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This Black Swan Soars
Way Above Expectations
By Amy Halloran
Christopher C. Wells received his doctorate in
inorganic and physical chemistry May 14th from the University at
Albany in New York state. While completing a Ph.D. is quite an accomplishment
for anyone, it should be noted that Wells is legally blind and profoundly deaf.
At his graduation, the 32-year-old also received the 2011 Distinguished
Doctoral Dissertation Award, an accolade for the best dissertation in any field
in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Most of the time I find things easy to overcome, but
I spend a lot of time reaching out to people, said Wells, interviewed
recently at his home in Lake George, N.Y., with his godmother Pat Thompson
interpreting and his mom, Eileen, and brother Bobby nearby. I think most
people could work beyond their limits if they tried. I took three years of
Spanish, and I did great.
His appetite for learning is huge. Hes teaching
himself Japanese, Swahili and Polish, and he likes to try to communicate with
people on the computer in those languages, though the keyboards dont
always have the right characters.
Wells was born two months premature; at birth, he weighed
2 pounds and was deaf. He had bleeding in the brain when he was a baby, which
damaged some of his cranial nerves. As a result, it is difficult for him to
swallow food, and he cannot breathe very deeply. He has cerebral palsy, which
slightly limits his range of motion and affects his balance.
Despite that, he swims and works out regularly and plays
basketball, billiards and bowling. He has a shelf of bowling trophies in his
room, along with much larger collections of rocks and Transformer toys. All of
those, though, are outnumbered by his book collection, which includes plenty of
physics, chemistry and philosophy titles, along with novels. Among his favorite
books are Ralph Ellisons Invisible Man and anything by Ralph
Waldo Emerson. Another writer he admires is bell hooks (Gloria Watson),
especially her book Killing Race: Ending Racism in America.
Im really into learning about black culture
and how they overcame things, Wells said. He sees the discrimination
against African Americans as paralleling the prejudice leveled against people
who live with disabilities.
On the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. this year,
he posted a long note on his Facebook page about the civil rights leaders
legacy.
Genetically, we are too similar to be
different, he wrote. Any two humans among the nearly 7 billion
living on Earth share over 99.9 percent of their genetic information. We must
apply this information as our defense against discrimination and keep King's
legacy alive!
In March of this year, Wells flew to Texas to present a
paper on the energy states in graphene at the American Physics Society. He was
the first deaf-blind doctoral student to present research at this annual
meeting. Graphene became the focus of his work after a three-month internship
at NASA in 2007.
My research is about enabling electronics to be
improved with a pure-carbon material that is 1 atom thick, he wrote in a
reporters notebook. My work has identified ways in which this
material (graphene) can be controlled for electronics. This piece of pencil
lead has energy states that remain the same in energy and my research hopes to
find gentle ways to make these states differ in energy and describe these
conditions for future device designs incorporating graphene.
At some point, Wells said, he plans to write for
scientific journals and work more with Dr. Lawrence Snyder at the University at
Albany. Hes also looking for computational chemistry work. If he can find
a location he likes, he will consider moving. Otherwise, he will stay local.
Wells lived with his family throughout his undergraduate
work at Siena College in Loudonville, N.Y., and the nine years he was at
Albany. Initially, he planned to get only a masters degree, but after a
year, his advisers suggested he skip that and go straight for the Ph.D.
His family members, who have a strong knowledge of
services for the developmentally disabled, have navigated the logistics of his
schooling. Eileen Wells became his foster parent when he was 4, and she adopted
him when he was 7. This is the 40th year she has worked for Prospect
Child and Family Center, which serves several counties in the lower Adirondack
region. Pat Thompson has been with the center for 30 years.
Chris Wells read large-type books throughout high school
but switched to normal-sized type before college, a decision that allowed him
access to the specialized texts necessary for his studies.
His mother advocated for him on numerous occasions
throughout his education. Once, when he was in the seventh grade, she enlisted
the services of a lawyer when SAT moderators wanted him to take the tests in a
separate room. (The tests were administered by the Johns Hopkins Center for
Talented Youth.)
Normally, his grades would have been marked nonstandard
because of the accommodation, but Eileen Wells perseverance resulted in a
precedent-setting victory: now, the visually impaired can be in the same room
as other test takers. She also fought for her son to read his Spanish Regents
and answer in sign language. That battle was won, too.
Chris Wells taught his brother sign language when the
latter joined the family 11 years ago. Bobby, who graduated from high school
earlier this year, considers his big brother his role model.
Chris Wells graduation sparked articles in local
newspapers. In one of the stories, he advised people to turn disabilities into
abilities. He was asked how he did that.
It was easy -- like alchemy. That was the old
science, before chemistry. If you think you can change something, you can.
People tend to think that disabilities are a burden, but I never think down; I
think up. Its figuring out how to use what you have, how to use it to
work with what you dont have. Think about silence -- being in silence all
day long, being able to focus. Its not a bad thing.
That focus has served him well. Though her son was sickly
as a child, once his health stabilized, he learned quickly, picking up 100
signs in a weekend, Eileen Wells recalled.
In grade school I loved math, and I had many other
interests, he said. Then science came, and I could visualize the
movements and molecules in my head. Chemistry was my main love. I started
reading books about atoms and power and realized I could do well in chemistry.
I loved chemistry. I loved physics.
I had an interpreter in elementary and high school.
Students would take notes for me in high school and in college. Some typed, but
most of them wrote. I could read most of them enlarged.
In college, many of the notes had to be finger
spelled because of the letters in chemistry, said Wells, who noted that
his interpreter in graduate school understood his research and work. Sometimes,
he said, he felt like her teacher, but that was an asset. Teaching helps
you to learn. To explain things, you also improve the ability to learn from
that person.
Technology plays a big role in Wells research and in
his daily life.
I would use (computer) modeling programs when I was
younger, so in college everyone wanted me in their group. I use a lot of
different interfaces. I have a lot of different scientific programs on my
computer, for my research. Things that people do in labs I can show much more
quickly by using quantum chemistry software. I can work it up on the computer
and show them 3D.
He uses a program called WordPad on his iPhone to
communicate with people, such as store clerks and people who dont sign.
Of meeting people through technological outlets, he
wrote, My disabilities are well-hidden, eclipsed by my abilities, so
well-hidden that people never recognize that I am deaf or visually impaired
when they first encounter me. Texting, he noted, cannot distinguish
between people who hear and people who are deaf.
When asked what he might say to the disability community,
he wrote: Never let what society uses to define what a person can do or
cannot do deter you from consideration of unprecedented acts by individuals
that seem at first glance unlikely to be capable (of doing them). Let the
black swans speak for themselves and redefine what capability in
society really means. Black swan is something thats very improbable and
no one thinks exists, but it can. I am. Im like a black swan.
Amy Halloran, a writer,
lives in upstate New York with her sons and husband. |