Collaborations Worth Celebrating
Research & Inquiry
Smith College students share research work with faculty as part of the annual Celebrating Collaborations event
Kyra Hawk ’27 holds up petri dishes of fibers from her team’s project: developing a biodegradable, cellulose-based menstrual pad made from tea leaf waste fibers. Photos by Jessica Scranton
Published May 1, 2026
Smithies engaging in collaborative scholarship is a regular occurrence on campus, but for one day each year, they get the opportunity to share and celebrate their work with the greater Smith College community.
“Celebrating Collaborations: Students and Faculty Working Together” showcases the wide breadth of research projects completed by Smith students and faculty. This year’s event was held on April 24 and included over 230 projects. Students behind four of them took a few moments to discuss their work before the event, and what they were most excited about sharing with attendees.
In Defense of the Corset
Nicole Degelman ’27
Degelman spent this past semester researching the craft techniques and historical sewing methods of turn-of-the-century corsets. With the support and guidance of Emily Dunn and Tilly Adams, costume shop director and assistant costume shop director, and Chris Aiken, professor of dance and chair of Smith's dance department, Degelman used her newfound skills to craft a corset of her own from scratch. The project served as her Interdisciplinary Making Concentration capstone.
Optimizing Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) Preprocessing for Young Children
Hannah Hafner ’26
Hafner’s project focuses on her honors thesis in neuroscience, which is about removing motion artifacts (spikes in the signal caused by study participants moving, which can potentially reduce data quality and make it harder to investigate research questions relating to the minds of younger subjects) from fNIRS neuroimaging data of four- and five-year-olds.
Lower Harkless Archaeocyath Reef Ecology and Ocean Chemistry in the Southwest United States
Quinnlan Steele ’27 and Rheva Wolf ’28
During interterm earlier this year, Steele and Wolf completed a week of field work outside of Gold Point, Nevada, and have spent the past semester investigating fossil ecology of marine invertebrates and the geochemistry of how they’ve been preserved in fossils.
Making Change: Cataloguing the Emily Shields Ancient Coin Collection
Skye Nugent ’28
Nugent has been cataloguing, identifying, and writing descriptions for the Smith coin collection since October of 2025, with the goal of producing a detailed, public-facing catalog for members of the Smith community to peruse. She estimates that the catalog is currently around 75% complete.