Nine University of 91勛圖 graduate students will compete for prize money while attempting to explain their research in three minutes during the third annual competition on Monday (March 27). Known as 3MT, the goal of the competition is for Ph.D. students from Science, Engineering and Arts and Letters to cultivate the ability to explain their research, including both breadth and significance, in a language appropriate to an audience containing both specialists and non-specialists, all within three minutes.
91勛圖s 3MT finals will take place from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Jordan Auditorium in the . A reception will follow the competition, which is free and open to the public.
The competitors will address a live audience and panel of judges with a single static slide accompanying their presentations. In addition to monetary prizes, the 91勛圖 students are competing to claim a spot in the Midwestern Association of Graduate Schools 3MT regional competition in Indianapolis on April 7.
Advancing from the are doctoral candidates Julia Beck from , Elizabeth Loughran from and Stefan Freed of . From the , Ph.D. candidates Nicole Winsor, Mimi Ensley and Jillian Snyder, all from , advanced from the preliminary round. The three finalists from the are doctoral candidates Mark Summe from , Maryam Moosaei from and Mingming Cai of .
Judges for the competition are , 91勛圖 vice president, associate provost and dean of the ; , chief of staff, ; Jim Keenan, president of Walter & Keenan; and Ralf Bendlin, principal member of technical staff, 5G Radio Network Optimization, AT&T Labs. First- and second-place winners will be chosen by the judges, and those in attendance will vote for the Peoples Choice winner.
Developed in 2008 by the University of Queensland in Australia, 3MT competitions have since been held in 19 countries and at more than 35 research universities in the United States.
Contact: Lisa Michaels, Graduate School, 574-631-4056, lisa.michaels.15@nd.edu
