Every year the Alumni Awards event is held in the historic Great Hall to honour outstanding recent graduates and more established alumni who have been leaders and innovators in their work in Australia and internationally.听
People from every part of the University community will gather in the Great Hall on Thursday 27 April for the 2017 Alumni Awards.
Under the Hall鈥檚 newly launched lighting design, alumni and more recent graduates will be honoured for their outstanding dedication, leadership and vision. This year, the new President鈥檚 Award will be given for the first time, honouring an acclaimed alumnus whose career has enriched society.
The Award winners have come from multiple disciplines. Their work has influenced everything from the spaces where we live, the music that we listen to, the technology that serves us, the understanding of our planet and its dangers, and the education of children. They have also worked throughout the world from the US to Uganda, Switzerland to Antarctica.
The 2017 Alumni Award winners are architect and arts patron, Penelope Seidler AM; computer science pioneer, Emeritus Professor Vaughan Pratt; orchestra conductor, Antony Walker; biologist and ecologist, Dr Patricia Selkirk AAM; educator and humanitarian, Annabelle Chauncy OAM; and innovative maths teacher, Eddie Woo. The inaugural President鈥檚 Award goes to Dr Colin Mathers for his transformative work at the World Health Organisation (WHO).
Each of them has fulfilled one of the University鈥檚 most important missions; to make a better world.
Also honoured on the night will be 20 of the most聽outstanding recent graduates who have achieved academic excellence and contributed to the richness of the University community. Medal winners will be announced at the ceremony.
The award winners were selected by a panel of judges including the Alumni Council, University academics and professional staff, after being nominated by colleagues, family and people from the broader community. Nominations for the next Alumni Awards open later in the year. Find out more information about 2018 nominations.听
Eighteen year old Penelope Evatt was inspired to study architecture by the man who would become her husband, influential architect, Harry Seidler. Together they pioneered the integration of modernist art and architecture in Australia. Today, Penelope is a prominent and leading architect, but also an advocate and patron for music, architecture, art and performance. With an interest in nurturing the careers of countless artists, she is also a willing subject, with Fiona Lowry鈥檚 2014 portrait of Penelope winning the 2014 Archibald Prize.
Vaughan is a pioneering mathematical theorist and a real-world problem solver who was an early driving force behind computer company, Sun Microsystems, for which he also designed the iconic logo. Some key computer concepts like the Knuth-Morris-Pratt algorithm bear his name and in 1976 he developed Dynamic Logic originally for software but which is now applied in other disciplines. He is now an Emeritus Professor at Stanford University and working on ideas for low carbon energy and improved climate change forecasting.
Antony was just 12 when his music teacher predicted he would be a conductor. As a University student, he conducted the Melbourne and Sydney Symphony Orchestras and by 22, he was the Musical Director of the Sydney Philharmonia Choirs. Antony has now conducted across Europe and the US including choral, symphonic and chamber works and over 100 operas, with regular returns to Australia to stay engaged with local companies that he helped create; Pinchgut Opera, Orchestra of the Antipodes, and Cantillation.
Patricia is a decorated subantarctic researcher who has spent much of her career on Macquarie Island (1500km south of Tasmania) and Heard Island (4000km southwest of Fremantle). In 1983, she was the first woman to conduct research at Antarctica鈥檚 Casey station. Her specialisation is mosses and liverworts and her book, Subantarctic Macquarie Island: Environment and Biology, published in 1990, is still a key work in the field. She is seen as a trail blazer and role model for women scientists everywhere.
Annabelle鈥檚 idea for the School for Life came from a simple observation 鈥 a couple of years schooling can change a child鈥檚 life. She was in Uganda at the time and wanted to help. So in 2011, Annabelle and a fellow University student established Katuuso Primary and Vocational School. The first students had never seen a book. Many weren鈥檛 getting enough to eat. From nothing, the school now has buildings and nearly 560 students. Annabelle鈥檚 vision is creating a sustainable model for replicating across the developing world.
The Sydney Morning Herald said Eddie is 鈥渁rguably the country鈥檚 most famous maths teacher鈥, and it all started with an act of kindness. One of his students was sick so Eddie filmed his maths lesson on a phone and posted it online. Now his YouTube channel, Wootube, has had more than 3 million views and Eddie was awarded the 2015 Premier鈥檚 Prize for Innovation in Science and Mathematics. He also works with the University鈥檚 Compass program helping disadvantaged communities participate in higher education.
Colin remembers when the World Health Organisation (WHO), UNICEF, the World Bank and the UN Population Division used different statistics for child mortality rates. Knowing the power of statistics to enlighten, it was appropriate that Colin had the task of changing this. His PhD was in theoretical physics, but his career has seen him working to improve international health outcomes. For 15 years he has led the WHO on global health statistics helping international agencies work together by having access to the same information.
聽聽 聽
Mina Askovic (BHlthSc 鈥16 BHlthSc (Hons) 鈥17)
Finalist for Convocation Medal
Jack Blair (BSc 鈥17)
Finalist for Nigel C Barker Medal
Sarah Bradbury (BA(Media&Comm) 鈥14 LLB(Hons) 鈥16)
Finalist for Convocation Medal
Clare Britton (MSA 鈥16)
Finalist for Edmund Barton Medal
Dane Drivas (BA 鈥15 MTeach 鈥17)
Finalist for Edmund Barton Medal
Dr Kerryn Drysdale (BA(Hons) 鈥03 MA 鈥09 PhD鈥16)
Finalist for Rita and John Cornforth Medal
Dr Ines Duran Matute (PhD 鈥16)
Finalist for Rita and John Cornforth Medal
Janelle Evans (BVA(Hons) 鈥13 MFA 鈥16)
Finalist for Sister Alison Bush Medal
Dr Luciano (Luke) Hespanhol (MIDEA 鈥13 PhD鈥16)
Finalist for Rita and John Cornforth Medal
Yi Yun Low (BSc 鈥17)
Finalist for John C Harsanyi Medal
Rhys Michie (MHR 鈥17)
Finalist for Edmund Barton Medal
Nur Nazurah Mohd Nasir (MPE 鈥17)
Finalist for John C Harsanyi Medal
Samuel Murray (BA 鈥14 LLB(Hons) 鈥16)
Finalist for Convocation Medal
Nate Phumitharanon (BA(Hons) 鈥17)
Finalist for John C Harsanyi Medal
Tian Qin (BA 鈥14 MCom 鈥16)
Finalist for John C Harsanyi Medal
Philippa Specker (BPsych(Hons) 鈥17)
Finalist for Convocation Medal
Dr Lukasz Swiatek (BA(Media&Comm)(Hons) 鈥11 PhD 鈥16)
Finalist for Rita and John Cornforth Medal
Kane Townsend (BSc (Hons) 鈥17)
Finalist for Nigel C Barker Medal
Geoffrey Winters (BA(Hons) 鈥11 LLB 鈥16)
Finalist for Sister Alison Bush Medal
Yiu Cheryl Wong (BE(Hons) '16 BSc(Adv)(Hons) '16)
Finalist for Convocation Medal