ASU's Origins Project announces recipient of $10K Postdoctoral Lectureship Award


Aomawa Shields of the University of California-Los Angeles is the recipient of the 2016 Origins Project Postdoctoral Lectureship Award.

The Origins Project is pleased to announce Aomawa Shields of the University of California-Los Angeles is the recipient of the 2016 Origins Project Postdoctoral Lectureship Award.

This $10,000 award, the largest of its kind in the world, is offered to promising young scholar-scientists on the basis of their scholarly achievement and potential, as well as their skills in science communication. Part of the award is a week-long residency at Arizona State University where Shields will offer a series of departmental colloquia and a large public lecture in early April. 

Shields’ research focuses on exploring the climate and potential habitability of extrasolar planets orbiting low-mass stars. Currently a National Science Foundation Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellow, Shields is also a University of California President's Postdoctoral Fellow in the UCLA Department of Physics and Astronomy and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

She is also a TED Fellow whose TED talk “How We’ll Find Life on Other Planets” has nearly 1 million views. In addition to her many scientific accomplishments, Shields is a classically trained actor with an Master of Fine Arts degree, a skill she uses to communicate her love of science. 

“Dr. Shields rose to the top of a very impressive list of nominees,” said Origins Project director Lawrence Krauss. “Her cutting edge research in a topic of great current interest, combined with her clear communication skills, make her the ideal Origins Postdoctoral Award winner.”

“We are extremely happy she has accepted the award and are looking forward with anticipation to her visit, as should members of the ASU community and the public at large. Her presentations will be thrilling.”

For more information on the public lecture, please see: https://origins.asu.edu/events.

The Origins Project Postdoctoral Lectureship Award is one of many awards and scholarships that The Origins Project has available to students, researchers and scholars. For more information visit https://origins.asu.edu/awards-scholarships.

Written by Michelle Iwen, Origins Project

More Science and technology

 

Portrait of a white woman with long blond hair wearing a black blazer posing with her hands on her hips

Water expert drinks in ASU Regents Professor recognition

Hurricanes helped shape Amber Wutich's childhood.Growing up in Miami, she was no stranger to their whirling winds and water…

Portrait of a white man with short dark hair wearing a white button down shirt with his arms crossed

How a childhood passion led Jim Bell to being named an ASU Regents Professor

In the early 1970s, in a rural town in the smallest state in the U.S., a young boy in elementary school began to imagine the…

Kathy King and Scott King standing in an outdoor setting smiling

Alum's journey to leadership shows the power of lifelong learning

In 1976, Kathy King was among a minority when a high school teacher advised her to pursue chemical engineering at Arizona State…