- Tech influencer energized by Imagine RITTech influencer Jacklyn Dallas knows a thing or two about creativity and innovation. But when she got the chance in late April to visit the Imagine RIT: Creativity and Innovation Festival, she said she was “blown away.” More than 34,000 people visited campus on April 26 for Imagine RIT. They got to experience a record-setting number of exhibits that highlighted student, faculty, and staff work at the cutting edge of technology, the arts, and design. “It was genuinely one of the most energizing days of the year so far for me,” Dallas said. “The students were brilliant, curious, and so many of them had personal missions driving what they were building.” Jacklyn Dallas with RIT President David Munson at Imagine RIT. Dallas launched her YouTube Channel NothingButTech when she was 13. She’s expanded her social media presence to Instagram, X (formerly Twitter), and podcasts, with a total following in the hundreds of thousands. She’s racked up tens of millions of views for her interviews with luminaries such as Apple CEO Tim Cook, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, and Rivian Automotive CEO RJ Scaringe, as well as in-depth behind-the-scenes tours and product reviews. Just 23 years old, she’s already given guest lectures at Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and New York University. She visited Imagine RIT as part of a partnership with the university. She shared glimpses of her day with her followers during her visit and recently published a more in-depth look at her experience. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Jacklyn/NothingButTech (@nbtjacklyn) “I have the privilege of spending a lot of time in tech labs and at launch events led by incredibly smart engineers and founders—and I felt that same energy at RIT,” Dallas said. Would she come back? “In a heartbeat,” she said. Learn more about Dallas and her work at her website NothingButTech.
- RIT student video game creations take top prizes at GameFest 2025When RIT students create video games, they don’t just mail it in. A team of students won the Grand Prize at GameFest 2025 for developing Pelican Post. The game is about a pelican mailman delivering mail to a small town of unique characters. Along the way, players help the town regain a lost sense of community. The narrative game, which is in the cozy genre that emphasizes low-stress and non-violence, is currently in development. GameFest, held at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in April, is an annual showcase of student talent in game development. The competition brings together college students from around New York state and the Northeast to exhibit their games. Thirty games were accepted at GameFest this year. Three of the four finalists for the Grand Prize were games from RIT. “The quality of the games this year across the board, not just from RIT, was seriously impressive,” said Benjamin Snyder, visiting lecturer in RIT’s School of Interactive Games and Media (IGM). “What stood out to me the most was how intentional our teams were about the full experience, including updated websites, social media presence, and promotional materials. You could tell they had considered how people would encounter their games and how to keep that connection going. That big-picture mindset is going to serve them really well moving forward.” In addition to the Grand Prize, Pelican Post also won Excellence in Narrative Design and was a finalist for Excellence in Visual Art. Four other RIT student games were highlighted at the 2025 competition, including:Good Luck Valley — won Excellence in Visual Art and finalist for Excellence in Narrative and the Grand Prize Grim’s Coffin — won Excellence in Game Design and Grand Prize finalist Vessyl — finalist for Excellence in Game Design and Technical Excellence Echoes in the Mist — Technical Excellence finalist Grim's Coffin by Kevin-Insinna Snyder said that what makes the biggest difference for RIT students at competitions is that they tend to take opportunities and really run with them. “They don’t just treat their games as something they needed to make for a class—they treat them like they’re already in the industry,” said Snyder. “That mindset shift, from ‘this is a class project’ to ‘this is something I believe in,’ is what really raises the bar and changes the perception from ‘a game made by students’ to ‘a game made by developers who happen to be students.’” How Pelican Post delivered Pelican Post started as a game jam submission for the 2024 New Year, New Skills Game Jam. The game development event had the theme of “making connections.” Pelican Post In Pelican Post, players take on the role of Pepper, a young pelican who recently moved to Port Pleasant for a job as the town’s mailman. Through the job, players interact with and get to know the townsfolk and help them out. The creators said that small acts of kindness is pretty much in the mailman’s job description. In 2024, the team continued working on Pelican Post through RIT’s MAGIC Maker Program. The extracurricular program provides students with the funding, studio space, and mentoring support to manage their own digital media projects and prepare them for publication and investment readiness. “While the game was already visually impressive prior to the program, the