The Albert Dorman Colloquium Series
Staying informed about all aspects of the world around you beyond your professional interests is an essential component of leadership.
Spring 2025
The Albert Dorman Colloquium Series focuses on the interface between Science, Technology and Society. Colloquia normally meet during university common hours each semester. They feature talks by - and conversations with - industry, academic, and government leaders on a wide range of topics. Field trips to corporate, scientific, cultural, and community organizations are also included. In addition, some important campus political and cultural events are co-sponsored by the Honors College and regarded as part of the Colloquium Series.
Dorman Scholars must attend at least 2 colloquia and Dean's Scholars must attend at least one colloquium each semester. Both cohorts are strongly encouraged to attend more than the required amount. Please click on the colloquia titles below for more details and register through the Dorman Difference (powered by Suitable).
Regulations for Colloquia attendance: Attendance will be recorded at the entrance to the colloquium via the Dorman Difference (powered by Suitable). Dorman scholars who attend the event will then need to complete the colloquium survey, also through the Dorman Difference (powered by Suitable). The survey must be completed (within 10 days of the event) in order to receive credit for the colloquium. Scholars arriving more than 10 minutes after the start of the colloquium or leaving the colloquium early will not be granted credit for the colloquium.
You are welcome to review past colloquium topics and speakers here.
2:30pm - 4:00pm | NJIT Campus Center Ballroom
Engineering NASA’s Webb Space Telescope
Speaker: Mike Menzel, Mission Systems Engineer, NASA
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is the most complex and powerful space telescope ever made. Launched in 2021, Webb had over 344 single points-of-failure that it successfully completed before releasing its first scientific images on July 12, 2022. Hear from the Webb Mission Systems Engineer and New Jersey native, Mike Menzel, about the engineering behind building, launching, and now operating Webb.
Mike Menzel is the NASA Mission Systems Engineer for the James Webb Space Telescope at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Menzel has held this position since he joined NASA in June of 2004. His involvement with the James Webb Project extends back to 1998 when he became the Chief Systems Engineer for Lockheed Martin's Pre-Phase A studies for the then Next Generation Space Telescope and later for Lockheed's Phase A James Webb Space Telescope contract. In 2001, he joined the Northrop Grumman James Webb systems engineering team.
In his role on James Webb, Menzel oversees all system engineering efforts which include requirements formulation and management, systems design and integration, and systems validation and verification. He has led numerous studies which have contributed to the systems design and verification program. He wrote one of the first articles to layout a verification program for the system, "A Strawman Verification Program for the Next Generation Space Telescope" in 1998 and led the Independent Verification Assessment Team, to evaluate the verification risks in 2003.
Prior to his involvement with James Webb, Menzel was the Deputy Program Manager for the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Servicing Missions Group for Lockheed Martin. While in this position, he participated in system engineering activities for the HST Orbital System Test (HOST), which flew on STS 95. Between 1995 and 1997, he was the Director of Systems Engineering at Orbital Science Corporation (OSC) in Germantown, Maryland. Aside from the functional management duties of this position he led several proposal efforts; among them, the successful GALEX Mission proposal for the OSC spacecraft. Between 1990 and 1995, Menzel was a Principal Member of the Technical Staff for Lockheed Martin's Astro-Space Division in East Windsor, New Jersey and Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. While in this position, he contributed to numerous system conceptual design studies, was the functional manager of the Sensor Systems Group and developed and taught the Systems Engineering Training course for the Astro-Space Division. He was awarded the Martin Marietta General Manager's Award in 1993 for these efforts. Between 1981 and 1990, Menzel was an antenna engineer for RCA Astro in East Windsor New Jersey.
Menzel received a BS degree in Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technnology in 1981 and earned an MS degree in Physics from Columbia University in 1986 while he was working for RCA.
During his career, Menzel has held various positions as an adjunct college instructor for Astronomy and Physics. He is an avid amateur astronomer and is a member of the American Astronomical Society.
ADHC / JHCSLA / NCE Co-Sponsored Colloquium
11:15am - 12:30pm | Martinson Honors Hall Lobby - 2nd floor
Sounds of the Skies: Music Inspired by Birds
Performers: Clara Abel, Hannah Burnett, Matthew Graybil, Giancarlo Latta, Alexander Liebermann, David Rothenberg
This lecture-concert will showcase some of the most remarkable classical works inspired by birds. Featuring live performances by world-class musicians, the program spans music from 1723 to 2025! Beyond the music, this event highlights the significance of birdsong in our world today, exploring its cultural, ecological, and artistic importance. Join us for this experience that intertwines nature, science, and music.
