Layale Bazzi’s paper took first place in the medicine and biology division at the Canadian Association of Physicists annual congress.
Layale Bazzi’s paper took first place in the medicine and biology division at the Canadian Association of Physicists annual congress.
The University fêted top graduates Ian Stecher and Layale Bazzi during its Convocation ceremonies last week.
Carefully tucked away in Layale Bazzi’s academic portfolio sits a certificate she received in Grade 11.
This certificate, while not her most notable accomplishment, represents a moment that forever influenced her academic career.
“When I first saw the University of Windsor’s department of physics in all its glory and met some of the students in the physics club at the time, it was like a whole new world opened up to me,” Bazzi said on Tuesday.
A group of students will present their investigation into the status of women in science at UWindsor at the UWill Discover research conference.
Students in a new science internship course earn academic credit while gaining real-world experience.
Disciplines in the humanities provide a frame for her to understand the implications of her work in sciences, says Layale Bazzi. The second-year physics student took top honours in the “Why Humanities” competition for her impassioned defense of their importance.
“Day in and day out, I am differentiating, integrating, rearranging and solving equations that describe the physical world around us,” she wrote. “What I can’t tell you are the ethical implications. All I can provide are facts about nature, and not human nature.”