majority of actual development happened during the Maker program,” said Jeremy Kotz, a third-year game design and development major from North Potomac, Md. “We worked incredibly hard to transform the game from a visual and conceptual demo into a full game demo with a complete vertical slice—a segment of the game that is polished, contains all core gameplay features, and is reflective of the final product we aim to create.” Kotz said that the team’s success at GameFest can be largely attributed to its efforts during RIT’s MAGIC Maker program. “Pelican Post stood out because we have a clear vision for the world we are creating and the experience we want players to have,” said Kotz. “Players were fully immersed in the cozy atmosphere of the game and we received an incredible amount of positive feedback.” The Pelican Post team includes Connor Petrei (top row, left to right), Rylan, Vanacore, Drew Genel, Jeremy Kotz, Ricard Halvorson, Cheryl Chang (bottom row, left to right), Joana Leong, and Jason Weinberg. The Pelican Post team currently includes development lead and game designer Kotz; visual lead Drew Genel ’25 (new media design); narrative lead Connor Petrei, a fourth-year game design and development major; composer Joana Leong, a fourth-year game design and development major; developer Ricard Halvorson, a third-year design and development major; developer Jason Weinberg ’25 (game design and development); developer Gale Ellis ’24 (game design and development); animator Cheryl Chang, a fourth-year film and animation major; and marketer Rylan Vanacore ’25 (journalism). In the fall, several members of the team are bringing the game to their IGM Production Studio course, where they will get to continue creating content for the game. In the future, they hope to work with MAGIC to publish the game on Steam.
- Record number of RIT students earn study abroad scholarshipsA record number of RIT students has been awarded the Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship to pursue cultural exchanges and research opportunities abroad. “We are so pleased that our talented students continue to be recognized by earning these distinguished fellowships and scholarships,” said Jenny Sullivan, director of Education Abroad and International Fellowships. “This is a testament to the high level of dedication and commitment to their studies, as well as the importance of immersing oneself in different cultures and learning environments. These experiences will undoubtedly contribute to their short-term and long-term successes.” The Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship from the U.S. Department of State is a competitive, merit-based scholarship that allows U.S. students to gain proficiency in a variety of languages and cultures, skills that are important to their academic and career development. This year’s Gilman scholars studying in Japan are Jeremiah Henderson, an applied modern languages and culture – Japanese option major; Ignacio De Orbe, a game design and development major; Samir Samal, a computing exploration option major; Lilly Anastasia Radon, a game design and development major; and Emily Francisco, a computer engineering technology major. Gilman scholars studying in Croatia are Joshua VanNostrand, a management information systems major; Louis Jon LaGambino, a mechanical engineering technology major; Mamadou D’Elhadj Bah, a web and mobile computing major; Breanna Litviak, a hospitality and tourism management and marketing major; and Kelsey Luke, a new media design and computational mathematics major. Jaimison Grimes, an industrial design major, and Ashley Locatelli, a cybersecurity major, will study in Italy; and Delana Perkins, a civil engineering technology major, will study in Greece. Additionally, several students have been awarded other prestigious international fellowships and scholarships. The DAAD (Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst) Research Internships for Science and Engineering assists students with research in Germany. This program is an opportunity for students to gain practical research experience and students are paired with a German university and a German Ph.D. student on research projects in the fields of science and engineering. This year’s awardees are Nicholas Atteck, a biomedical engineering major, and Anna Piccione, an artificial intelligence MS major. The Critical Language Scholarship is awarded to undergraduate students to help fund a language-intensive study abroad program for one semester. This year’s recipient is Ava Inkseep, a cybersecurity and applied modern language and culture – Chinese option double major, who will study Chinese language through Dalian University of Technology in China. The Fulbright Canada Mitacs Globalink fellowship program gives U.S. students the chance to be part of a 10- to 12-week research summer internship under the supervision of Canadian university faculty members in a variety of academic disciplines including science, engineering, mathematics, humanities, and social sciences. This year’s participants are Ezra Bernstein, a computer science major; Jacqueline Driehaus, an environmental science major; Victoria Prendergast, a biomedical engineering major; Leah Robinson, a biotechnology and molecular bioscience major; and Valentine Webster, a psychology major.
