Stony Brook University

04/27/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 04/27/2026 13:09

Building Connection and Leadership

How Stony Brook's Alan Alda Center, DI3, Office for Research, and SUNY Are Training Scientists to Lead and Communicate

"We're going to play an exercise called 'Affirmation Ball,'" said Josh Rice, a facilitator from the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science™ at Stony Brook University.

At the State University of New York (SUNY) headquarters in New York City, Rice faced a crowded room of scientists and researchers. He raised his hands and began shaping the air into a ball.

Josh Rice, facilitator at the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science, starts an improv exercise with fellows from the SUNY Research Leadership Academy. Photo Credit: Chris Nguyen, SUNY Global.

"I'm going to say an affirmation about this journey," he said. "Then, I'll call someone's name. You'll catch the ball, share a reflection, and throw it to someone else."

As if the ball had weight, he tossed it overhead to his colleagues, Alda facilitators Radha Ganesan and Kim Stauffer, and then on it went to some 30 biomedical researchers, engineers, neuroscientists and climate scientists - now fellows of the inaugural SUNY Research Leadership Academy (SRLA).

After a year-long training experience, the fellows gathered at SUNY Global Center for their final session with the Alda Center on March 30.

As the ball traveled from fellow to fellow, they reflected on challenges they worked through since the Academy's start: the feeling of isolation in their work, difficulty in communicating research to funders and elected officials and the unlearning that communication is a gift that you either have or don't.

When the ball got to Susan Clark, associate professor at the University at Buffalo, she volleyed it into the air before catching it again. "This experience has been life-changing," she said. "Coming into this, I was intimidated and self-conscious. But everyone has been so welcoming. It doesn't get easier. But we're going to get better."

Left: Susan Clark, SRLA Fellow, participating in an 'Affirmation Ball' exercise at the final meeting of the SUNY Research Leadership Academy. Photo Credit: Chris Nguyen, SUNY Global.

Long before the fellows gathered at SUNY Global and learned to toss imaginary balls into the air, what Clark felt was a sentiment all too familiar to one of the Academy's founders.

A Founder's Vision

Before she cofounded SRLA, Laura Lindenfeld came to Stony Brook a decade ago to lead the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science. From the start, she drew on the wisdom of Alan Alda, who founded the center in 2009, and facilitators who teach the Alda Method®. "The listening tour took time," she said, "It was worth every second."

What she heard from facilitators shaped everything that came next for the Center. Under Lindenfeld's leadership, training and research in the Alda Method® expanded, infrastructure grew and the Center's work broke into private and nonprofit industry, including NASA and the Gates Foundation. But for Lindenfeld, the Alda Center's growth felt incomplete.

SRLA fellow Susan Clark (left) and Laura Lindenfeld, founder of the SUNY Research Leadership Academy and Executive Director of the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science.

"We help thousands and thousands in the sciences. We've travelled from Australia to Hawaii and back again," she said. "Many on the Alda team asked, 'how can we help more people?' And that got me thinking. If we can do that for clients across the world, why not here in our own backyard?"

As the Center grew, the answer that brought Lindenfeld back to SUNY took shape as a year-long academy for researchers in the university system. The program would train fellows to communicate their work with clarity and leadership, bridging science and society and bringing the Alda Center's training to more than 10 SUNY campuses for the first time.

Setting Up the SUNY Research Leadership Academy for Success

In early 2025, Lindenfeld submitted a proposal to the Henry Luce Foundation, which backed the Academy with a seed grant. She brought the concept to Stony Brook University's Office for Research and Innovation, then led by Kevin Gardner, who saw the Academy's potential and helped pitch it to SUNY's vice presidents for research.

From there, Shadi Shahedipour-Sandvik, senior Vice chancellor of SUNY's Office for Research, Innovation and Economic Development, brought the full weight of the SUNY system behind the Academy, and with it the support of SUNY's Chancellor John B. King Jr.

Right: Executive Director Laura Lindefeld stands next to Chancellor John B. King Jr. before opening remarks at the SUNY Research Leadership Academy. Photo Credit: Osvaldo Rodriguez, Bobi Media.

With SUNY's help, the work of building a tangible program began. Brenda Hoffman, who leads curriculum and organizational strategy at the Alda Center, worked alongside Lindenfeld and Alda facilitators Radha Ganesan,Josh Rice, Kim Stauffer, Nancee Moes, and Lydia Franco-Hodges to shape what the Academy would ask fellows to accomplish.

Lindenfeld then enlisted the expertise of another Stony Brook colleague to help launch the Academy: Judi Brown Clarke, vice president of DI3. Clarke contributed a specific teaching methodology to the Academy: lessons in leadership and emotional intelligence, explored through fables. "Leadership is measured not only by what we know, but by how we listen, uplift others and respond to challenges," she said. "Fables provide a timeless foundation for difficult conversations and strategic thinking."

Judi Brown Clarke at session 2 of the Academy held at the University at Buffalo.

The Academy's third partner was the Office of Research and Innovation at Stony Brook, now led by Mónica Bugallo. Bugallo, who stepped into the interim vice president role in January.

"Including the Office of Research and Innovation in the design and implementation of the Academy elevates it beyond many traditional leadership programs," she said. "The Academy focuses on essential communication skills that researchers need today - from conveying complex knowledge to students, to securing critical funding from legislators, to translating societal impact for the media."

Bringing the Academy to life was a cross-collaborative effort between the Alda Center, DI3, and the Office of Research, including key Stony Brook colleagues who helped project manage the Academy across SUNY: Jawaad Sheriff, a biomedical engineer and research development associate, and Nina Maung-Gaona, senior associate vice president for research administration.

