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Four alumni recognized with 2024 Graduate School Alumni Society Awards

The Graduate School at Penn State recognized four alumni with Graduate School Alumni Society Awards at the Graduate School Alumni Recognition Dinner on March 23 at the Penn Stater Hotel and Conference Center. The winners are, top row, left to right: Julie A. Cerrito and Melanie R. McReynolds, and bottom row, left to right: Scott Michael Robertson and Vivian Briones Valenty. Credit: The Graduate School. All Rights Reserved.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The Graduate School at Penn State recognized four alumni — Julie A. Cerrito, Melanie R. McReynolds, Scott Michael Robertson and Vivian Briones Valenty — with Graduate School Alumni Society Awards at the Graduate School Alumni Recognition Dinner on March 23 at the Penn Stater Hotel and Conference Center.  

2024 Graduate School Early Career Award 

Two alumni were honored with the 2024 Graduate School Early Career Award: Julie A. Cerrito, faculty member and program coordinator for the master's program in school counseling at Commonwealth University-Bloomsburg, and Melanie R. McReynolds, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Hanna H. Gray fellow and assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at Penn State. The award recognizes alumni who have demonstrated exceptional success in their chosen field within 10 years of earning their graduate degree.  

Cerrito earned a doctorate in counselor education and supervision from Penn State. She is credentialed as a National Certified Counselor, National Certified School Counselor, and Approved Clinical Supervisor. 

Her research focuses on access, equity and advocacy in addressing the college and career readiness needs of underserved pre-K through grade 12 youth. She has been part of former First Lady Michelle Obama’s National Reach Higher Initiative since its inception in 2014 — by participating in the annual White House Convening as a representative for counselor educators and school counselors from Pennsylvania. She also served as co-chair for professional school counselors on the Pennsylvania College and Career Readiness Consortium. In 2017, Cerrito was named Counselor Educator of the Year by the Pennsylvania School Counselors Association. She recently received the Bloomsburg University Provost’s Award for Research and Scholarly Activity. 

McReynolds earned a doctorate in biochemistry, microbiology and molecular biology from Penn State. She holds the Dorothy Foehr Huck and J. Lloyd Huck Early Career Chair in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in the Penn State Eberly College of Science.  

McReynolds specializes in understanding the connection between metabolic stress and aging. She has more than a decade of research, mentoring and teaching experience that she shares with Penn State graduate students and fellow faculty members. She is on the trajectory to establish her independent research group, where her lab will shed light on metabolic aging and disease. McReynolds has been recognized with the inaugural Intersections Science Fellow Award, the University of Utah Rising Star Award in Metabolism, and the Penn State Student Way Paver Award from the Council of Multicultural Leaders. 

2024 Humanitarian Service Award 

Scott Michael Robertson, senior policy adviser with the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Disability Employment Policy, was honored with the 2024 Humanitarian Service Award. The award recognizes individuals who have made a positive societal impact on the welfare of humankind beyond the responsibilities of one's profession.  

Robertson earned a doctorate in information sciences and technology from Penn State. In his current role, he works to foster neurodiversity in the workplace and advance national autism policy. He represents his office at the Federal Interagency Workgroup on Autism and serves as a key subject matter expert for the office’s project on Research Support Services for Employment of Young Adults on the Autism Spectrum. He directs the Partnership on Inclusive Apprenticeship to improve access to career paths in high-growth, high-demand fields. He also has been an adviser on core equity and access issues for emerging work technologies, such as artificial intelligence and automated vehicles.  

Robertson previously worked on Capitol Hill and served as a Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. fellow in the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. He drafted provisions for legislation to increase access to higher education and community living and provided expertise to U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin on national disability policy issues. He also served as the founding vice president of the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, a national nonprofit organization. 

The College of Information Science and Technology recognized Robertson’s professional achievements with its Outstanding Alumni Award, the highest honor the college bestows on graduates. In 2020, he was inducted into the National Disability Mentoring Coalition Hall of Fame. 

2024 Lifetime Achievement Award 

Vivian Briones Valenty, founder and president of VB Cosmetics, was honored with the 2024 Lifetime Achievement Award. The award recognizes Graduate School alumni who have achieved exceptional success in their profession and have demonstrated loyalty to the University and the Penn State Alumni Association.  

After graduating from Mapua Institute of Technology (now Mapua University) in the Philippines, Valenty worked at the International Rice Research Institute investigating the chemical properties of rice. A Ford Foundation grant allowed her to pursue graduate studies in chemistry at Penn State, where she earned a doctorate in organic chemistry, specializing in biochemical processes.  

Valenty found her passion working in industry creating specialty chemical products that solved problems in fields such as agriculture, textiles, microelectronics, graphic arts, and finally, cosmetics. Vivian spent an entire year developing a nail topcoat for the professional nail industry. After 300 trial formulations, she produced a sample that dried traditional nail polishes within just six minutes using UV light. This was the world’s first UV topcoat.  

She left the corporate world to manufacture the topcoat and innovate new products under private labels for emerging brands, and she incorporated her company, VB Cosmetics, in 1992. 

In 1997, after the Food and Drug Administration released a statement highlighting the dangers of UV-A light used in tanning beds, Valenty spent the next 10 years developing Dazzle Dry, a four-step nail polish system that dries in five minutes without UV light exposure and reactive chemicals, yet wears for more than seven days, and removes like a traditional polish. Dazzle Dry now generates more than $20 million in annual sales and is growing rapidly. Valenty holds several patents involving detergents, electronics, ceramics and cosmetics. 

The people, growth, products and social responsibility initiatives of VB Cosmetics have been recognized by the state of Arizona and other government and professional association groups. Valenty’s company donates to nonprofit organizations that support women’s education and in partnership with We Forest, plants one tree for every order placed on its website. To date, VB Cosmetics has planted more than 500,000 trees in India and Africa. 

More information about the Graduate School Alumni Society Awards program can be found on the Graduate School website

Last Updated March 27, 2024

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