- Thirteen seniors at partner high school headed to RITRIT’s partnership with Rochester Prep High School has reached a milestone this year with the 10th anniversary of the partnership and the eighth graduating class. This year, 100 students will graduate from RPHS, and 13 of them will attend RIT to study biochemistry, engineering, photography, computer science, and other disciplines. Eleven of the students are Destler/Johnson Rochester City Scholars, The seniors shared their future plans with the community at a May 23 event at the high school. In addition to RIT, students will attend Boston College, Johns Hopkins University, University of Notre Dame, and Wellesley College, among many others in New York and out of state. Kadence Wilson, the student-elected speaker at the event, has enrolled in RIT’s biomedical engineering program. “When I came to Rochester Prep, every year we’d go to RIT to see faculty and to see what they were doing,” Wilson said. “I was in the STEP program, and I did the Capstone project. When I go to RIT, I already know what to expect.” Counting the Class of 2025, RPHS will have graduated 613 students during the last decade. According to Rachel Dominic, director of College Counseling at RPHS, 67 students have enrolled at RIT since the first graduating class in 2018. Pete Schuck/RIT Photo Rochester Prep High School senior Evangeline Simmons will study English at RIT in the fall. Those numbers are bound to rise with the incoming class of 270 ninth graders. The growth spurt results from Rochester Prep expanding to three middle schools. Jeff Allen, RPHS director of operations, said the staff will grow from 59 to 75 to accommodate the influx. RIT’s support through the K-12 University Center has given students on-campus experiences and has fostered opportunities for them to sit in college classrooms and conduct research with faculty and RIT students through the Capstone program, and for a few, to co-author three research papers with faculty. RIT’s partnership has helped students conceptualize college, according to Allen. “To have those experiences is incredible.” In 2013, RIT Board of Trustee member Ronald L. Zarrella funded the partnership between RIT and Rochester Prep High School to increase the number of Rochester city students who attend college and complete their bachelor’s degree. The public charter school, managed by the Uncommon Schools charter network, opened for the 2014-2015 academic year.
- RIT named a top 5 university to study game designRochester Institute of Technology has been recognized as one of the best game design colleges in the nation. RIT was ranked No. 5 on the Animation Career Review list of Top 50 Game Design Schools and Colleges in the U.S. and No. 2 in New York state. The 2025 rankings considered more than 150 colleges with game design programs. The annual rankings are created by Animation Career Review, an online resource for aspiring animation, game design and development, graphic design, and digital art professionals. The list also named RIT the No. 3 game design master’s degree program, No. 4 bachelor’s degree program, No. 4 private school in the nation, and No. 3 game design school on the East Coast. “RIT Games involves a growing portfolio of game-related academic programs and opportunities for students to explore all aspects of games,” said David Schwartz, director of RIT’s School of Interactive Games and Media (IGM). “We specialize in game development and game design in computing and the arts. We also offer opportunities that apply in many other industries.” Animation Career Review noted that RIT offers several paths for aspiring game designers. Future game-makers can choose between 12 bachelor’s degrees, a four master’s degrees, minors, and an accelerated five-year BS/MS option. In classes, students explore animation, interactive media, user interaction, and math, in addition to electives that specialize in narrative, engines, audio, and graphics. In Echoes in the Mist, players are the last remaining knight in a dark overrun seaport. RIT students created the game as part of a game design and development master’s capstone course and plan to continue development for release on Steam. The ranking also highlights RIT’s emphasis on experiential learning experiences that provide students with an opportunity to learn on the job in real-world industry settings. With help from the cooperative education program, graduates of RIT’s game design and development programs have started careers at companies including Electronic Arts, Cartoon Network, Sony Interactive Entertainment, Google, and Microsoft. The university offers Creative Industry Days—a series of networking events with major companies and studios, where students can engage in panel discussions and portfolio reviews. Participating companies have included Walt Disney, Epic Games, and Adobe. Many students, alumni, and indie developers from the Greater Rochester area go on to develop and publish their games through RIT’s MAGIC Spell Studios. The studio also has a growing portfolio of client work that provides students with the opportunity to work on professional projects before they graduate. The Animation Career Review 2025 Game Design Rankings website has the complete game design school rankings. The ranking looked at academic reputation, employment data, admission selectivity, depth and breadth of programs, value as it relates to tuition and indebtedness, graduation rate, and retention rate. Learn more about RIT’s offerings in Game Design, Development, and Arts.