From proposal to application and now more than a year later, Lindenfeld, Clarke, and Bugallo stood together at SUNY Global Center to witness the final session of the Academy.

Judi Brown Clarke, Vice President of the Office of DI3 at Stony Brook, opens the final session of the SUNY Research Leadership Academy on March 30 at SUNY Global. Photo Credit: Osvaldo Rodriguez, Bobi Media.

The Final Session: 3-Minute Doses of Hope

"Welcome to another day of growth," said Judi Brown Clarke, looking out at the SRLA cohort. She reflected on how far fellows had come since their first session in August. "We knew this was going to be something special, and the culmination is today."

Joy Goswami gives a masterclass in research commercialization and entrepreneurship to SUNY's Research Leadership Academy fellows. Photo Credit: Osvaldo Rodriguez, Bobi Media.

During their final day, fellows moved through keynotes, warm-ups exercises with Alda facilitators, and panel discussions covering philanthropy and patents, including a session on research commercialization and entrepreneurship led by Joy Goswami, director of intellectual property and licensing at SUNY Research Foundation.

That afternoon, the fellows would take the stage for the Alda Spotlight presentations. Each would have three minutes to deliver a clear and vivid talk connecting their research to a layperson.

But first, they heard from the Academy's leadership.

Mónica Bugallo, Interim Vice President of the Office of Research and Innovation at Stony Brook University. Photo Credit: Rachel Davila Ramirez, Alan Alda Center.

Bugallo brought the morning into sharp focus on research leadership.

"The work starts in your labs, when you mentor students, when you write a grant," she said. "But today is about more than that. We need to share with the world the importance of what we do, and help people connect to the advances and complex problems we are working to address."

Lindenfeld was the last of the Academy's leaders to address the fellows.

"We didn't ask you to simplify your expertise or perform in a certain way," she said. "But rather to make genuine human connections. This is the core of the Alda Method - being more present, more human, more connected. We need more leaders just like the ones here."

Laura Lindenfeld gives the final address on behalf of SRLA's leadership team on March 30 at SUNY Global. Photo Credit: Osvaldo Rodriguez, Bobi Media.

Before introducing Chancellor John B. King Jr., Lindenfeld signaled for a surprise at the close of her address: a recorded message from Alan Alda played for the room. He left the fellows with a message that's at the heart of what the Center teaches. "Don't forget," he said. "Connect."

SUNY Chancellor John B. King Jr. took the podium last. Rather than a lesson on leadership, he offered the fellows a story about a particular painting from the 1960s - and what its context reveals.

Laura Lindenfeld introduces Alan Alda, actor, science communication advocate, and founder of the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science. Photo Credit: Rachel Davila Ramirez, Alan Alda Center.

He described Norman Rockwell's painting of Ruby Bridges, who at six years old, walked into a segregated New Orleans school surrounded by U.S. Marshals. Most people's eyes go straight to Ruby, he told them. But he asked the fellows to "zoom out" - to look at who else was in that painting. The federal agents in the background, he explained, provide the context that reveals the stakes of that moment in history. He invited the fellows to see their own work through the same lens.

"You know all the parts - every nook and cranny of your research," King said. "You know what's in the abstract and what's in every footnote. But sometimes the nugget that unlocks understanding for the audience you are trying to reach is in the background, not the foreground."

SUNY Chancellor John B. King Jr. offers remarks to SRLA Fellows at SUNY Global Center. Photo Credit: Osvaldo Rodriguez, Bobi Media.

For the fellows, the moment to find that nugget had arrived later that day.

One by one, researchers took the floor of SUNY Global and put their Alda training into practice. They distilled years of expertise into a short talk that a stranger could understand and care about. A guest in the room that afternoon described what he witnessed as "3-minute doses of hope."

Reuben Kline, SUNY Research Leadership Academy Fellow from Stony Brook University, delivers a 3-minute Alda Spotlight talk. Photo Credit: Rachel Davila Ramirez.

In their talks, SRLA fellows offered an inside look at research that holds promise for bio-printed organs to shorten transplant waiting lists; identified early warning signs of high-risk pregnancy to keep newborns out of the NICU; explored solutions for cardiac health in patients at risk of arrest; and pushed new frontiers in Alzheimer's research, glaucoma, and more.

SUNY Research Leadership Academy Fellows strike a "Ta-da!" pose - a signature closing tradition inspired by Alda Center events - alongside SUNY and Stony Brook University staff and facilitators. Photo Credit: Osvaldo Rodriguez, Bobi Media.

With a dash of improv and newfound confidence, they talked about their research with excitement and laughter. "In some ways, we've untrained them from leading with facts only," said Lindenfeld, "We're asking them to find the connection first. All of us need community, scientists and engineers too. But to build community, you must connect."

Left to Right: Roseann E. Peterson, Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Director of the Population Genetics and Environment in Mental Health (POP-GEM) Lab at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University; Sabina Hirshfield, Professor in the Department of Medicine at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University; and Suman Ghosh, MD, Associate Professor of Neurology at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University and Clinical Director of Pediatric Neurology at Maimonides Medical Center.

The SUNY Research Leadership Academy aims to return in the Fall. "I hope to continue growing the Academy with the amazing team that made this program possible," Lindenfeld said. "We are building a broad community where researchers link arms across differences and institutions - forget the boundaries between them and do important work together."

Stony Brook University published this content on April 27, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 27, 2026 at 19:09 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]