Victoria College Research Day Puts Undergrad Ideas on Display

Third-year student Jasmine Jing’s research examines how race, income and neighbourhood marginalization influence anxiety and depression in children with childhood-onset lupus. She found that youth in the most financially disadvantaged areas were over four times more likely to show signs of depression.
By Dan Blackwell
Victoria College’s Research Day, held March 31 in Alumni Hall, showcased undergraduate student research across a variety of disciplines, with students presenting their work on poster boards and delivering three-minute elevator pitches to a panel of faculty judges.
The day included an awards ceremony along with a keynote address from U of T Professor Matt Ratto, who explored how "critical making"—the act of creating as a way to ask questions or challenge assumptions, rather than simply to build something useful or marketable—can transform systems through creative, hands-on approaches.
Victoria College Principal Alex Eric Hernandez said that Research Day provides students with a one-of-a-kind opportunity to showcase their research to peers, faculty and experts.
“Research Day challenges students to synthesize their work for presentation, gather feedback and advance their professional development,” Hernandez said. “It serves as a form of publication and offers undergraduates the unique experience of sharing research with the broader university community.”
This year’s event saw a record number of research submissions from both the humanities and sciences, something Hernandez said reflects Vic’s strong reputation for fostering interdisciplinary research.
“At Vic, we take research seriously, so much so that we offer a variety of prizes recognizing student scholarship, we host research centres like the Northrop Frye Centre and the newly launched Centre for Creativity and we offer a wealth of support services for our student researchers," he said.
For students like Jasmine Jing, whose research explores the intersection of race, income and neighborhood marginalization in childhood-onset lupus, Research Day is an opportunity to refine her communication skills.
“The most important aspect of Research Day is that it forces us to think not just about our research but how it can truly be understood,” she said. “It challenges us to simplify complex concepts for the general public and policymakers. It makes our research more accessible and impactful.”
Learn more about this year’s Research Day award winners and explore videos featuring some of the student researchers and their innovative projects below.
Shane Joy | Advocate or Assimilator? Egerton Ryerson’s Role in Shaping Indigenous Education in 19th-Century
Dani Pucci | Episodic Disability and Accommodation Access at Ontario Post-Secondary Institutions
Nicolas Viulet | Magic Mushrooms: A New Frontier in Mental Health
Chelsea Wang | Informal Jubao (Reporting) and Citizen Activism In Contemporary China
Suha Kazmi | Dens: A Housing Loophole
2025 Research Day Award Winners
Award | Recipient | Project Title |
---|---|---|
Dean of Students Social Impact Awards | Shane Joy | Advocate or Assimilator? Egerton Ryerson’s Role in Shaping Indigenous Education in 19th-Century Upper Canada |
Sijil Jindani | Technology and the Border-Industrial Complex at the San Diego-Tijuana Border | |
Grace Eaton | Palimpsest: A Queer Memoir | |
Artin Khiabani | Fundamental Fairness Beyond Legal Counsel: Envisioning a Less Lawyer-Centric Refugee Status Determination System in Canada | |
E.J. Pratt Primary Sources Research Prize (Humanities) | Arlo Grzyb-Reed | Eva Kushner: A Lifetime of Letters |
E.J. Pratt Primary Sources Award (Social Sciences) | Natalie Lau | Narratives of Resilience from the Thai-Myanmar Border |
Principal’s Science Prize | Hannah Consunji | Using Stem Cell-Derived Brain Organoids to Model Myelination and Demyelination |
Science, Technology, and Society Program Prize | Ava Spurr | Through the Looking Glass: PLATO Spectacles and the Birth of Augmented Reality |
Student Choice Award and |
Shebonti Khandaker | Intimacy in the Archive: Feeling History in AIDS-Era Photography |
VUSAC Student Experience & Wellbeing Award | Dani Pucci | Episodic Disability and Accommodation Access at Ontario Post-Secondary Institutions |