- Saunders College of Business at RIT will recognize alumnus James G. Gould with 2025 Vanden Brul AwardJames G. Gould, president and co-founder of Alesco Advisors LLC and an RIT alumnus, has been named as the 2025 recipient of the Herbert W. Vanden Brul Entrepreneurial Award, presented by Saunders College of Business at Rochester Institute of Technology. The award, established in 1984, is presented annually to a Rochester-area entrepreneur who has enhanced the regional economy through innovative business leadership. The recipient is selected by a committee of area civic leaders, business leaders, former awardees, and RIT faculty and staff, symbolizing the important connection between RIT and the Rochester business community. Gould will be honored at the Vanden Brul Entrepreneurial Award Luncheon from noon to 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 10, inside the Susan R. Holliday Center on campus. Registration remains open until May 30. Gould, who graduated from RIT with his master’s degree in accounting in 1985, co-founded Alesco in 2000 with a vision to offer objective, fee-only investment advisory services tailored to the needs of institutions and individuals. Under his leadership, the Pittsford-based firm has grown steadily, managing billions in assets for clients across the country, while remaining deeply rooted in Western New York. “I’m proud of what we do for our clients,” Gould said. “Our mission is simple in that we just try to help others. We have a talented group of professionals who enjoy working with one another and with our clients.” Gould added that early credibility was one of the firm’s biggest hurdles, especially having to navigate early troubles like the 2000 dot-com crash and the 2008 financial crisis. “There’s always a gap you have to bridge when you’re starting from scratch, especially at that time,” said Gould. “But in hindsight it was a blessing in disguise. There were a lot of investors at the time who felt that they were ill-served, and we were able to tell our story and open some doors. Our investment philosophy resonated, and that carried us further than we imagined.” Alesco Advisors operates across three distinct business lines, each designed to meet the unique needs of its clients. The firm’s high-net-worth practice offers personalized wealth management services to individuals and families. Its Outsourced Chief Investment Officer (OCIO) practice supports nonprofit organizations, including endowments and foundations, as well as corporate accounts, by providing strategic investment guidance. Alesco also manages a robust retirement plan business, advising on both defined benefit and defined contribution plans, such as 401(k) and 403(b) programs. Gould and his Alesco team are also widely recognized for their community engagement. Gould served on the boards of many regional nonprofits and educational institutions like ROC2025 (OneROC), Al Sigl Center Foundation, Catholic Charities, and the Greater Rochester Health Foundation. Gould, whose Odessa, N.Y., farm upbringing paved the way for his future success, consistently promotes civic responsibility as an essential part of business leadership. “Our exposure to the not-for-profit community has made us aware of the needs of the communities we serve,” he said. “We see the good work that they’re doing and want to help out with gifts of time and treasure.” Gould said receiving the Vanden Brul Award is considerably humbling and inspiring. “Herbert Vanden Brul was an amazing person,” Gould said. “He was a renaissance man, successful in law, real estate, and communications. And he was very philanthropic. He checks all the boxes of what it means to be a community leader. To be recognized as someone following even part of that path is a tremendous honor.” Prior to founding Alesco Advisors, Gould served in leadership roles at Clover Capital Management, as a sales representative for IBM, and was a financial analyst at Xerox. He resides in Pittsford with his wife, Ann. They have four daughters and 11 grandchildren. Saunders College will also honor three RIT students with the Herbert W. Vanden Brul Student Entrepreneurial Award. This award, established in 2019, recognizes outstanding RIT undergraduate or graduate students who have demonstrated the potential to become successful entrepreneurs. The students will find out their placement of finish at the awards ceremony on June 10.Will Gamroth, a computer science major from Mercer Island, Wash., is the co-founder of Tacoma Web Design and SEO, a web design firm which serves over 34 clients across the United States. He also works as a software engineer intern for FM Global. Benjamin C. Hart, an MBA student from Rochester, N.Y., is the founder of Hart