Page 40 - Penn State Civil and Environmental Engineering Magazine
P. 40

 STUDENT NEWS
 Penn State civil engineering undergraduate wins Goldwater Scholarship
By Sean Yoder
The Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation announced March 27, 2020 that Autumn Deitrick was named a 2020 Goldwater Scholar.
Deitrick, of Williamsport, Pennsylvania, is a civil engineering major in the water resources track in the College of Engineering and a Schreyer Honors Scholar.
“I am incredibly honored and grateful for this award and know it would not have been possible without the unwavering support from my mentors, parents, family, and friends,” Deitrick said.
“Being named a 2020 Barry Goldwater Scholar has been a goal of mine since my first year of college because of the award’s ability to open opportunities for graduate school and beyond.”
Since her first year at Penn State, Deitrick has been a member of the Environmental Fluid Dynamics research group under Xiaofeng Liu, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering. During her two years with this group, she worked on her own research project titled, “Optimizing the Weir Equation for Nature-Like Fish Passages.” As part of this research, she said, she constructed her own experimental flume last summer thanks to support from an Erickson
“I would place Autumn in the top 1% of students I have known in civil engineering over my 30 years as a professor. I am so impressed with her spirit, intelligence, curiosity, maturity, and creativity.”
Discovery Grant. Deitrick researched how to accurately predict attraction flow for nature-like fish passages which help aquatic life complete their migratory journeys. She said that while biologists have determined the optimal flow patterns to entice fish to enter these passages, there isn’t yet a formula to predict these flows.
This work is currently on hold, however, as Deitrick has recently joined the FEWs Lab under Caitlin Grady, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering and research associate in the Rock Ethics Institute. Here, Deitrick will work alongside lab mates to investigate embedded nitrogen and phosphorous accounting into and out of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed as part of the, “Thriving Agricultural Systems in Urban Landscapes,” project funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Deitrick was also mentored by Schreyer Honors College Dean Peggy A. Johnson, who lauded Deitrick’s abilities and enthusiasm.
“Autumn has been strongly engaged in research at Penn State, almost since she walked in the door,” Johnson said. “Since I am also a professor of civil engineering, she came to me for advice on how to get started in research. I was able to connect her with a research project that I had left behind when I became the dean. I would place Autumn in the top 1% of students I have known in civil engineering over my 30 years as a professor. I am so impressed with her spirit, intelligence, curiosity, maturity, and creativity.”
Deitrick said she plans to pursue a doctorate in environmental fluid mechanics and become a professor, one day directing her own hydraulics lab while leading a research group in the study of river hydraulics.
The scholarship, named for statesman Barry Goldwater, is among the most competitive honors in the country for undergraduates in the STEM fields. The Goldwater Foundation announced 396 scholarship recipients for 2020 from the 1,343 nominated students from 461 academic institutions in the U.S. Scholarships are awarded up to $7,500 per year for a maximum of two years.
The University Fellowships Office is part of Penn State Office of Undergraduate Education, the academic administrative unit that provides leadership and coordination for University-wide programs and initiatives in support of undergraduate teaching and learning at Penn State. Learn more about Undergraduate Education at undergrad.psu.edu.
 40 CEE NEWSLETTER • VOLUME 36, 2020


















































































   38   39   40   41   42