Land Acknowledgement Statement
Land Acknowledgement Statement
As a land-grant institution, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has a responsibility to acknowledge the historical context in which it exists. In order to remind ourselves and our community, we will begin with this statement. We are currently on the lands of the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Piankashaw, Wea, Miami, Mascoutin, Odawa, Sauk, Mesquaki, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Chickasaw Nations. It is necessary for us to acknowledge these Native Nations and for us to work with them as we move forward as an institution. Over the next 150 years, we will be a vibrant community inclusive of all our differences, with Native peoples at the core of our efforts.
The Land Acknowledgement Statement
As a land-grant institution, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has a responsibility to acknowledge the historical context in which it exists. In order to remind ourselves and our community, we will begin with this statement. We are currently on the lands of the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Piankashaw, Wea, Miami, Mascoutin, Odawa, Sauk, Mesquaki, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Chickasaw Nations. It is necessary for us to acknowledge these Native Nations and for us to work with them as we move forward as an institution. Over the next 150 years, we will be a vibrant community inclusive of all our differences, with Native peoples at the core of our efforts.
Land Acknowledgement Statement
As a land-grant institution, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has a responsibility to acknowledge the historical context in which it exists. In order to remind ourselves and our community, we will begin with this statement. We are currently on the lands of the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Piankashaw, Wea, Miami, Mascoutin, Odawa, Sauk, Mesquaki, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Chickasaw Nations. It is necessary for us to acknowledge these Native Nations and for us to work with them as we move forward as an institution. Over the next 150 years, we will be a vibrant community inclusive of all our differences, with Native peoples at the core of our efforts.
Land Acknowledgement Statement
As a land-grant institution, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has a responsibility to acknowledge the historical context in which it exists. In order to remind ourselves and our community, we will begin with this statement. We are currently on the lands of the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Piankashaw, Wea, Miami, Mascoutin, Odawa, Sauk, Mesquaki, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Chickasaw Nations. It is necessary for us to acknowledge these Native Nations and for us to work with them as we move forward as an institution. Over the next 150 years, we will be a vibrant community inclusive of all our differences, with Native peoples at the core of our efforts.
Messages from Dean Constable and Committee Chair
Dean: Dr. Peter Constable
Welcome to the annual Awards and Scholarships Celebration! On this site you will find the names of outstanding students and generous donors. You will even learn a little bit about the students' passions and aspirations and about the donors' intentions. Despite the fact that most of the scholarship givers have a few more decades
Dean: Peter Constable
Welcome to the annual Awards and Scholarships Celebration!
On this site you will find the names of outstanding students and generous donors. You will even learn a little bit about the students' passions and aspirations and about the donors' intentions.
Despite the fact that most of the scholarship givers have a few more decades of life experience than the scholarship recipients do, I think you will find that both groups have worked very hard to get to where they are in life. Both groups care deeply about animals, health, community, and altruism.
On behalf of the College of Veterinary Medicine, I extend our gratitude to all those we celebrate this day. Your efforts will have great impact on the health and happiness of people and animals for years to come.
Committee Chair: Dr. Jonathan Samuelson
Welcome to the College of Veterinary Medicine Awards and Scholarships Celebration 2024 Good afternoon. I feel a great deal of admiration to be here on behalf of the Awards and Scholarships Committee as we celebrate our student awardees and thank our alumni and other friends of the college. The sheer range of awards
Dr. Jonathan Samuelson
Welcome to the College of Veterinary Medicine Awards and Scholarships Celebration 2024
Good afternoon. I feel a great deal of admiration to be here on behalf of the Awards and Scholarships Committee as we celebrate our student awardees and thank our alumni and other friends of the college. The sheer range of awards and scholarships that our supporters provide is truly wonderous; it is a sustained source of positivity, generosity, and assistance, and I hope that you find it as inspiring as I do.
Our student body is clearly dedicated to animal health and well-being. They have worked hard in the face of a constantly changing local environment and larger world around them. Each year I read A LOT of essays and applications for scholarships. It’s a daunting task, yet I always come away filled with hope.
To our students, thank you for your inspiration, hard work, and dedication to our profession. And congratulations! You have earned this honor!
To our alumni and friends, today is not possible without you. Thank you for supporting the college with your time, effort, and generosity. I consider it an honor to be tasked with responsibly selecting awardees for the gifts you have given. Your efforts make our college stronger, and our students better able to navigate the high cost of a veterinary education.
To our advancement team, thank you for your hard work as facilitators, communicators, and change agents for the college.
In closing, I would like to thank the other members of the awards and scholarships committee for their commitment to today’s purpose.
And one more thing, “May the fourth be with you.”
