Jefferson Trust Flash Grants Highlight Student Research

The Trust has awarded $75,480 across 16 flash grants since September.

“This was our first time running a Flash Funding cycle in the Fall semester. The high request volume is an indicator of students’ drive to advance UVA, and the wide variety of projects showcase the vibrancy of our student body. We look forward to the Spring round!”

—Brent Percival, Executive Director

Student research and learning experiences are key themes this fall. Projects like Tangible Microbes, Living Tectonics, Project Loch Ness, and others are offering students hands-on learning in the classroom.

Different than the Trust’s Major Cycle grants, Flash Funding grants are capped at $10,000 per project and are awarded monthly in the fall and spring.

The 2025 Fall Flash Grants:

Interpreting the Night Sky: $9,425
A team from the Astronomy Department is developing the first astronomy course for American Sign Language (ASL) interpreters, aiming to make astronomy education more accessible to the Deaf community.

Tangible Microbes: 3D Printing for Hands-On Microbiology Learning: $4,049
Students will create physical, interactive 3D models of microbes, transforming microbial concepts into tangible learning experiences.

Student AI Guides: Partners in Teaching and Learning: $10,000
Through workshops, learning communities, consultations, and resource development, students will help shape the use of generative AI in classrooms and ensure that student perspectives are included in university-wide conversations.

Living Tectonics: Bio-Based Futures Studio: $3,400
From the School of Architecture, Living Tectonics is a hybrid studio that engages undergraduate and graduate students in developing engineered living materials (ELMs) through casting and robotic additive manufacturing, upcycling agricultural and post-consumer waste into mycelium-based composites.

Project Loch Ness: $3,000
Students from the Engineering School plan to design, build, and test an underwater stealth technology demonstrator to showcase the viability of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) propulsion as a silent alternative to propeller-based systems for underwater vehicles.

CanSat Project: $1,000
The UVA CubeSat Design Team aims to design UVA’s first CanSat for the American Astronautical Society annual competition, providing hands-on engineering experience for UVA students. This year’s challenge is to create a rocket payload that separates and deploys a paraglider to glide to a specific location to drop another payload.

Project Pegasus: $2,000
A team of students in the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering department will study combustion and detonation physics by creating a system for examining detonation wave properties through curved geometrics. The project allows them to gain research experience and contribute to propulsion innovation.

Dancer and Choreographer Fana Tesfagiorgis prepares for the Gullah Meditations performance.

Gullah Meditations: Performance and Guest Artist Residency: $10,000
“Gullah Meditations” is a choreographed concert of new, jazz arrangements of unpublished Gullah spirituals performed this fall. The project aims to preserve and reimagine African American musical heritage while providing educational opportunities for UVA students.

Beyond the Surface: Innovating and Elevating Artistic Swimming: $6,820
This project plans to establish the first artistic swim team at UVA and introduce artistic swimming to the local community.

Mobilizing the Occultation Group Fleet of Telescopes: $6,343
Funding helps the Occultation Group purchase hardware to modify their telescope systems for overseas research, enabling the observation of stellar occultations when asteroids pass in front of distant stars.

Revitalizing University Records: $2,863
University Records is expanding and upgrading the musical equipment available to students for music creation, practice, recording, and performance, as well as creating affordable practice spaces.

Girls Who Innovate: $9,922
Girls Who Innovate (GWIn) provides free entrepreneurship education and networking to help high school and college girls launch their ideas, including a Summer Entrepreneurship Bootcamp.

Dissemination of Novel Type II Diabetes Management Method for Awareness and Empowerment: $3,332
Funding helps to publicize materials for Type II Diabetes management developed by the Center for Behavioral Medicine, helping patients manage their diabetes more effectively than traditional methods.

KINEcted- Undergraduate Kinesiology Networking Event: $1,775
This event brings students, alumni, and industry experts together for career exploration and networking opportunities.

Wormi: $350
A student-led composting initiative, Wormi aims to divert organic waste from landfills by creating a composting network that transforms kitchen scraps into living soil amendments.

Japanese Cuisine in America: $1,200
Funding enables a group of students to explore cross-cultural dynamics through Japanese cuisine and local businesses by touring North American Sake Brewery and visiting Bad Luck Ramen.

Grants in the News

Our grantees have been busy! Catch up on projects recently featured in the news:

  • The UVA Speaking Center is a free resource available to all UVA Students. Learn more about the work of this flash grant.
  • Jefferson CARES Concussion Management Protocol, a 2025 grant, has received publicity in UVA Today, NBC29 News, and CBS19 News as the program has launched this fall.
  • The Roadmap Scholars from UVA Law received a Trust grant in 2022 to establish the program. Meet two Scholars who are now first-year Law students in the UVA Law magazine.
  • Personalized Student Support and Stronger, AI-Empowered Teaching Assistants, a new Major Cycle Grant, is featured in the School of Data Science Newsletter.
  • The SPRINT Program, a 2024 recipient, is featured in UVA Today, highlighting its work in helping young people recover physically and mentally from knee injuries.

    Associate Professor of Kinesiology Chris Kuenze monitors Research Assistant Cadence Layne’s progress on the treadmill. (Photo: Matt Riley)
  • Students are at the core of a new University program, the UVA EMS Response Initiative.
  • A team at UVA Health is studying microplastics in human heart valves. Learn more about this groundbreaking grant project.
  • Dr. Alisa Bahl was recently featured on the Behavioral Health Today podcast to discuss her work with Parent-Child Interaction Therapy. She is a 2025 grant recipient.
  • Sound on Grounds has many episodes of “Pilot Projects: From Seed to Story”, featuring Jefferson Trust grants! Listen here

Upcoming Grant Cycles

Are you considering applying for a Jefferson Trust grant in Spring 2026? Now is the time to start planning!

  • Major Cycle: For requests over $10,000. Submit a Letter of Inquiry (LOI) at any time; those invited to the next stage must submit full proposals by January 31, 2026. Early LOI submissions are strongly encouraged to allow time for feedback and refinement.
  • Flash Funding: For requests of $10,000 or less, with the proposal form opening on January 1, 2026. Designed for short-term projects or immediate-use opportunities, grants will be awarded monthly until the semester’s $100,000 allocation is fully distributed.

Visit our Grant Seekers webpage for full details and timelines of both cycles. We like bold, original ideas that create a tangible impact on the student experience, UVA community, or broader society.

Rotunda Planetarium Open House

Child at a Rotunda public night

Make plans to view the constellations and stars in the Rotunda Dome Room on Friday, November 28, from 6–8:30 p.m. This free community event will feature special performances by the Youth Orchestras of Central Virginia and a visit from historical actor-interpreter Bill Barker as Thomas Jefferson.

The idea for a Rotunda Planetarium dates back to the summer of 1818, when Jefferson envisioned the Dome’s ceiling painted “sky-blue and spangled with gilt stars in their position and magnitude copied exactly.” That vision was brought to life in 2019, when three UVA doctoral students—supported by a Jefferson Trust grant—purchased the equipment needed to “open the ceiling to the stars” and hosted an exhibition on the Rotunda Library’s early history.

Don’t miss this opportunity to step into Jefferson’s vision and experience the night sky from inside the Rotunda. We hope to see you on November 28!