Clara Abel:
Praised for her “gorgeous tone and fine solo playing” (Nordskjye), cellist Clara Abel enjoys a colorful international performing career on both modern and baroque instruments. She is a member of Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra and the Tempest String Quartet and has held quartet residencies at Kneisel Hall and Norfolk Chamber Music Festivals. As winner of Juilliard’s baroque concerto competition she soloed with Juilliard415 at BEMF and Alice Tully Hall. Other recent highlights include Elgar’s cello concerto with NYO-USA, and her Lincoln Center solo debut with Masaaki Suzuki. She holds three degrees from Juilliard, where she specialized in chamber music and historical performance and was a proud recipient of the Kovner Fellowship.
Hannah Burnett:
New York-based violist Hannah Burnett enjoys an invigorating career as an active freelancer, holding positions in the Princeton Symphony Orchestra and New York Classical Players, and serving as guest principal viola with the Washington Heights Chamber Orchestra for the 2024-2025 season. She is a passionate performer of new music, collaborating in recent years with composers such as Philippe Hersant, Eric Nathan, Hilda Paredes, and Jörg Widmann. Ms. Burnett completed both her B.M. and M.M. at Juilliard under the tutelage of Roger Tapping and Misha Amory, where she was a proud recipient of the Kovner Fellowship.
Matthew Graybil:
Praised by The New Yorker as an “exceptional young artist” American pianist Matthew Graybil has performed throughout the US, Canada, Europe and Mexico in venues such as Carnegie’s Zankel Hall, Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center and Lincoln Center. Since making his orchestral debut at age 14, he has performed with the Fort Worth Symphony and the National Chamber Players among many others. He has been a prize-winner in the MTNA/Yamaha National Piano Competition, the New York Piano Competition, the Juilliard Gina Bachauer Competition, the Missouri Southern International Piano Competition and the Wideman International Piano Competition. Graybil completed his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees at The Juilliard School, where he worked with Jerome Lowenthal and Matti Raekallio.
Giancarlo Latta:
Fiercely committed to the music of our time, violinist, composer, and writer Giancarlo Latta is interested in the intersection and convergence of music old and new. He has performed with flutist Claire Chase and violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and in 2022 was the soloist in Tyshawn Sorey’s violin concerto at Spoleto Festival USA. Since 2019, Latta has been a member of the acclaimed Argus Quartet, with whom he has performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, the Morgan Library, Arizona Friends of Chamber Music, UC San Diego, the University of Denver, and many other major chamber music venues across the country.
Alexander Liebermann:
Alexander Liebermann is a German-French composer whose work blends diverse influences, including philosophy, biology, and astronomy. Recent commissions include a climate-change-themed monodrama for the Deutsche Oper Berlin and a birdsong-inspired wind quintet for the Brazilian Winds Ensemble. Passionate about nature, his transcriptions of animal vocalizations have been featured in National Geographic and CBS Sunday Morning. Liebermann holds degrees from the Hanns Eisler Music Conservatory, the Juilliard School, and Manhattan School of Music, and his thesis on Erwin Schulhoff earned him the Saul Braverman Award in Music Theory. He currently teaches at Juilliard and NJIT.
David Rothenberg:
Musician and philosopher David Rothenberg wrote Why Birds Sing, Bug Music, Survival of the Beautiful and many other books, published in at least eleven languages. He has more than forty recordings out, including One Dark Night I Left My Silent House which came out on ECM, and most recently In the Wake of Memories and Faultlines. He has performed or recorded with Pauline Oliveros, Peter Gabriel, Ray Phiri, Suzanne Vega, Scanner, Elliott Sharp, Umru, Iva Bittová, and the Karnataka College of Percussion. In 2024 he won a Grammy Award as part of For the Birds, in the category of Best Boxed Set. Whale Music and Secret Sounds of Ponds are his latest books. Nightingales In Berlin is his latest film. Rothenberg is Distinguished Professor at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
ADHC / HCAD Co-Sponsored Colloquium
2:30pm - 3:30pm | GITC 1400
Speaker: Dr. Tanya Berger-Wolf
ADHC / YWCC Co-Sponsored Colloquium
Women With STEAM Colloquium
2:30pm - 4:00pm | Martinson Honors Hall, IDS1
Being Impactful, Part 1
Speaker: Dr. Joel Bloom
11:45am - 7:00pm | Bus transportation will be provided between campus and Mercer Museum & Fonthill Castle (Doylestown, PA)
Study Tour: Mercer Museum & Fonthill Castle (Doylestown, PA)
Join fellow scholars for a unique study tour of the Mercer Museum and Fonthill Castle (Doylestown, PA).
