Tennessee Tech Chemistry Students Win National Awards

The American Chemical Society recently handed out 49 Outstanding Awards and 27 Green
Chemistry Awards to student chapters for 2020-2021. The Tennessee Tech chapter brought
home one of each.
“I believe this is our chapter’s ninth consecutive year for receiving the Outstanding
Award and our fifth consecutive year for receiving the Green Chemistry Award,” Amanda
Carroll, chapter advisor and chemistry lecturer at Tech, said.
The Society Committee on Education selects ACS Student Chapters to receive special
recognition on the basis of their programs and activities, as described in their chapter
reports. Awards are classified as outstanding, commendable and honorable mention.
“The number and variety of events is what earned our chapter the Outstanding award.
Our report review said the reviewers were very impressed with how our chapter was
able to do so many events while maintaining a safe environment through COVID-19,”
Carroll said.
They were one of 27 student chapters who received the Green Chemistry Award for successfully
completing green chemistry activities throughout the year.
“This puts our chapter in the top 10 percent of student chapters both nationally and
internationally,” Carroll said.
The Green Chemistry Student Chapter Award provides national recognition for ACS student
chapters who have shown outstanding commitment to incorporating green chemistry into
their annual activities. It is an acknowledgement of green chemistry activities conducted
by a student chapter.
To be eligible to be recognized as a green chemistry student chapter they must engage
in at least three green chemistry activities during the academic year.
Student involvement in green chemistry principles and practices is essential to the
integration of environmentally benign technologies in academia and industry, according
to the American Chemical Society.
Recipients are recognized at the Green Chemistry Student Chapter Awards Ceremony held
at ACS National Meetings, receive information on green chemistry travel awards and
scholarship opportunities and gain connections with faculty engaged in green chemistry
research.
The Tech chapter also drafted a proclamation for National Chemistry Week in October
that was signed by the City of Cookeville’s vice mayor.
They had a week full of activities that the campus and community participated in.
It included walking a mole of zeptometers around the stadium track, a lecture on Green
Chemistry and how it relates to human and environmental safety, an ACS webinar about
the chemistry behind a good cup of coffee and a periodic table of cupcakes and a bake
sale.
They viewed the ACS ChemLuminary awards program where they found out one of their
events won an award for Fostering Interactions between Local Sections and Student
Chapters, had movie night and handed out free chemistry activity bags, color changing
cups and baked goods to the community at the Putnam County Library.
“Our chapter strives to serve our members, campus, and community through professional
development events, service activities, and chapter development and social activities,”
Carroll said.