Four Princeton undergraduate students — Zoe Tavares, Adrija Kundu, Lena Chau, and Janah Richardson — gave back to communities and gained practical, real-world experience by working with New Jersey-based organizations focused on public health-related projects and research.
The New Jersey Alliance for Clinical and Translational Science (full story.
) collaborated with the Program for Community-Engaged Scholarship ( ) and community partners to design and fund four different short-term initiatives. These remote projects, which addressed specific community health and organizational needs, offered the Princeton students valuable experiential learning opportunities between the 2024 and 2025 academic semesters. Each student also produced a final deliverable for the community partner to support the organizations’ efforts going forward. The students were chosen for the paid micro-internships through an annual selective application process. To read the