Alexandria Brady-Miné
Alexandria Brady-Miné is an internationally recognized social entrepreneur and activist on a mission to empower over one million young people to become changemakers by 2021. She founded the Human Projects at the age of seventeen. Now three years later, the Human Projects has worked with over 650,000 individuals in 118 countries to empower young leaders to solve human rights issues in their own communities. Funded by organizations including General Motors, T-Mobile, and the Jane Goodall Institute, Alexandria is dedicated to continuing to build and rapidly scale innovative human rights educational programs that equip young people with the tools they need to make a difference.
Delaina Parrish
Ms. Parrish is a 2020 Marketing graduate from the University of Florida with double minors in retail and entrepreneurship. While at UF, she helped redefine the culture of inclusion through personal advocacy and leadership for thousands of students with unique abilities. For that role, she is a much sought-after spokesperson on campus and within Florida, utilizing high tech augmentation communication. Delaina’s voice engages audiences with topics ranging from transitioning to college, adaptive fashion, life inspiration, and disability inclusion. Ms. Parrish has formed relationships with international brands such as Vera Bradley, Tommy Hilfiger and Zappos Adaptive, and is a brand ambassador for NuMotion Mobility, Tobii Dynavox, and Runway of Dreams, for whom she has modeled Tommy Hilfiger adaptive fashion on the runway of New York. Through these unique experiences and mentorships, Delaina has expanded “Fearless Independence, LLC” into a collaborative branding and entrepreneurial business. She hopes her dream employer is listening to this talk, and invites to the corporate table!
Ethan Kutlu
Ethan Kutlu is a PhD candidate in the
University of Florida’s Linguistics department,
and a proud member of the Brain Cognition
and Development Lab in Psychology. He is
trained as a cognitive scientist and specializes
in language use, specifically in places where
more than two languages coexist, as well as
on the outcomes of the interactions of these
languages, their speakers, and their social
networks. Ethan is particularly interested in
impacts of language on visual perception and
has been receiving training to understand these
mechanisms in infants and adults using different
behavioral and brain imaging techniques. Aside
from his research, Ethan taught for over 3 years
in the Linguistics department and was named an
Anderson Scholar Faculty Honoree and received
the 2019-2020 Graduate Student Teaching
Award. Ethan also serves as the diversity leader
in many organizations such as the Society
for Research in Child Development and the
Linguistic Society of America.
Imre Bartos
Dr. Imre Bartos received his PhD
from Columbia University, where he
subsequently remained as a lecturer and
then research scientist, before joining
the faculty at the University of Florida. His
broad field of interest is multi-messenger
astrophysics. He primarily studies extreme
cosmic processes related to the formation
and evolution of black holes. Dr. Bartos
is a member of the LIGO Scientific
Collaboration and the LISA Consortium
and is an associate member of the IceCube
Collaboration. He also serves as an
associate member of the Commission of
Astroparticle Physics of the International
Union of Pure and Applied Physics.
Dr. Bartos was awarded the Alfred P. Sloan
Research Fellowship and the University
of Florida’s Excellence Award, both in
2020. He was part of a Grand Challenges
Explorations Team supported by the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation. He was the
recipient of the Allan M. Sachs Teaching
Award, and was a finalist for Columbia’s
IMRE
BARTOS,
PH.D.
Presidential Teaching Award. As a member
of the LIGO Collaboration, he was the
co-recipient, among others, of the 2016
Breakthrough Prize, Gruber Prize, Einstein
Medal, and the Bruno Rossi Prize.
Kevin Jones
Dr. Kevin S. Jones is a Distinguished
Professor and holds the Fredrick N Rhines Chair
in the Department of Materials Science and
Engineering (MSE) at UF. He received his BS in MSE
from the University of Florida in 1980 and his MS
and PhD in MSE in 1987 from the U.C. Berkeley. He
has spent the past 33 years as a professor at the
University of Florida studying electronic materials.