The Mercer Museum is a six-story reinforced concrete castle designed by Henry Mercer (1856-1930) and completed in 1916. Today, it is one of Bucks County’s premier cultural attractions and a Smithsonian affiliate. The museum complex features local and national traveling exhibits, as well as a core museum collection of over 17,000 pre-Industrial tools. This permanent collection offers visitors a unique window into pre-Industrial America through sixty different crafts and trades, and is one of the world’s most comprehensive portraits of pre-Industrial American material culture.
Built between 1908-1912, Fonthill Castle was the home of archaeologist, anthropologist, ceramist, scholar and antiquarian Henry Chapman Mercer (1856-1930). Mercer built Fonthill Castle as his home and as a showplace for his collection of tiles and prints. The castle serves as an early example of reinforced concrete and features forty-four rooms, over two hundred windows, and eighteen fireplaces. Fonthill Castle’s interior features Mercer’s renowned, hand-crafted ceramic tiles designed at the height of the Arts and Crafts movement.
ADHC / HCAD Co-Sponsored Colloquium
10:30am - 12:00pm | Martinson Honors Hall, IDS1
The Best Singer at NJIT: Understanding the Song of the Mockingbird
Speaker: David Rothenberg, Distinguished Professor, NJIT
NJIT is a great habitat for the Northern Mockingbird, the finest singer among North American birds. People often say the mockingbird mocks, or copies the sounds of other birds, as if making fun of them. But in fact, this bird is a composer and improviser, following his own musical rules, first described in print by David Rothenberg, Dave Gammon, and Tina Roeske. In this paper the authors explain what these birds are doing, and compare their music to the likes of Beethoven, Tuvan throat singing, and Kendrick Lamar.
Musician and philosopher David Rothenberg wrote Why Birds Sing, Bug Music, Survival of the Beautiful and many other books, published in at least eleven languages. He has more than forty recordings out, including One Dark Night I Left My Silent House which came out on ECM, and most recently In the Wake of Memories and Faultlines. He has performed or recorded with Pauline Oliveros, Peter Gabriel, Ray Phiri, Suzanne Vega, Scanner, Elliott Sharp, Umru, Iva Bittová, and the Karnataka College of Percussion. In 2024 he won a Grammy Award as part of For the Birds, in the category of Best Boxed Set. Whale Music and Secret Sounds of Ponds are his latest books. Nightingales In Berlin is his latest film. Rothenberg is Distinguished Professor at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
ADHC / JHCSLA Co-Sponsored Colloquium
11:30am - 1:00pm | NJIT Campus Center Ballroom
The Sustainable Campus: ADHC First-Year Seminar Biodiversity Initiatives
Honors first year scholars will present their proposals for increasing and sustaining biodiversity through a campus planting. The NJIT Urban Ecology Lab and Real Estate Development & Capital Operations teams will provide the context for this project and select the winning team. Join us to support the scholars and learn about our sustainability efforts.
City Leadership & Civic Engagement Colloquium
2:30pm - 4:00pm | Martinson Honors Hall, IDS1
A Case for Cultivating STEM Identity among Underrepresented Groups: Exploring the Association between Students' Persistence and Their Access to Support
Speaker: Dr. Emily Tancredi-Brice Agbenyega, University Lecturer in Civic Engagement, Albert Dorman Honors College, NJIT
Dr. Emily Tancredi-Brice Agbenyega joined the Albert Dorman Honors College in August 2024 as a University Lecturer in Civic Engagement. In this new role, Dr. Agbenyega is responsible for developing and implementing Honors service-learning courses as well as expanding co-curricular civic engagement opportunities.
Dr. Agbenyega comes to NJIT after teaching Sociology at CUNY and SUNY. As an educator, Dr. Agbenyega prepares diverse students to develop the knowledge and skills needed to do community-engaged research that positively impacts their communities. In her courses, she employs reflective, experiential learning approaches that help students develop critical thinking and leadership skills.
