91探花

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Summer 2016 Edition
Alumni & Friends Magazine

Innovation redux

Ohio Today introduced The Big Idea in summer 2009, profiling innovators鈥攅xperimenters, creators, educators, and inventors鈥攚hose ideas took root or took off at 91探花. Innovation, by definition, means change, so we decided to check in with Bobcats profiled in the issue for an update.

By Mary Reed, BSJ 鈥90, MA 鈥93 | June 13, 2016

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Ohio Today introduced , profiling innovatorsexperimenters, creators, educators, and inventors鈥攚hose ideas took root or took off at 91探花. Innovation, by definition, means change, so we decided to check in with Bobcats profiled in the issue for an update. Marie Braasch Chelberg went from performing traditional experiments as a graduate student in social and health psychology to experimenting for user-experience companies in Silicon Valley; Jessica Hagy creates diagrams for her popular blog that have been featured in books and articles far and wide; Angelic Pinckney鈥檚 time at OHIO gave her space to think about community and giving back through education; and Jesse Yun and Fiona Mitchell Yun are inventing an entirely new kind of transportation business鈥攐ne that aims to go carbon neutral.

6 people floating around inside an airplane compartment

Marie Braasch Chelberg (center) joined others in August 2012 for an out-of-this-world experience offered by MiGFlug & Adventure GmbH: weightlessness via a zero-gravity plane at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in the Chkalovsky Military Airport in Star City, Russia. Photo courtesy of Marie Braasch Chelberg

Life pivots

In 2009, Marie Braasch was unlike most 18-year-olds. Instead of entering OHIO's Honors Tutorial College, she was graduating from it. A dual degree in biological sciences and psychology set her path: a career in neuropsychology or cognitive neuroscience.

Braasch entered Stony Brook University鈥檚 social and health psychology doctoral program, studying romantic relationships. There was only one problem: She wasn鈥檛 happy.

鈥淚t was hard for me to admit that maybe this career path that I had been following for so long wasn鈥檛 actually what I wanted to do,鈥 said the now Marie Chelberg, who married in 2011.

As a visiting student at the University of California, Berkeley, she saw psychology graduate students pursue private tech careers and decided to take the leap, too. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e in Silicon Valley, it鈥檚 easy to transfer into tech because there are so many job opportunities,鈥 Chelberg said. She is a user experience (UX) researcher, working initially for the online college course platform Coursera, and now for ZipRealty.com in California鈥檚 Bay Area. 鈥淚f it turns out that this isn鈥檛 the path I want to stay on either, I鈥檓 hopeful that I will recognize that more quickly this time and pivot again.鈥

Psychologists like Chelberg are entering the still-emerging UX field in numbers. They bring their ability to conduct research and perform behavioral science testing for an applied setting. Psychologists typically know more than designers about memory, attention, and other ways the mind works, Chelberg explained.

鈥(Tech companies) need people to be able to find out, are our users able to use our product? Are they happy with it? Do they get confused? Are there parts that don鈥檛 make sense to them?鈥 she questioned. Chelberg credits her graduate school education for developing the skills necessary for her unexpected career change. But graduate school taught her a far more important lesson, she realized: life goals 2.0. 鈥淵ou can change your mind.鈥

A man in a suite and a woman in a wedding dress stand next to a white vehicle bearing the words "ecoShuttle"

Jesse Yun and Fiona Mitchell met as undergraduates at OHIO and married in 2011. In 2006, they started the Portland, Oregon-based ecoShuttle, a taxi service that runs on biodiesel or electricity. Photo courtesy of Jesse Yun

Nice ride

A couple of Bobcats sing the praises of sustainable synergy!

When Jesse Yun, BBA 鈥03, and a friend decided to launch a green airport shuttle business in Portland, Oregon, Yun asked his best friend from college, Fiona Mitchell, BFA 鈥06, to help with marketing. 鈥淚 called the Waterfront Blues Festival (organizers) maybe a week or so before the festival started and asked if we could have a booth,鈥 Mitchell recalls. 鈥淎nd they said, 鈥榃hy don鈥檛 you provide transportation for the bands?鈥 So we went out and bought a van.鈥 With that, ecoShuttle began.

That was 2006, and since then, ecoShuttle has grown to 27 vehicles and 40 employees. The vehicles all run on biodiesel, and a new electric vehicle recently joined the fleet.

But their commitment to sustainability doesn鈥檛 end with fuel choices. ecoShuttle, now with just Yun and Mitchell at the helm, has a goal to become completely carbon neutral. 鈥淲e鈥檙e becoming good enough where I can purchase some carbon credits to offset our energy usage, so it鈥檚 not out of the question,鈥 Yun says. Their office, which is nearly paper free, is powered 100 percent with wind energy.

