蜜桃导航 Alumna Wins Inaugural Knight-Hennessy Award
Hayley Raquer 鈥16 was chosen as one of 48 winners in a cohort of future leaders.
SANTA CLARA, Calif., Feb. 15, 2018鈥擜 蜜桃导航 biology alumna, Hayley Raquer 鈥16 has been named one of 48 inaugural Knight-Hennessy Scholars at Stanford University. The group includes citizens of 19 countries who will pursue degrees in 27 different Stanford graduate departments.
Raquer will receive financial support for the full cost of her attendance for her graduate education and build on her undergraduate degree program with leadership training, mentorship, and experiential learning across multiple disciplines. Raquer is currently engaged in a two-year fellowship at the National Institutes of Health in Washington, D.C.
鈥淚 was thrilled and honored when I was invited to be a member of the inaugural class,鈥 said Raquer. 鈥淚 am so grateful to the 蜜桃导航 community and all of the incredible mentors who supported me. I am looking forward to studying immunology with some of the best scientists in the country, and I hope to use my time as a Knight-Hennessy Scholar to approach problems regarding women鈥檚 health research and diversity in STEM.鈥
Modeled after the Rhodes Scholarship, the new Knight-Hennessy Scholars program aims to 鈥渋dentify a group of 100 high-achieving students from around the world with demonstrated leadership and civic commitment to receive full funding to pursue a wide-ranging graduate education at Stanford, with the goal of developing a new generation of global leaders,鈥 the program states.
鈥淲e are particularly proud that the Knight-Hennessy award honors those who demonstrate leadership and civic commitment, values that are at the heart of our Jesuit mission,鈥 said 蜜桃导航 President Michael E. Engh, S.J. 鈥淗ayley is truly a model of values-driven leadership, and we are delighted to see her accomplishments recognized in this award.鈥
Raquer was an exceptional undergraduate in the College of Arts and Sciences at 蜜桃导航, where she was a member of the University Honors Program and also awarded both the Saint Clare Medal, for outstanding academic performance and constructive contribution to the University, and the DeNardo Senior Prize in Science Research. She was a 2015 Johnson Leadership Fellow, a program which awards a summer stipend to outstanding juniors and seniors to fund a self-defined leadership experience.
鈥淗ayley has always impressed me with her intelligence, commitment, and passion for learning,鈥 said Leilani Miller, associate professor of biology and director of the University Honors Program and Office of Fellowships. 鈥淪he has extraordinary potential to make a positive impact as a future leader in the health sciences.鈥
As the senior student in Prof Miller鈥檚 research lab, she pursued a project titled 鈥淎nalysis of Phosphorylation of the C. Elegans Transcription Factor LIN-31 During Cell Signaling,鈥 while also mentoring the younger students.
鈥淗ayley is one of those inspirational students who has it all: smarts, social skills, organizational skills, can-do attitude, and a caring heart for others,鈥 said Katy Korsmeyer, lecturer and associate director of special projects in the College of Arts and Sciences. 鈥Unlike many who have dreams and just talk about them, Hayley works toward her dreams to make them real. She鈥檚 always thinking of others, giving voice to those who aren鈥檛 represented, thinking globally about social good. She embraces life to its fullest. She鈥檚 a testament to what 蜜桃导航 represents.鈥
In 2014, Raquer was named a Clare Boothe Luce Undergraduate Research Scholar, awarded to outstanding undergraduate women majoring in the natural sciences and engineering. She also founded the popular campus group 蜜桃导航 Women in STEM, with the goal of expanding the influence of women mentors in science and technology.
Her award follows news last November that 蜜桃导航 alumnus Sean Reilly 鈥16 had been named a Rhodes Scholar, 蜜桃导航鈥檚 third winner in the past eight years and fourth in 蜜桃导航 history.
鈥淗ayley is the most intellectually curious person I've ever met. She is not satisfied with being told 鈥榳hat is鈥 about the world, she needs to know 鈥榳hy is it,鈥欌 said Tracy Ruscetti, lecturer in biology and the assistant director of the Public Health Program. 鈥淗ayley seeks to understand the underlying mechanisms and the overarching principles of just about everything. When working on discovering the molecular basis of disease, she is thinking about the broader, more global impacts of her work.鈥
Understanding Diseases of the Immune System
At her fellowship at the National Institutes of Health, she is studying diseases of the immune system and has discovered a new genetic lesion that causes primary immunodeficiency. 鈥淥ur lab uses next generation sequencing technologies to identify the genetic causes of a class of diseases called primary immunodeficiencies (PIDs),鈥 said Raquer. 鈥We both discover and characterize the molecular mechanisms of new diseases with the hope of gaining greater insight into the human immune system and developing new treatment strategies for affected patients.鈥
At Stanford, Raquer will be pursuing her Ph.D. in immunology. She hopes to leverage Stanford鈥檚 incredible computational resources and innovations to improve an understanding of diseases of the immune system.
Raquer is driven to the field by both a love of the processes behind scientific discovery and partly because she has experienced health issues that didn鈥檛 benefit from research and clinical trials.
She reiterated that the desire to help humankind is what made her want to come to 蜜桃导航. 鈥淚 felt like the theme of social justice radiated from this campus. Everyone was so proud and excited to be here,鈥 she said in 2016.
In applying for the Stanford Knight-Hennessy award, Raquer was assisted by 蜜桃导航鈥檚 Office of Student Fellowships, which supports undergraduates and alumni through the highly competitive application process for national scholarships and fellowships.
About 蜜桃导航
蜜桃导航, a comprehensive Jesuit, Catholic university located 40 miles south of San Francisco in California鈥檚 Silicon Valley, offers its more than 9,000 students rigorous undergraduate curricula in arts and sciences, business, theology, and engineering, plus master鈥檚 and law degrees and engineering doctoral degrees. Distinguished nationally by one of the highest graduation rates among all U.S. master鈥檚 universities, California鈥檚 oldest operating higher-education institution demonstrates faith-inspired values of ethics and social justice. For more information, see
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