Doubts (mostly) behind her, astronomy fan heads to HarvardĢż
Claire Lamman, the collegeās spring 2019 outstanding graduate, turned out to be much better at science than sheād thought possible
As she prepares to accept two degrees, one in physics and the other in astronomy with highest honors, Claire Lamman appears to be just the sort of student youād expect to be named outstanding graduate of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder.Ģż

Claire Lamman is the outstanding graduate of the College of Arts and Sciences for spring 2019. Her honors thesis focused on a survey of red dwarf stars, an image of which (courtesy of NASA) is at the top of the page.
Lamman graduates on May 9 with summa cum laude distinction in astrophysical and planetary sciences. She wrote her honors thesis on red-dwarf star multiplicity. Her thesis advisor called her the āmost outstanding undergraduate student I have worked with.ā In fall, she will begin a graduate research fellowship in astrophysics at Harvard University.Ģż
But she spent years believing she was not smart enough to pursue the field she lovedāastronomy. She attributes her success to persistence, hard work and luck. Ģż
She dates her interest in astronomy to kindergarten, when her teacher told her about astronauts, whereupon Lamman decided to write a non-fiction book about the planets. In grade school, her grandparents often took her to the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, where the planetarium would screen āBlack Holes: The Other Side of Infinity.ā
Astronomy is something sheās always wanted to do, āalthough I havenāt always thought I could do this.ā
At Š”»ĘŹé Boulder, Lamman has been behind the projector, showing āBlack Holesā to audiences at Fiske Planetarium. Sheās also racked up an impressive list of awards, and a version of her honors thesis is being considered for publication by a peer-reviewed journal.
āI know I come across as kind of an over-achiever right now. I realize that. But I havenāt always thought of myself in that way,ā Lamman said.Ģż
āI was a total slacker in elementary school,ā she said, adding that her second-grade teacher declined to recommend Lamman for an accelerated-learning program ābecause she said I wasnāt good at math.ā
Lamman doesnāt blame the teacher; she says she simply ādidnāt careā about school in those early years.Ģż
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Research is a lot like the weather in Boulder. It can be confusing, difficult to see consistent trends, and just when youāve finally got it, you have days of sun and think winter is overābam!ĢżBomb cyclone.ā
In a speech to fellow honors students, Lamman explained further: āGrowing up, I didnāt feel smart,ā she said. āI stood out more as a creative person ā putting most time into drawing, playing piano and writing atrocious poetry.āĢż
But astronomy remained her real passion. āSo, I decided to give it a goāand found that succeeding in science means a lot more than just being āsmart.āā
In a meeting with James W.C. White, interim dean of the college, Lamman identified a key moment when she began to reconsider her own abilities. When her family moved to a new town and she began studying in a new school, she found herself slightly ahead of other students in an area she presumed she was not good at: math.
āAnd it was the first time I felt smart,ā she said, pausing before inflecting the word āsmartā as if she were still questioning the term. Then she began working harder.Ģż
Upon entering Š”»ĘŹé Boulder as a student, Lammanās goal was to graduate in four years with at least a 3.0 grade-point average. āI thought that was going to be really difficult for me,ā she said.Ģż
White, who is not only dean but also a noted climatologist and one of the most highly cited researchers on the Š”»ĘŹé Boulder campus, told Lamman that his experience resembled hers. He, too, didnāt take studying too seriously until high school, āwhen I realized I could actually get good grades,ā White said.
In her prepared remarks for fellow honors graduates, Lamman expounded on this theme. Science, and particularly research, is hard.Ģż
āYou can be brilliant, hard-working, innovative, and yet fail purely from bad luck,ā she said. āI, like probably most of you, am here today due to some combination of persistence, creativity and luck, none of which Iāve always fully appreciated or known how to use.ā
Even with hard work, persistence and luck, Lamman faced obstacles, she said. In spring 2018, it felt like her research was āgoing nowhereā because she was struggling to identify a weird pattern in her data. After much effort, she found the problem in her computer code: out of thousands of lines of code, sheād missed two characters.Ģż
Read the rest of Claire Lamman's prepared remarks to fellow honors graduates at this link.
āA 1 and a 0 stole months of my life,ā she said, adding: āResearch is a lot like the weather in Boulder. It can be confusing, difficult to see consistent trends, and just when youāve finally got it, you have days of sun and think winter is overābam!ĢżBomb cyclone.ā
Lamman, who says she wants to spend at least part of her time in her career doing outreachāhelping people understand the science she lovesāsays persistence and creativity have been critical.Ģż
Generating new approaches to inquiry, making connections, conducting novel research, even presenting work in an accessible way all require creativity, she said, the kind of creativity she thought had been useful only for her hobbies.
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āI didnāt turn out to be smarter than I thought; I just realized the potential of skills not traditionally associated with science.āĢż