Jonathan Samuelson, DVM, MS, DACVP
Clinical Assistant Professor, Veterinary Clinical Medicine
Keynote Speaker
Dr. Kathryn Golden of Northern Lakes Equine Practice
Dr. Kathryn Golden of Northern Lakes Equine Practice
Thank you so much for having me here today. It truly is an honor to come back and be with all of you. As Christine said, my name is Kathryn Golden and I am a 2013 graduate.
Some of you in this room may remember my class as the first class that went through the “new” curriculum. We started our veterinary school learning on clinics, had cumulative examinations, and benefited from the clinical skills lab. The new curriculum was truly revolutionary and changed the scope of learning for veterinary students forever.
Tangential benefits of this new curriculum that are less measurable on paper, but arguably equally important, were in the relationships that formed between classmates, upper classmen, and even residents and faculty. The veterinary world is so small, and by forging relationships early in our careers we, and classes thereafter, have benefited from an amazing network of colleagues.
Dr. Kathryn Golden
University of Illinois Awards and Scholarships Lunch
Thank you so much for having me here today. It truly is an honor to come back and be with all of you. As Christine said, my name is Kathryn Golden and I am a 2013 graduate.
Some of you in this room may remember my class as the first class that went through the “new” curriculum. We started our veterinary school learning on clinics, had cumulative examinations, and benefited from the clinical skills lab. The new curriculum was truly revolutionary and changed the scope of learning for veterinary students forever.
Tangential benefits of this new curriculum that are less measurable on paper, but arguably equally important, were in the relationships that formed between classmates, upper classmen, and even residents and faculty. The veterinary world is so small, and by forging relationships early in our careers we, and classes thereafter, have benefited from an amazing network of colleagues.
This connection was one of the biggest gifts that I was given as a result of my coursework at Illinois. Understanding and having a sense of being part of something much bigger than just myself is what laid the foundation for my career and why I am here today, an equine practice owner, and proud scholarship donor.
My path to veterinary school didn’t start until I was a freshman in college at William Woods University, a small liberal arts school in Fulton, Missouri. I was drawn to William Woods because of my love of horses. They offered a four-year degree in both Equestrian Science and Equestrian Administration.
During my early coursework I took an Equine Health and First Aid class that completely captivated me. Very shortly thereafter, I switched to a degree in Biology with a minor in Chemistry in preparation for application to veterinary school.
Even though my passion has always been firmly rooted in horses, once in veterinary school I found myself confused about pursuing a career in equine medicine. Was making my passion my career a good choice? Or would I resent working on horses and potentially not see enough of my own?
This is the crux of the problem that so many veterinary students face. We have all this fervent desire to help animals, but how do we find a balance between being a veterinarian and becoming consumed by our careers?
The veterinary community at large is in crisis between the influx of family pets during COVID, the number of retiring veterinarians, declining mental health, and the huge financial burden associated with schooling. The equine veterinary industry has been particularly hard hit. In 2023, roughly fifty—FIVE ZERO—equine veterinarians graduated and entered the field.
Even more staggering is that less than 50% of this small number of graduating equine vets remain in equine practice after 5 years. There are so many reasons for these alarming numbers, but one of the main reasons is the economic stress associated with being a veterinarian.
When my business partner, Laurel, and I were laying the framework for our practice, we spoke in depth about our core values. One thing we both felt passionately about was showing veterinary students that there is a realistic way to make a living and have a well-rounded and fulfilling life as an equine veterinarian.
This led us to starting the Northern Lakes Equine Practice Scholarship for equine veterinary students here at Illinois, but also at Iowa State, Laurel’s alma mater, and soon to be at University of Wisconsin-Madison, where our associate graduated. The goal of our scholarship is not only to provide financial support to equine veterinary students but also to raise awareness that there is a sustainable way to have a fulfilling career in equine veterinary medicine.
In addition to our financial support, we visit each of our alma maters on an annual basis to talk to the student AAEP chapters about equine private practice. Connecting with students is one of the single best things that I have found injects excitement back into my day to day and helps prevent my own feelings of burnout.
As much as these interactions are about helping equine-passionate students enter and remain in equine medicine, they also help ground me. I will never forget the factors that changed the trajectory of my career. Firstly Dr. Foreman, who was my assigned mentor for professional development, bluntly if not so eloquently said to me, “Kathryn, it is obvious you want to be an
equine veterinarian. Get out of your own way and go do it.” He was able to have this insight because of the relationship we formed during my early years in veterinary school as a direct result of the integrative curriculum.
And secondly, a wonderful program that has recently returned called Opportunities in Equine Practice (OEPS), which is an immersive experience for third-year equine students in Kentucky that is fully funded by donors and comes at no cost to the veterinary students attending.
When I take a step back and look at the veterinary industry, there is one word that summarizes what it means to me: Community. To be a veterinarian is to be a part of a community. It is so important that we, as members, offer support both financially and emotionally.
