Tech’s 100,000th Living Engineering Graduate from ChBE A stroke of luck changed Oluwaferanmi Adeyemo’s entire life trajectory. “My mother applied for the visa lottery system in Nigeria,” Adeyemo said. “She’d done it on a whim and ended up winning.” Known to friends and family as Feranmi, she says she was only 5 years old when her family packed up and moved to Illinois. As a student in Chicago, she excelled in math and science. When it came time to apply to colleges, a teacher suggested that Adeyemo check out chemical engineering programs. “These past four years have been phenomenal,” says Adeyemo, wh0 was recognized as Georgia Tech’s 100,000th living engineering graduate at the December 2019 ceremony. She undertook research as an undergraduate with Associate Professor Corey Wilson’s research lab that focuses on establishing a computational framework to translate understanding of the fundamental principles of biophysics and biochemistry. “It was so cool to see what we’ve worked on and how it could be applied to actual patients,” she said. Adeyemo will now move to Maryland and work in
the John Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab. She says Georgia Tech has more than prepared her for the road ahead. “When you see a challenge, you don’t get scared, you take it head on. I’ve learned at Georgia Tech that I’m capable — and can do that!”
Okonkwo Leads Community Development Efforts in Nigeria Claudia Okonkwo, ChBE PhD 2020, was featured in a Boston Herald highlighting her efforts as an ambassador of Umu Igbo Unite (UIU), a U.S.-based nonprofit organization that promotes cultural preservation, professional development, and civic engagement among the Igbo people of Nigeria. Born and raised in Nigeria, Okonkwo led UIU's community development efforts in Anambra State, Nigeria. “In Nigeria, there is a shortage of clean water, and a lot of underserved communities in Igboland are not provided with this fundamental necessity,” says Okonkwo, who served as the 2018 president of UIU's Atlanta chapter. “We raised $18,000 to build three boreholes (water wells), so families don’t have to walk miles to fetch water. We also will continue our yearly donations to orphanages in Igboland and provide food, medical supplies, and household supplies each year.” Okonkwo and other ambassadors worked with the region's underprivileged youth who spend much of 12
their time on the roadside selling bags of water and snacks to help provide for their families. Harsh conditions have led many people to leave the country, contributing to Nigeria's "brain drain," according to experts. Nigeria is the largest source of African immigration in the United States, notes the Boston Herald, which says “the Nigerian diaspora ranks among the most educated ethnic groups in the country, employed at higher rates than the general U.S. labor force in specialized fields facing unprecedented levels of demand — including health care, engineering, science and finance.” Okonkwo says she hopes UIU will inspire others among the African diaspora to invest in the continent. “The most important message that I want to tell people in the diaspora is to get out of your comfort zone. We cannot afford to take our talents for granted,” says Okonwko, who is now a consultant for Boston Consulting Group in Atlanta.
SCHOOL OF CHEMICAL AND BIOMOLECULAR ENGINEERING, GEORGIA TECH