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Biotech Program’s ‘Dr. Judy’ Wins Meyer Award

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Judith A. Kjelstrom, environmental, standing against concrete wall
Judith A. Kjelstrom, aka "Dr. Judy," director emerita of the Biotechnology Program and recipient of the Academic Federation’s James H. Meyer Distinguished Achievement Award for 2018.

Judith A. Kjelstrom (aka “Dr. Judy”), who devoted her career to ٺƵ, the Biotechnology Program, DEB graduate students and students of all ages, has been named the recipient of the James H. Meyer Distinguished Achievement Award for 2018 — an honor that Kjelstrom, as a recent retiree, calls “the icing on the cake of a successful career.”

AWARD PRESENTATION

The James H. Meyer Distinguished Achievement Award will be presented at a dinner, 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 6, in the Vanderhoef Studio Theatre, Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts. This is an invite-only event (registration deadline Oct. 30). For more information, send an email to Cindy Smith in Ceremonies and Special Events.

The Meyer award is the ٺƵ Academic Federation’s highest honor, given annually to one of its members for a distinguished career of achievement in his or her federation role as well as service to the campus and community.

“Dr. Kjelstrom has worked tirelessly to promote the development of a robust and diverse biotechnology sector that will provide a route to prosperity for all communities in the greater Sacramento region,” said her nominators, including Mark Winey, dean of the College of Biological Sciences; and Cameron Carter, professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, who was interim vice chancellor of the Office of Research at the time of the nomination.

“Via university and public service, she has touched the lives of hundreds of the region’s K-14 students, teachers, undergraduate and graduate students, campus colleagues and members of the community. Her ongoing engagement with regional and statewide organizations actively building technology sectors that form an integral part of the state economy has been driven by her passionate support for translational research that addresses challenges in health care, agriculture and the environment.”

Amrit Kaur Sahota and her mentor, Dr. Judy, in a ٺƵ promotional photo from 2013
Amrit Kaur Sahota and her mentor, Dr. Judy, in a ٺƵ promotional photo from 2013.

Kjelstrom retired in June after nearly 20 years as a lecturer and academic coordinator. Those are among the job titles that fall under the realm of the Academic Federation, which also takes in such titles as adjunct professor and adjunct instructor, agronomist, professional researcher and project scientist, academic administrator, librarian and program coordinator.

She served the campus in other capacities, as well, for example, 10 years on both the Regents Scholarship Administrative Advisory Committee and the Biological Safety Administrative Advisory Committee, and as a member of the federation’s executive council.

Kjelstrom’s association with ٺƵ actually began more than 45 years ago when she completed an internship in clinical laboratory science here in 1972-73. She did this after earning a Bachelor of Science degree in biological sciences at California State University, Sacramento, becoming a first-generation college graduate.

Done with her internship, she started a career that included working as a clinical chemist at ٺƵ Medical Center and as a clinical microbiologist at Belleville Memorial Hospital in Illinois.

In 1986, she returned to ٺƵ to pursue a doctorate in microbiology in the laboratory of Professor Blaine L. Beaman in the School of Medicine. After completing her Ph.D. in 1992, she served as an adjunct professor of biology at Cosumnes River, Sierra College and American River community colleges, and Sacramento State over the next five years.

Landing ‘a job made in heaven’

She returned to ٺƵ for good in 1998 as a lecturer in biological sciences, teaching Biology 1A (“Cellular and Molecular Biology”) for 300 to 500 students. One year later, “a job made in heaven” came along — associate director of the Biotechnology Program, home of the newly approved Designated Emphasis in Biotechnology, or DEB, graduate program. Before long, “DEB” became a coveted notation on doctoral student diplomas.

She found the Biotechnology Program to be her dream job, because as a scientist, doing research on new diagnostic technologies, she had found herself asking, “How do we get this test to the clinic?”

“I thought we should all be talking together — basic science and engineering researchers, clinicians, industry and government agencies,” she said.

The DEB graduate program brought academia and industry together by having industry-focused seminars and requiring DEB graduate students to complete three- to six-month internships with biotechnology companies. 

A ‘master connector’ of people

“I am a master connector of people,” she said, explaining how she paved the way for internships at companies all around Northern California. She would keep abreast of biotechnology sector — new start-ups, initial public offerings, expanding companies — and she would often make cold calls. She would introduce herself to whoever answered, say that she would like to talk to the CEO and invite him or her to give a seminar to DEB students. It worked: Most of the executives said “yes.”

Over time, DEB grew in popularity, from 10 graduate students in 1999 to nearly 240 today, along with more than 200 affiliated faculty members. “We are similar to a start-up that has grown to a mature company,” said Kjelstrom, who became the program director in 2004.

Judith A. Kjelstrom in conversation with a graduate student
Talking biotechnology: Graduate student Amanda Dang, left and Kjelstrom in December 2017.

This novel graduate program is still unique among universities. Dr. Judy explained: “We offer the DEB as an enrichment program for numerous STEM disciplines rather than a Ph.D. in biotechnology, because biotechnology crosses so many areas: life sciences, engineering, chemistry, computer science and biostatistics.”  

Students value their participation in DEB and so do the life science companies. “I can tell you,” Kjelstrom said, “the Bay Area biotech industry knows our program.”

“They understand that they will get bright scholars with strong soft skills, who can ‘connect the dots’ between science and industry.”

Partnering with the GSM

Kjelstrom did not limit her mentoring to graduate students. “Any student who knocked on my door and asked for guidance, I would help them,” she said. She’s also involved in e-mentoring with high school students in biotech academies.

She said she is humbled by being selected for the Meyer award. “I am an Aggie — I bleed blue and gold,” she said. “This award for distinguished service is the highest honor for an Academic Federation member.” And while it might be “the icing on the cake,” she has more cake to bake.

Last year she partnered with the Graduate School of Management to develop a new course, MGT 290, “Biotechnology Industry Immersion,” bringing together Ph.D. and MBA students to tackle innovation challenges in biotechnology. She taught it for the first-time last winter and will teach it again this winter — this time with her new title of “director emerita” of the Biotechnology Program and GSM academic coordinator.

In another endeavor to promote science literacy, she is a board member and chair of the education committee for Sacramento’s Powerhouse Science Center on the Riverfront. It is expected to open in the fall of 2020.

Dean Winey and Professor Carter, along with the others who nominated her for the Meyer award, said: “Dr. Kjelstrom has rightly gained a stellar on-campus and regional reputation as an advisor and mentor who understands the work force needs of the biotech industry and is able to help craft educational approaches that allow students and working professionals to successfully engage in related career paths.”

They said her distinguished service record reflects a passion for STEM education, her natural business acumen and desire to see new technologies have a positive impact on the world.

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