I am forever grateful to the scholarships I received during my education, and I am honored to be able to give back now that I am on the other side. My career wouldn’t be what it is without the incredible support and mentorship I received along the way, and I am just one story. We each have our own.
I encourage donors who are here today to look around at these incredible students—who are the future of animal health—and reflect on your own journeys to where you are today. Who got you here? How would your path have been different had you had additional resources? And most importantly, what can you be doing now to further support the students who are the future of our industry.
The more we champion each other, the more our patients will benefit from educated, excited, and content veterinarians. We all abide by our oath take at graduation “to do no harm.” My hope is that we are able to extend that promise to ourselves as well, by learning how to thrive in the lifestyle that is being a veterinarian.
Student Speakers
Max Paulson: Fourth Year Student
Britt Kiokemeister: First Year Student
Awards & Scholarships
Scholarships A-C
Scholarships D-K
Scholarships L-Q
Scholarships R-Z
Corporate
Congratulations to Our 2023 VMAA Alumni Award Winners
Dr. Erwin Small Distinguished Alumni Award
Dr. Julia Whittington, Class of 1997, has been selected to receive the Dr. Erwin Small Distinguished Alumni Award. This honor recognizes graduates who have excelled in their field and made significant contributions to the profession and/or the college.
Her nomination states, “Dr. Whittington is one of the founding members of our Zoo Med program, which is now, thanks to her dedication, one of the best in the country. The Wildlife Medical Clinic has grown to a highly visible community resource, providing care for rescued wildlife, assistance to wildlife rehabilitation specialists, and amazing clinical teaching for veterinary students.”
Additionally, Dr. Whittington’s leadership of the Veterinary Teaching Hospital, beginning in 2017, has ushered in a period of “tremendous growth in caseload, staff numbers, renovated facilities, and faculty numbers.”
Outstanding Young Alumni Award
Dr. Nicki Rosenhagen, Class of 2015, has been named Outstanding Young Alumni for creativity and entrepreneurship.
After graduating from college, Dr. Rosenhagen began working as a wildlife rehabilitator with the PAWS Wildlife Center in Washington state. There she decided to pursue a veterinary degree, and chose the University of Illinois because of its strong wildlife medicine program.
After completing her DVM and a wildlife internship at Illinois, Dr. Rosenhagen returned to PAWS Wildlife Center as an associate veterinarian. In 2019 she assumed leadership of the veterinary care team.
In this role she actively engages in training veterinary interns and veterinary student externs, providing public education, conducting wildlife and rehabilitation research, and offering continuing education for veterinarians and wildlife rehabilitators.
Special Service Award
The Special Service Award will be given to Dr. Amy Schnelle. The Special Service Award honors an individual or organization that has made significant contributions to the advancement of the veterinary profession or to the college.
Dr. Schnelle, who is a diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists and holds a master’s degree, joined the faculty at the College of Veterinary Medicine in 2017.
Recently, she has taken on leadership roles as chair of the intern mentorship committee and as Service Head of Clinical Pathology in the Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory. When a staff shortage led to gaps in coverage for the service, Dr. Schnelle stepped up to cover most holidays and also learned how to troubleshoot the analyzers in the clin path lab.
Her nominator wrote: “She has gone above and beyond the role of a typical faculty member. She has done an exceptional job making sure that the clinicians, students and patients in our hospital were served.”
Spotlight on New Scholarships
Class of 1986 Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing with financial need and a member of SAVMA.
Sponsored by the Class of 1986 Endowment Fund
Class of 2004 Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing with financial need.
Sponsored by the Class of 2004 Endowment Fund
Monica Dillon – Nelson and Steve Nelson Award
Awarded to any student in good academic standing within the college. Preference will be given to underserved student population with a financial need.
Sponsored by Monica Dillon – Nelson and Steve Nelson
Curtis A. Drake Memorial Scholarship
Second- or third-year student pursuing their DVM degree. Preference given to students who participated in a 4-H program for a minimum of seven years and applicants will be asked to provide verification from their respective county extension office. The recipient can win multiple years but needs to reapply for the scholarship. One student cannot win both the Belle and Curtis Drake Scholarship in a single academic year.
Sponsored by the Curtis A. Drake Memorial Scholarship Fund
Dr. Steven Helmink Memorial Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing in Clinton, Fayette, Marion, Madison, St. Clair, Washington, Jefferson, Wayne, Jasper, Cumberland, Effingham, Bond, Macoupin, Montgomery, Clay, Shelby, or Jersey county. Preference to students with a strong interest in agriculture particularly livestock production.
Sponsored by Lisa Helmink and Family
Linda Hillis Foley Award
For a graduate from St. Ignatius College Prep of Chicago, Illinois. Financial need. Good academic standing with a small animal focus.
Sponsored by the Linda Hillis Foley Award Fund
Jackson Family Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing with financial need.