Homes, a real estate investment company focusing on the revitalization of urban Rochester with affordable housing. He also serves as the president of RIT’s Real Estate Club. Joshua Michaels, a marketing major and entrepreneurship minor from Far Rockaway, N.Y., is the founder of OnCall, a digital healthcare platform which connects qualified nurses to nearby healthcare facilities. He also serves as the founder of RIT’s Black Artists & Records Society and the president of the Personal Finance Club. “Jim exemplifies the entrepreneurial spirit, ethical leadership and dedication to the Rochester community that the Vanden Brul Award was created to honor,” said Saunders College Dean Jacqueline Mozrall. “We are also proud to honor Will, Benjamin, and Joshua, for their creativity and work ethic—representing the future of innovation and entrepreneurship." Past Vanden Brul award recipients include Marc Fiore, president and founding owner of Mindex; Dwight “Kip” Palmer, a fifth-generation CEO of Palmer Food Services and the Palmer Family of Companies; Susan R. Holliday ’85 (MBA), former president, publisher, and owner of the Rochester Business Journal; and E. Philip Saunders, Saunders Management Co. Inc., and the namesake of RIT’s Saunders College of Business. Information about the Vanden Brul award is available on the Saunders College website.
- Biomedical engineer integrates AI techniques to improve diagnostic medicineResearchers at Rochester Institute of Technology developed new artificial intelligence techniques to extract and visualize information from standard-of-care biomedical data, providing a means for clinicians to better diagnose diseases and determine interventions. The new techniques could also improve image-guided therapies, including surgeries, and minimize invasive procedures because of these refined imaging details. “The future of medicine is not necessarily about acquiring more data but rather having access to effective tools to make use of the data, and this is where biomedical computing plays a critical role,” said Cristian Linte, professor of biomedical engineering in RIT’s Kate Gleason College of Engineering. “Imaging accounts for the majority of biomedical data has transformed diagnostic and interventional medicine from a subjective, perceptual skill based on physicians’ experience to an objective science driven by large-scale, heterogeneous data.” Computer-integrated diagnosis and therapy is an emerging field dedicated to improving disease detection and treatment. Linte and members of his research team, including Imaging science doctoral students Bipasha Kundu, Bidur Khanal, Zixin Yang, Nakul Poudel, and Richard Simon, detailed results of this work in several publications, including the April 2025 proceedings of SPIE Medical Imaging 2025. Biomedical visualization has evolved from anatomical drawings to a standard tool to aid diagnosis, plan treatment options, and monitor therapy. Before biomedical data can be visualized, the raw biomedical imaging data needs to be processed. Integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into medical image analysis has led to significant advances, but several challenges still exist, Linte said. AI models rely on large amounts of expert-annotated data for training, which requires time and expertise of clinicians to curate data. User variability also poses a significant barrier for accurate AI algorithm development. Internal operations and relevance of test data acquired for training of AI models are also not well understood, making predictions difficult to explain. “Many physics-based biomedical models are hampered by their computational expense, which constitutes a major setback to clinical adoption, limiting their use as interactive simulation tools for therapy planning or monitoring,” Linte said. “AI techniques, on the other hand, can learn from large patient-specific datasets, so combining data science with physics-based models has the potential to yield more accurate and more computationally efficient simulations.” Researchers in Linte’s lab have effectively combined biomedical imaging, computing, modeling, and visualization for computer-integrated diagnosis and therapy. They contributed to the development and validation of robust AI computational imaging informatics tools to advance computer-integrated diagnosis and interventional data science by addressing a broad range of diseases, organ systems, and minimally invasive therapy applications. “We believe that effective utilization of biomedical informatics to develop versatile biomedical computing and visualization tools will lead to solutions that enable more accurate and timely disease diagnosis and less invasive therapies. These tools will help lay a foundation