Dr. Agbenyega’s research has focused on the intersection of identity and educational experiences, with an emphasis on how students’ identity can serve as an asset that fosters their persistence, particularly in fields in which they are underrepresented. Dr. Agbenyega holds a PhD in Urban Education from Temple University where she researched the impact of sociocultural and science identity on the career trajectories of Latina engineers. She has presented her work at various education research conferences and has collaborated on publications on topics including student motivation and engagement in STEM and qualitative research.
City Leadership & Civic Engagement Colloquium
Women With STEAM Colloquium
Time TBC | NJIT Campus Center Ballroom
Women Designing the Future Conference: “Looking Back, Moving Forward”
Women With STEAM Colloquium
2:30pm - 4:00pm | NJIT Makerspace
Make 203: Introduction to SLA Printing
Building on Make 103, this training covers stereolithographic 3D printing, a printing process that involves curing a photopolymer resin layer-by-layer. Briefly covers design considerations, slicing, starting and removing prints. Prerequisites: Make 101, Make 103
ADHC / NCE Co-Sponsored Colloquium
10:00am - 12:00pm | Eberhardt Hall Room 112
Bloomberg NJIT STEM Report
Next-Gen STEM - NJIT Researchers Working to Solve Problems and Improve Life
Join us for a live 2-hour Bloomberg Radio broadcast from the NJIT Campus.
ADHC / MTSM Co-Sponsored Colloquium
7:00pm | Jim Wise Theatre, Kupfrian Hall (NJIT)
Amélie - performance and talkback
Adapted from the hit 2001 French-language film, Amélie (the musical) is about an extraordinary young woman who lives quietly in the world but loudly in her mind. She covertly improvises small but surprising acts of kindness that bring joy and mayhem. But when a chance at love comes her way, Amélie realizes that to find happiness she’ll have to risk everything and say what’s in her heart. Be inspired by this imaginative dreamer who finds her voice, discovers the power of connection, and sees possibility around every corner.
Ticket purchase is required - link will be posted once available.
11:30am - 1:00pm | Martinson Honors Hall, IDS1
Modulating Human Behavior through Technology and Policy
Speaker: Roni Barak Ventura, Assistant Professor, NJIT
Human behavior is not always conducive to our health, happiness, and success. Technologies and policies are developed to improve those aspects of our lives, yet our interactions with them are influenced by a variety of dynamic factors. My research aims to understand humans’ behavior from data and hypothesis-driven experimentation, towards the design of interface interventions that optimize individual and group performance. In this talk, I will present the results of my previous research along with ongoing projects I lead at the School of Applied Engineering Technology.
Roni Barak Ventura is an Assistant Professor at the School of Applied Engineering and Technology, New Jersey Institute of Technology. She received a BSc in biology from the University of Rochester in 2014 and a MSc and PhD in biomedical engineering and mechanical engineering from New York University in 2017 and 2021, respectively. Between 2021 and 2023, she served as a Science Analyst in the Directorate for Engineering at the National Science Foundation. Her research interests include rehabilitation, motion analysis, human–computer interactions, causal inference, and time series analysis.
ADHC / NCE Co-Sponsored Colloquium
Women With STEAM Colloquium
2:30pm - 4:30pm | NJIT Campus Center Atrium
Passing the Torch: Networking Roundtable
Albert Dorman Honors College scholars and alumni will connect in this interactive networking roundtable event.
Women With STEAM Colloquium
11:30am - 1:00pm | NJIT Campus Center Ballroom
Honors Interdisciplinary Research Forum
Scholars from ENGL102 Honors, STS 205 Honors, ENTR 210 Honors, and the Honors Summer Research Institute (HSRI) will discuss their research and projects. Engage with scholars as they showcase their digital posters and cast your vote for the top presentations. This forum will be highly interactive and an excellent opportunity to exchange ideas while learning about an array of research taking place across campus.
2:30pm - 4:00pm | Tour meeting location TBC
Newark Study Tour: The Krueger-Scott Mansion and Newark Community during Great Migration Newark
ADHC / HCAD Co-Sponsored Colloquium
City Leadership & Civic Engagement Colloquium
11:30am - 1:00pm | Martinson Honors Hall, IDS1
Fellowships for International Experiences and Research
Hear from current and former students about why and how to apply for prestigious fellowships that help you to travel internationally and gain research experience. They will share tips about the process and how it is has helped them to think through and write about their goals. Join us for a celebratory reception immediately following the colloquium as we honor this year’s prestigious fellowship recipients.
Global Studies Colloquium