Sharing science with the next generation
Experiences like these helped Stuwe realize how much communicating science serves the broader community. An Oregon native, she earned her undergraduate degree in biochemistry and molecular biology at Oregon State before spending several years working in industry research and development. While she valued the technical experience, she said she missed academia.
“I missed the kinds of questions we ask and the broad research topics. A lot of the basic science feels really important to me,” she said.
She returned to OSU for graduate school and is now in the final stages of her Ph.D.
"I really want people to walk away feeling inspired and empowered to use their positions, whether that’s as scientists or academics or community members."
The same commitment to access and community care that guides her work in music also shapes how Stuwe brings science to young people. Through her research lab, she developed a hands-on activity that allows visiting middle and high school students to purify a green fluorescent protein, a molecule that glows under ultraviolet light, from bacterial cells. The experience gives students a chance to handle real research materials and see science come to life.
She has led the activity with student groups from rural communities, schools with a majority of Spanish-speaking students and coastal regions, and has seen firsthand how early exposure can shift the way students imagine their futures. “I’ve seen kids become really excited about science,” she said.
Bringing it all together
In her Inclusive Excellence Multimedia Experience, Stuwe will bring all of these experiences together, blending storytelling, live music and scientific insight to expand how scientists think about their role in society.
“I really want people to walk away feeling inspired and empowered to use their positions, whether that’s as scientists or academics or community members. I want them to feel empowered and realize they do have power to enact change in the community around them,” she said.