for advances in computer-aided diagnosis and therapy across a wide spectrum of diseases and organ systems that can impact a larger patient population,” said Linte, who has a background in mechanical and biomedical engineering as well as imagining science. He teaches in RIT’s engineering college as well as the Chester F. Carlson Center, specifically in the areas of biomechanics and biomedical thermo-fluids and conducts research at the intersection of biomedical imaging, computing, and visualization. Research in Linte’s Biomedical Imaging, Modeling, Visualization and Image-guided Navigation Laboratory is supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Science Foundation. Its research focus remains on biomedical artificial intelligence tools for diagnostic and intervention data science. Most recently, he was awarded nearly $2.4 million by the NIH for a five-year competitive renewal of the research grant on Biomedical Computing and Visualization Tools for Computer-integrated Diagnostic and Therapeutic Data Science to support innovation, training, and mentorship of graduate and undergraduate students in the lab, many of whom have gone on to serve in prestigious national labs, hospitals, and research organizations. “Mentoring and training high caliber students who will join tomorrow’s biomedical and academic workforce constitutes by far the greatest impact of our careers as academics and scientists and we’re thrilled to see them succeed,” said Linte.
- RIT expands global presence with location in Tirana, AlbaniaRIT’s worldwide reach continues to grow with a new global location in Tirana, Albania. The expansion was announced at a launch event in the capital city. RIT Tirana will feature two bachelor of science degrees, computing information technology and electrical engineering technology, when it hosts its first classes in fall 2025. The site evolved through a partnership between RIT Kosovo and the Harry Fultz Foundation. “This is not just the launch of a new location for RIT programs; it is the beginning of an exciting journey to provide transformative education and global opportunities for students in this region,” stated Kamal Shahrabi, president of RIT Kosovo. “Through our innovative programs, hands-on learning approach, and strong industry connections, we are equipping students with the skills they need to thrive in an ever-evolving global economy.” In addition to the main campus in Rochester and a growing presence in Los Angeles, RIT has international campuses in Dubai, Croatia, and Kosovo. Global education enriches the RIT community, creating a unified perspective on global challenges and opportunities. “We are delighted to add Albania to our constellation of global locations,” said James Myers, associate provost for International Education and Global Programs. “With 21,300 students in more than 200 career-oriented and professional programs, RIT is internationally recognized and ranked for its leadership in technology, the arts, and design. We are proud of more than 150,000 RIT alumni who come from more than 100 countries.” For more information on RIT’s international opportunities, go to the RIT global website.
- Global campuses celebrate more than 650 graduatesStudents around the world will be crossing the stage to become RIT alumni as the global campuses celebrate their 2025 spring commencement ceremonies. A highlight of the celebrations will be RIT Kosovo honorary commencement speaker Drena Kusari Berisha, vice president and general manager at Microsoft. Kusari Berisha received her master’s degree from Harvard Business School and held executive roles at Goldman Sachs, Lyft, and Bumble before joining Microsoft. RIT Kosovo’s commencement, featuring nearly 150 graduates, is May 21. RIT Dubai will be graduating more than 300 students on May 20. The growing campus located in the Silicon Oasis is currently in phase two of new construction projects. The building growth will enable campus enrollment to reach 4,000 students once it is completed in 2027. In Croatia, graduates will be recognized on May 22 in Zagreb and May 24 in Dubrovnik. Nearly 200 students across the two campuses will receive degrees. Upwards of 650 graduating students from RIT’s global campuses are part of the more than 4,800 students at all degree levels earning diplomas this spring. The new class will join more than 150,000 RIT alumni across the globe. “Congratulations to all our students receiving diplomas this spring,” said James Myers, associate provost for International Education and Global Programs. “The growing number of graduates at our global campuses is a testament to RIT’s reputation on the world stage.” For more information on RIT’s 2025 spring commencement, go to the commencement website.