Sponsored by Scott and Brenda Jackson
Dr. Edward “Fast Eddy” McGinniss Class of 1984 Scholarship Fund
Scholarships in the unit.
Sponsored by Dr. Edward McGinniss
Stan and Dawn Sutherland Scholarship Fund
Fund shall support scholarships for DVM students within the Unit.
Sponsored by Stan and Dawn Sutherland
Sally Sedlak Vaughan Shelter Medicine Scholarship
For UI DVM students who have demonstrated interest in animal shelter medicine and who have completed their first year in the DVM program. Second preference will be given to applicants who a) graduated high school in Sangamon County or adjacent counties (Logan, Menard, Macon, Christian, Montgomery, Macoupin, Morgan, or Cass) AND intend to practice in Sangamon County or adjacent counties b) If there are no applicants from the listed counties, an awardee may be selected from any Illinois county. Students may receive the award more than once but must reapply each year.
Sponsored by the Sally Sedlak Vaughan Trust
Spotlight on New Scholarships
Class of 1986 Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing with financial need and a member of SAVMA.
Sponsored by the Class of 1986 Endowment Fund
Class of 2004 Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing with financial need.
Sponsored by the Class of 2004 Endowment Fund
Monica Dillon – Nelson and Steve Nelson Award
Awarded to any student in good academic standing within the college. Preference will be given to underserved student population with a financial need.
Sponsored by Monica Dillon – Nelson and Steve Nelson
Curtis A. Drake Memorial Scholarship
Second- or third-year student pursuing their DVM degree. Preference given to students who participated in a 4-H program for a minimum of seven years and applicants will be asked to provide verification from their respective county extension office. The recipient can win multiple years but needs to reapply for the scholarship. One student cannot win both the Belle and Curtis Drake Scholarship in a single academic year.
Sponsored by the Curtis A. Drake Memorial Scholarship Fund
Dr. Steven Helmink Memorial Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing in Clinton, Fayette, Marion, Madison, St. Clair, Washington, Jefferson, Wayne, Jasper, Cumberland, Effingham, Bond, Macoupin, Montgomery, Clay, Shelby, or Jersey county. Preference to students with a strong interest in agriculture particularly livestock production.
Sponsored by Lisa Helmink and Family
Linda Hillis Foley Award
For a graduate from St. Ignatius College Prep of Chicago, Illinois. Financial need. Good academic standing with a small animal focus.
Sponsored by the Linda Hillis Foley Award Fund
Jackson Family Scholarship
For a student in good academic standing with financial need.
Sponsored by Scott and Brenda Jackson
Dr. Edward “Fast Eddy” McGinniss Class of 1984 Scholarship Fund
Scholarships in the unit.
Sponsored by Dr. Edward McGinniss
Stan and Dawn Sutherland Scholarship Fund
Fund shall support scholarships for DVM students within the Unit.
Sponsored by Stan and Dawn Sutherland
Sally Sedlak Vaughan Shelter Medicine Scholarship
For UI DVM students who have demonstrated interest in animal shelter medicine and who have completed their first year in the DVM program. Second preference will be given to applicants who a) graduated high school in Sangamon County or adjacent counties (Logan, Menard, Macon, Christian, Montgomery, Macoupin, Morgan, or Cass) AND intend to practice in Sangamon County or adjacent counties b) If there are no applicants from the listed counties, an awardee may be selected from any Illinois county. Students may receive the award more than once but must reapply each year.
Sponsored by the Sally Sedlak Vaughan Trust
The Awards & Scholarships Selection Committee
Dr. Russhawn Aldridge
Lecturer, Veterinary Clinical Medicine
Tauqeer Alam
Research Assistant Professor, Pathobiology
Christine Dietrich
Ex-officio, Associate Dean of Advancement
Dr. Jonathan Foreman
Professor VCM, Ex-officio, Associate Dean,
Academic & Student Affairs
Dr. Makoto Inoue
Associate Professor, Comparative Biosciences
Dr. Jonathan Samuelson – Chairperson
Clinical Assistant Professor, Veterinary Clinical Medicine
Dr. Thomas Lowery
Instructor, Veterinary Clinical Medicine
Dr. Ian Sprandel
Senior Lecturer, Comparative Biosciences
Dr. Federico Zuckermann
Professor, Pathobiology
Meet the Dean and the CVM Advancement Team
Begin a scholarship or support the college TODAY!
Dr. Peter Constable
Dean
Christine Dietrich
Associate Dean of Advancement
Ginger Passalacqua
Associate Director of Advancement
Dee Ann Bates
Office Manager
Jackie Watson
Office Support Assistant
Joel Agate
Assistant Director of Advancement
Awards & Scholarships Book Download
Additional Thanks To
Academic and Student Affairs Office
Advancement Office
Dean’s Office
Design Group @ Vet Med
Finance Office
Marketing and Communications Office
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