Cindy Fitzgerald receives Welch award for enriching students' experience

Published
June 3, 2017

award

Cindy Fitzgerald is congratulated by students after receiving the Welch Award at Design Day. (Photo by J. Adam Fenster/ University of Rochester)

Cindy Fitzgerald has made quite an impact since joining the Department of Chemical Engineering a little more than two years ago as a senior technical associate.

“She has truly made junior and senior lab an amazing experience,” says Dominick Salerno ’17.

“Cindy Fitzgerald is, simply put, the best,” adds Jean Brownell ’17.

With nominations and accolades like that, it is no wonder that Fitzgerald is the 2017 recipient of the Dottie Welch Award, named in honor of the former undergraduate coordinator in biomedical engineering. The award, based on voting by students, recognizes staff and faculty whose “performance and dedication enriches the student experience.”

This is the third time the award, now in its fourth year, has gone to someone in chemical engineering.

Prior to joining the department, Fitzgerald was a hybrid color imaging engineer at Eastman Kodak Co. for 35 years, much of that time as a systems team leader.

She would often fly out to Hollywood to visit the laboratories that processed the Kodak film used in the movies shot there. “We were transitioning from analogue film to digital manipulations and digital recording and projection, so that’s where the ‘hybrid’ in my title came in,” she explained.

Now Fitzgerald helps set up and conduct undergraduate labs in a department that has seen its undergraduate enrollment increase from 132 to 2010-11 to 230 this school year. She supervises more than 100 students each academic year.

Brownell praises Fitzgerald’s abilities as “a mentor and adviser both personally and academically. With her office attached to our senior design lab, she keeps a very open door policy, no matter how many times in a five-minute span you pop in to ask a question or give an update.”

In addition to be a good source of ideas and suggestions from her years in industry, Fitzgerald is also “able to provide a sense of humor during frustrating or repetitive processes,” Brownell says.

“All of her great qualities relating to engineering aside, she is also a great person to talk to who always takes a genuine interest in both the conversation and your life.“

“She has made every aspect of my senior year manageable, bearable, and better. Even though she has only been with the department for two years now, I can personally attest that her impact has been immense and amazing. “