VCU to send record-breaking contingent of students, alumni to Clinton Global Initiative University

Mashaba Rashid and Sravya Dhavala

Caption: Mashaba Rashid, a junior biomedical engineering major, left; and Sravya Dhavala, a sophomore chemical engineering major, right, are among the Clinton Global Initiative University students.

By Brian McNeill

University Public Affairs

A record-breaking nine Virginia Commonwealth University students and alumni have been accepted to participate in this fall’s Clinton Global Initiative University, a prestigious event that brings together more than 1,100 innovative students from around the world who are committed to tackling some of the most pressing challenges in the areas of education, environment and climate change, peace and human rights, poverty alleviation and public health.

Among the students’ projects are an effort to eliminate synthetic trash in landfills via enzymes derived from fungi, a venture to develop a cutting-edge electronic health records system, a program that would deliver math and computer skills training in rural India, and the creation of an app that harnesses the power of big data to reduce the chances of food shortages in Africa. The contingent of nine students and alumni is the largest VCU has ever sent to the Clinton Global Initiative University.

As part of the Clinton Global Initiative University, which is marking its 10th meeting and will be held Oct. 13–15 at Northeastern University in Boston, the participants will have opportunities to attend sessions and special events, network with peers, meet their assigned commitment mentors, build skills, identify potential partners, and possibly even obtain funding.

The VCU students are:

Mashaba Rashid, a junior biomedical engineering major in the School of Engineering.

Rashid’s Eco-Schools Leadership Initiative will bring VCU students to Richmond-area elementary schools to teach topics related to the environment, such as sustainable food, biodiversity, climate change, recycling and pollution. The goal is to create connections between college and elementary school students, and to raise awareness among children about environmental issues.

Michael Mahoney, a Master of Product Innovation student at the da Vinci Center, which is a collaboration of VCU’s Schools of the Arts, Business, Engineering and College of Humanities and Sciences.

Mahoney's venture, Mycelio LLC, in partnership with recent Brandcenter alumnus Rick Plautz, aims to launch a pilot program that will study the effectiveness of enzymes derived from fungi in breaking down polyurethane — one of the most diverse and ubiquitous synthetic materials on the planet.

Valena Doe, a senior management major in the School of Business who is also studying for both a Venture Creation Certificate and an Innovation and Entrepreneurship Certificate in the da Vinci Center’s Innovate Living-Learning Program.

Doe, who is from Liberia, is seeking to address Liberia’s poor education system by providing STEM education to 120 boys and girls at a school in Paynesville, Liberia.

Sravya Dhavala, a sophomore chemical engineering major in the School of Engineering.

Dhavala’s project, Sabalikarana — the Kannada word for empowerment — seeks to empower middle-aged women in rural India by teaching them basic math and computer skills. The project will partner with local government schools to provide a safe space for the women to learn.

Tatenda Ndambakuwa, a senior in the Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics, is developing an app that will allow African farmers to upload data about their farm’s livestock and crop management, seed and feed access, milk production analysis, cattle pricing and other data points, thereby allowing real time agriculture mapping and planning for all individual farms.

Joel Zeballos, a Product Innovation Certificate student in the da Vinci Center and a senior marketing major in the School of Business, and Camille Brenke, a recent School of Nursing graduate.

Brenke and Zeballos, leaders of the social justice student organization Political Latinxs United for Movement and Action in Society at VCU, are planning to expand PLUMAS’ UndocuAlly trainings to greatly increase the number of VCU faculty and students and Richmond Public Schools teachers who are certified in being able to better support undocumented immigrant students populations.

R. Jerome Dixon, a Master of Decision Analytics student in the School of Business.

Dixon is developing a prototype electronic health system that can share data across multiple state agencies based on the architecture of the Virginia Longitudinal Data System, which comprises several component technologies that support secure, authorized research addressing today’s top policy and state program questions.

Garret Westlake, Ph.D., executive director of the da Vinci Center, said VCU is proud of the record number of VCU students that will be heading to the Clinton Global Initiative University.

“One of the most rewarding aspects of joining VCU as the executive director of the da Vinci Center has been connecting outstanding VCU students to national and international platforms,” Westlake said. “Having nine students and alumni accepted to CGI U is one example of the powerhouse that VCU is becoming through greater coordination of our university innovation and entrepreneurship efforts.”

VCU joined the Clinton Global Initiative University Network as a partner university in the spring. The new partnership demonstrates that VCU is rising as a leading university for innovation and entrepreneurship, Westlake said.