- RIT alumna shapes growing hockey culture in Pacific NorthwestHockey is constantly evolving, expanding into new communities and welcoming new voices. RIT alumna Julia Takatsuka ’18 (graphic design) is helping lead that change from one of the NHL’s youngest outposts: her native Pacific Northwest. Takatsuka coaches for the Seattle Kraken’s Youth Hockey Association, a USA Hockey-sanctioned league growing the game in Washington state. She also serves as the Goalie Development Coordinator for USA Hockey’s Pacific District, representing the Pacific Northwest and identifying emerging goaltenders with national potential. Takatsuka stands at the forefront of an innovative grassroots approach to goaltender development, helping to reshape how the league, and the sport, thinks about coaching. Takatsuka’s unique path to the NHL dekes tradition: she didn’t play pro or college hockey, nor did she come up through elite coaching networks. For her, preparation consistently met unique opportunities. Growing up, she played the position competitively and attended USA Hockey select camps. But when Division I hockey didn’t feel like the right fit, Takatsuka felt like she was left with two options: play college hockey or attend a school with a great design program. She focused on education and enrolled at RIT. It was a decision that would subtly shape her future behind the bench. Provided Julia Takatsuka ’18, left, has been with the Seattle Kraken since the team’s NHL debut in 2021. Over four years, she has helped grow the organization’s youth program to include more than 50 goaltenders across multiple age levels. “RIT helped me to think outside the box,” Takatsuka said. “I found myself in that creative sense, and it helped me as I got into coaching.” She stayed active on campus as a two-year member of the RIT Crew team, found a home with a local women’s ice hockey team, and honed her design skills. Returning to Washington after graduation, she realized that hockey still had a significant hold on her. Coaching hadn’t been on her radar, but a chance pairing with a local goalie coach changed that. “I never thought I’d coach,” Takatsuka admitted. “I didn’t want to work with kids at the time. I got pulled in and paired with a goalie coach, and suddenly I was using all these tools I’d learned in design to connect with kids, meeting them where they are, and helping them embrace all the boring aspects of training. It all fell into place.” Her ability to connect with younger and marginalized players caught the attention of hockey leaders as she moved up the ladder. By 2020, she had become the Female Goaltending Development Coordinator for Western Washington. As Takatsuka was building connections and knowledge in the hockey world, the NHL awarded Seattle an expansion franchise with the Seattle Kraken in 2021. Takatsuka stepped into a rare opportunity: to build a goaltending model from the ground up. “I felt like I was in the right place at the right time,” Takatsuka said. She saw a better way to make the goaltending position accessible and appealing to young players, including providing “quick change” gear for beginners and allowing them to try the position without a large upfront investment. She is also educating individuals off ice as well, incorporating a three-pillar education system for players, coaches, and parents, so everyone involved better understands what goalies need to thrive. The program’s success was evident, expanding from six teams to 37 in four years, with over 50 goalies having their own equipment. Takatsuka runs weekly goalie clinics, with many traveling from neighboring states like Alaska, Idaho, and Oregon. In 2024, she became one of 30 individuals to earn gold level training from USA Hockey, and that June, presented her thesis at the inaugural USA Hockey National Goaltending Symposium. Her work has received national attention, drawing features from the NHL and USA Hockey. She still laces up the pads in adult leagues and participates in community events like the annual Seattle Pride Classic, where she receives strong support from the young athletes she coaches. “They love to come out and make signs and support,” Takatsuka said. “They’re like, ‘you’re so good,’ and I’m like ‘I’m so bad!’ But it’s great to see them.” As a queer woman in a male-dominated coaching world, Takatsuka doesn’t seek the spotlight but recognizes the power of visibility as she helps redefine what success looks like in the crease. “For a while, I tried to not think about it in that way,” Takatsuka said. “For me it’s just trying to help grow the knowledge of the position and the game and be a good role model for them.”
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