Paying it Forward

Andy Clark, Ph.D. '22 on mechanobiology, medical physics, and inspiring future physicists.

Students, including Andy Clark, sitting at a GSAS table for an event

On May 13, 2022, Andy Clark crossed the UU直播 stage to receive his Ph.D. in physics, as well as a Mary Patterson McPherson Award for Excellence. Clark was active on campus as co-chair of the Graduate Student Association and graduate representative to the Board of Trustees. He also created outreach projects to make physics more accessible to area schoolchildren.

Why did you choose UU直播 for graduate school?

I met with [Xuemei] May Cheng, who became my research advisor, and her work was very close to what I did in undergrad. I also liked her as a person, and I knew Bryn Mawr was a tight-knit physics department. I was a little nervous of going to a bigger school and getting lost in the mix.

How did your research progress at Bryn Mawr?

I really dove into a new field. May got a research grant a year after I joined her lab in an emerging field called mechanobiology. The grant funded a multi-institutional center鈥攖he Center for Engineering MechanoBiology鈥攖hat brought together physicists, biologists, cell biologists, biomedical engineers, and mechanical engineers to look at new ways to do things. Among the center鈥檚 research areas was understanding how cells respond to dynamic mechanical cues in their environment and creating materials that can systematically study that. Cells behave very differently on soft substrates than on stiff substrates. If they鈥檙e on something like Jell-O they behave one way, but if you culture them on glass, they behave very differently.

What鈥檚 next for you?

My research at Bryn Mawr, especially the biomedical engineering鈥揻ocused research, confirmed that medical physics is where I want to be. You can either go into therapy or imaging. The main focus for therapy is the treatment of tumors through radiation. The radiologist knows how much radiation they want to treat a tumor with, and the medical physicist makes sure the tumor gets that amount of radiation with minimal side effects to surrounding regions. I enjoy lab work, but I like a mix of things, working with people, working with instrumentation, and doing research. Medical physics really is all three of those.

Why did you become involved with outreach?

During graduate school I began to think about how I could give back to the community and expose younger kids to science. There鈥檚 been a lot of research in physics education that shows that it鈥檚 in middle school that kids lose any drive to do science. They write it off as something they don鈥檛 think they鈥檙e smart enough to do, or just don鈥檛 think is an option.

We began to develop a program to bring students from Eisenhower Middle School in Norristown to Bryn Mawr and show them the labs, have a panel discussion, and have them talk to physics graduate students about pursuing college and what we do on a daily basis. We were scheduled for March 24, 2020, right when the pandemic hit. We did it remotely on Zoom, and the students really seemed to like it. We also did an all-day event at Clark Park in West Philadelphia, where probably 600 people showed up for science demos. It was an ideal age group, with a lot of middle school children, some high school, and even some elementary school students.

It鈥檚 a lot of fun to hopefully inspire these kids. They鈥檙e going to be the future of physics someday, and we really need their ideas.

Published on: 08/09/2022