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Overview

Celebration of Scholarship

We are excited to announce that the Thirteenth Annual Celebration of Scholarship will take place on April 23 and April 24, 2025 at the main Romeoville campus.

Wednesday April 23, 2025
Extended Community Hour 12-2pm

Thursday April 24, 2025
10am-6pm

The Celebration of Scholarship is a campus-wide student symposium open to all undergraduate and graduate Lewis students. Celebration of Scholarship provides a platform for showcasing research projects, artistic creations, and innovative ideas, allowing students to share their achievements with faculty, peers, and the broader º£½ÇÉçÇø community.

The symposium highlights the diverse talents and intellectual contributions of the students from various disciplines. Participants are encouraged to present their work in various formats, such as oral presentations, posters, business plans, creative performances, or exhibits, reflecting the richness of scholarly and creative endeavors across the university.

Poster Sessions: Poster presenters will organize their work into a poster display and will present their research to an audience of Lewis students, alumni, and faculty.

Concurrent Sessions: Students who present in this format will host a 15-minute formal presentation using Microsoft PowerPoint. After the presentation is completed, Concurrent Session Presenters will have an additional 5 minutes to answer questions from an audience of Lewis students, alumni, and faculty. Students who are fully remote this semester are eligible to present via Zoom; all other students are expected to present in-person at the Romeoville campus.

Roundtable Sessions: The roundtable discussion format is a highly collaborative form of conference presentation in which each participating member contributes comments and questions to a scholarly conversation that develops over the course of 60 minutes. Participants write and circulate their papers to roundtable session members ahead of the scheduled discussion period. Each member of the roundtable formulates their own questions for other members of the roundtable and shares them on the day of the conference in front of an audience.

Panel Discussions: In this presentation format, a group of presenters will gather to discuss a particular topic. A faculty mentor will guide the discussion. Each panel presentation will be 45 minutes to one hour in length and will include opportunities for audience questions. Faculty mentors, in collaboration with student presenters, will determine the specifics of how each panel will be conducted. To apply for this presentation format, one member from the panel will complete a single application that includes the names and information of all presenters in the panel.

Creative Works: Students presenting a Creative Work may do so in either of the two formats listed above, or they can take the form of visual art presentation or a live performance. Presentations and performances will be limited to 10 minutes, followed by a 5-minute question and answer session. Students will also have the option of submitting 2D and 3D artwork to the President's Art Show competition. Winners will participate in a gallery talk to address questions about their work.

Br. Joel Damian Business Plan Competition: The Business Plan Competition invites students to formulate an idea, develop a business plan, and pitch their idea to a panel of judges. Students will have up to 15 minutes to present their business plan, followed by a 5-10 minute question and answer session with the judges.

Br. Joel Damian Business Pitch Competition: Participants will have 7 minutes to present their idea to the panel of judges. Unlike the Business Plan competition, students will not be required to have a faculty/alumni mentor, and a formal business plan is not required. The winners from the Business Plan and Business Pitch competitions will be competing for cash awards totaling $25,000 and space in the º£½ÇÉçÇø Regional Business Incubator to help launch their ideas.

Three Minute Thesis: This presentation category is open to graduate students only. Graduate students must present their research in a concurrent or poster session in order to be considered for this additional presentation category. Students presenting in this format will present their original research (or scholarship) in 180 seconds, in a form that can be understood by individuals without any background knowledge in the research area, using only one presentation slide.

STEM and HASS Slams: These events are similar to the Three Minute Thesis presentations but are open to undergraduate students only. Undergraduate STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math and Computer Science) students and Undergraduate HASS (Humanities, Arts, Social Sciences) students will present their original research in three minutes, using only one presentation slide. Undergraduate students must present their research in a concurrent or poster session in order to be considered for this additional presentation category.

The online application portal will open on December 1, 2024 and will close on February 14, 2025. Please see the Schedule of Events on the left sidebar for more important dates.

We look forward to assisting you,

Matthew Domico, PsyD
Co-Chair, Celebration of Scholarship

Marie Meyer, PhD
Co-Chair, Celebration of Scholarship

Questions? Please contact us at celebrationofscholarship@lewisu.edu

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