He has published over 400 technical articles. He
is a fellow of the Materials Research Society (MRS),
the American Society of Materials (ASM) and the
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers
(IEEE). He has won many awards including the 1990
Presidential Young Investigator Award from NSF,
the 2013 North American SEMI Award and the 2018
North America Award for Outstanding Contributions
to Materials Education. In 2018 he was named the
UF Teacher/Scholar of the Year and in 2020 he
was awarded the National Outstanding Materials
Educator Award by ASEE.
Rik Stevenson
Dr. Robert L. Stevenson, Jr., is a Visiting Assistant Professor of African American
Studies at the University of Florida. Dr. Stevenson holds two Master’s Degrees from
Fuller Theological Seminary, a Doctorate in Divinity from the Southern California School
of Ministry, and a Ph.D. from Michigan State University in African American and African
Studies. His research examines the role of suicide by drowning as a form of resistance
during the Transatlantic Slave Trade. He is a certified scuba diver and has been involved in
multiple underwater expeditions. His maritime interests are in the research and recovery of
sunken slave vessels.
Sarah Goff
Sarah Goff is the executive director and co-founder of The Repurpose Project:
a non-profit junk shop, creative-reuse center, and architectural salvage operation in
Gainesville, Florida, that is developing innovative ways to reduce waste and keep hard-tosalvage material out of the waste stream. Sarah grew up on the island of Kwajalein, in the
Marshall Islands where she spent her childhood collecting trash and shell on the beach to
make art. She saw firsthand the issues of trash and plastic in the ocean and now watches
as her beloved childhood home, which stands just six feet above sea level, disappears
because of climate change and sea-level rise. After graduating from Kwajalein High School,
Sarah moved to Sarasota, Florida, and earned a BA in Natural Science and Fine Art from
New College of Florida. She then moved to New York City and earned a fashion design
degree from Parsons School of Design. The Repurpose Project is a perfect combination of
her passions: art, science, and a larger life-purpose of making the world a better place.
Taylor Williams
Taylor Williams is the creative director of Guts
& Glory GNV, a live storytelling organization,
and the lead facilitator of Guts & Glory Creative
Consulting. She has been studying and
performing improv comedy and storytelling
for over 11 years, and has been a speaker for
20. She got her start in New York City where
she trained with Upright Citizens Brigade and
worked as a commercial actress. She offers
trainings and keynotes around communication,
storytelling, public speaking, and company
culture, and also serves as an event host and
emcee. She holds an advanced certificate
in Design Thinking and Communicating for
Impact, allowing her to use human-centered
design in the consulting work she does. She is
an adjunct lecturer at the University of Florida in
the College of Journalism in the undergraduate
and graduate programs (focusing on
storytelling, communication, personal branding
podcasting,) and serves as a consultant with UF
MBA programs. She is currently writing a book
about public speaking. Taylor is a graduate of
UF, with a BA in business and an M.Ed. and Ed.S.
in mental health.
Valeria Kleiman
Born in Argentina, Dr. Valeria Kleiman received her undergraduate Physical Chemistry degree from the Univ of Buenos Aires, and her Ph.D. from the University of Illinois @ Chicago. After working in National Laboratories in Washington D.C., Dr. Kleiman moved to Gainesville to start her independent professorial career in 2001, where she is currently a faculty in the Department of Chemistry at UF. Dr Kleiman has received
several national and international awards and has been named visiting professor in universities in Spain and Argentina. Her research area of expertise is ultrafast
laser spectroscopy of light-harvesting materials, exploring fundamental studies to understand how synthetic materials interact with light. The goal of her investigations is to understand the intrinsic properties of materials that could be used to improve harvesting of solar light to generate clean, renewable and sustainable forms of energy. Her research work has been primarily funded by the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation and her work involves collaborations with scientists in the US, France, and her native Argentina. Her scientific and life experiences have led her to pursue new teaching horizons, developing an interdisciplinary course which combines her heritage as a Latina with her chemistry expertise (Chemistry in the Cocina Latina). She is the current academic co-director of two UF programs facilitating student opportunities to take classes and perform research abroad, in more than 10 different countries.