Donor

Influential Innovation

“YIP provides students with one of the most comprehensive and immersive introductions to research they can find.”

“YIP provides students with one of the most comprehensive and immersive introductions to research they can find.”

When his high school chemistry teacher said a representative from the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy was stopping by to discuss the Young Innovators Program (YIP), Alex DeWalle ’22 decided to listen in.

Smart move.

The summer after his junior year in high school, DeWalle was one of 17 students to be accepted into YIP. He was paired with Dr. Sam Lai (Ph.D.) at the Lai Lab.

YIP engages top-tier high school students in cutting-edge and innovative research in the pharmaceutical sciences for eight weeks. The program, part of the Eshelman Institute for Innovation, challenges students to think creatively and critically as they solve real and urgent health-care problems, all under the guidance of UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy mentors.

“I helped [Dr. Lai] with his research and even did some independent work of my own,” says DeWalle, now a freshman biology major at Carolina. “At the end of the summer, I presented my work in a symposium. Each summer since then, I’ve worked in the same lab and expanded my work to gain more independence.”

DeWalle, who grew up in Allen, Texas, and Cary, North Carolina, says he got to witness firsthand researchers’ collaboration on projects in their various fields of expertise.

“The experience of working in the Lai Lab gave me insight into how science works, specifically pharmacology,” DeWalle says. “It taught me more about what I’m interested in and how to go about expanding and developing my passions.”

DeWalle says the immersive YIP experience was more than just academic.

“I’ve met lots of amazing people,” he says. “I’ve made new friends that have helped me get adjusted to life at Carolina, and I’ve learned a lot about the paths that are available to me during, and after, my undergraduate education.”

DeWalle admits a large reason he chose Carolina was YIP.

“The Young Innovators Program provides students with one of the most comprehensive and immersive introductions to research they can find. I would absolutely recommend this program.”

The Eshelman Institute for Innovation is made possible by a $100 million gift from Fred Eshelman to accelerate the creation and development of ideas leading to discoveries and transformative changes in education, research and health care

UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy Funding Priorities

    Readers Also Viewed...

    A group shot of Owen Fenton and his team in the Fenton Lab
    Faculty Support

    Attracting Expertise

    Owen Fenton sees coming to Carolina as a win for his research interests.

    Tim Willson stands with arms crossed with lab equipment in the background.
    Faculty Support

    Bringing the dark proteome into the light

    A Q&A with Tim Willson, the inaugural Harold Kohn Distinguished Professor in Open Science Drug Discovery

    A UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy student takes notes during class.
    Health

    Strengthening Diversity, Improving Care

    Grants to the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy will support diversity and rural care programs.

    Nate Hathaway in the CRISPR Screening Facility
    Research

    UNC-Chapel Hill Awarded Funding for Study of Malan Syndrome

    UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy and CRISPR Screening Facility collaborate on Malan Syndrome study.

    Health

    Smarter Organ Transplants

    The UNC Eshelman Institute for Innovation's Venture Studio invested in technology for smarter organ transplants.

    Shawn Hingtgen and Jillian Perry
    Research

    Treating the Untreatable

    New research funded by a NIH grant seeks to combat one of the most treatment-resistant cancers