Mitchell says she wanted to change the world politically when she was in college, but now believes she has made a bigger impact through owning a business. 鈥淐oming right out of college and starting a company in an industry we knew nothing about鈥攊t was the best way to innovate,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we would have been able to do that had we had 15 years of experience in the bus industry. I think we would have been stuck in a box.鈥

As the business grew, so did the relationship between the college best friends. They got married in 2011, and now the Yuns have two children, ages four and one.

A white index card with written words stating, "naysayers, whiners, pessimists: Innovations shut them up"

Wry insights like this one from Jessica Hagy attract more than 20,000 followers to her webcomic Indexed.

Appetite for creativity

When Ohio Today caught up with Jessica Hagy, BSJ 鈥99, in 2009, her webcomic already counted some 20,000 followers and led to a book, also titled Indexed, of images drawn, yes, by hand on index cards. The drawings read like punch lines on X-Y axes or Venn diagrams. One popular image shows a small circle identified as 鈥淵our comfort zone鈥 and, separate from it, a large circle identified as 鈥淲here the magic happens.鈥

When the webcomic won the 2010 Webby Award for personal blog/website, things really took off for the Seattle-based Hagy. Now some 100,000 people view her work monthly via the blog, social media, and publications that commission her. A 2011 piece for Forbes, 鈥淗ow to Be More Interesting (In 10 Simple Steps),鈥 includes 10 diagrams with titles such as 鈥淕o exploring鈥 and 鈥淒o something. Anything.鈥 It led to another book of collected images, How to Be Interesting (In 10 Simple Steps).

鈥淭hat鈥檚 probably my favorite piece because I got to do a book (of) happy philosophy,鈥 Hagy says.

Her philosophy about creativity remains a standby. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 sort of the garbage in, garbage out theory,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f your creative metabolism is fed with good stuff 鈥 you鈥檙e going to be able to put out more good stuff.鈥

Hagy reads widely, accordingly鈥擜ustralian artist communities, NASA Twitter feeds, and the ancient Chinese military treatise, The Art of War by Sun Tzu. The last inspired Hagy鈥檚 sixth book, The Art of War Visualized: The Sun Tzu Classic in Charts and Graphs.

Hagy鈥檚 most recent credit? Supplying the illustrations for The Hustle Economy: Transforming Your Creativity into a Career, a collection of essays by self-made professionals in the creative economy, edited by Jason Oberholtzer and published in April. 鈥淏eing part of that niche 鈥 is probably the thing I鈥檓 most proud of,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 can look at my network and think, 鈥業鈥檓 really one of THOSE people.鈥欌

Portrait photograph of Angelic Pinckney

Angelic Pinckney graduated with an English/pre-law degree, but instead of pursuing a career as an attorney, she chose a path that lets her lead and connect people with resources. She also volunteers at organizations close to her heart. Photo courtesy of Angelic Pinckney

Lead by example

Angelic Pinckney doesn鈥檛 think she would have been able to go to college without OHIO's Urban Scholars program, which paid tuition costs for four years. 鈥淚鈥檓 so thankful that OU took that risk (on me) through the Urban Scholars program,鈥 says Pinckney, who graduated in 1999 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in English.

Though finances weren鈥檛 a worry, the academic transition to college proved difficult for Pinckney, despite having graduated near the top of her class from her inner-city Columbus high school.

Today Pinckney is back in her hometown, paying it forward by preparing others to further their education. She works for Community Properties of Ohio Management Services, which provides affordable housing and other resources for its residents. Pinckney oversees a program that provides scholarships for parents who complete their GED. The program additionally supports these parents by providing lessons on how to read effectively to their preschool-aged children at home, in conjunction with the public library. She also manages the organization鈥檚 AmeriCorps program. Recently, she was selected for United Way鈥檚 competitive Project Diversity, a leadership program for people of color.

Outside of work, Pinckney volunteers as an assistant coach for her high school marching band and started a marching band alumni association. Pinckney also is on the executive board of the new Columbus chapter of the Ebony Bobcat Network, which raises money for the Urban Scholars program. These efforts showcase her leadership skills鈥攚hich she has been honing since she was a resident assistant at OHIO鈥攁nd her commitment to helping others achieve their educational goals, much like the Urban Scholars program facilitated hers.

鈥淓ducation has been key to my life,鈥 Pinckney says, 鈥淭hat is why I think my career path has been education.鈥

To that point, at home, Pinckney reads to her 10-month-old daughter. "I would love for her to be a Bobcat," says the OHIO mom and education advocate.

Mary Reed, BSJ 鈥90, MA 鈥93, is a freelance writer based in Athens. Her most recent book is Best Easy Day Hikes Fort Collins.

Feature illustration by Jeremy Blazer, BFA '09