD of the Department of Educational Studies – “An Examination of How Community College Matriculation and Transfer Relates to the Motivation and Self‑Regulated Learning of First‑Generation College Students.”
    • Chenyang Wei, PhD of the Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology – “Space Birding: AI Meets Community Science.”
    Tomaz Neves Garcia on stage presenting
    Postdoctoral 3mt participant Tomaz Neves Garcia
    Andrew Perry presenting on stage
    Postdoctoral 3mt participant Andrew Perry
    Chenyang Wei presenting on stage
    Postdoctoral 3mt participant Chenyang Wei

    Dr. Chenyang Wei earned first place in the postdoctoral competition, while Dr. Andrew Perry placed second.

    Mary Stromberger presenting Chenyang Wei with the 1st place postdoctoral 3mt certificate
    Mary Stromberger presenting Chenyang Wei with the 1st place postdoctoral 3mt certificate.
    Mary Stromberger presenting Andrew Perry with the 2nd place postdoctoral 3mt certificate
    Mary Stromberger presenting Andrew Perry with the 2nd place postdoctoral 3mt certificate

    The Three Minute Thesis competition continues to highlight Ohio State’s commitment to research excellence and public scholarship by equipping emerging researchers with the skills needed to communicate their work beyond academic audiences.

    The Graduate School is proud to continue to support graduate students and postdoctoral scholars with their research and career development with events such as the Three Minute Thesis competition. Visit the Graduate School website news and events to learn more about resources, programming, and support and news about graduate students and the larger graduate community that support their education at Ohio State.

     

  • World Kindness and Random Acts of Kindness Days in February

    Sharing kindness is part of being a Buckeye, and while it happens all year at Ohio State, it carries special meaning in this month. February 13 is World Kindness Day and February 17 is Random Acts of Kindness Day.  Over the next two weeks, foster connections and boost happiness throughout our Buckeye community. Let's share kindness together, make a positive impact on our community by encouraging graduate faculty, staff and students in ways that matter most. 

    Learn more about sharing kindness

  • Apply for a Mentoring Month Mini-Grant

    We are still accepting Mentoring Month Mini-Grants through the month of February! Departments and programs, graduate faculty and staff, and graduate student organizations are invited to apply for a Mentoring Month Mini Grant of up to $500 to host an event or initiative to recognize mentors and mentees or celebrate mentorship. Email mentoring@osu.edu with any questions.

    Submit an application

    The 2026 Mentoring Month Mini-Grant application is closed.

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