Balancing research and sporting careers

Balancing research and sporting careers

Arriving at Queen鈥檚 through the Principal鈥檚 Development Fund for Visiting Scholars, engineering researcher Rossana Pasquino is also a member of the Italian national wheelchair fencing team.

By Matt Mills, FEAS Communications Staff

August 7, 2018

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Rossana Pasquino took up wheelchair fencing five years ago as a way to stay fit and as a distraction from the rigours of her academic work. She was introduced to the sport in 2015 by childhood friend, and top-ranked Italian epee fencer, Francesca Boscarelli.

[Rossana Pasquino is a world-class athlete in wheelchair fencing]
Rossana Pasquino, associate professor, researcher, and a member of the Italian national wheelchair fencing team, is spending part of the summer at Queen鈥檚 as a visiting scholar in the Department of Chemical Engineering. (University Communications)

鈥淔rancesca was training at a fencing club in Napoli at the time,鈥 Dr. Pasquino says. 鈥淭hey had a wheelchair platform but no athletes. It ended up being a lot of fun because there were many athletes there who were not disabled but who would sit and fence with me. I started to just like it for recreation. Then, as my skills improved, I started to try different weapons and to compete.鈥 

Dr. Pasquino joined the Italian National Wheelchair Fencing Team after earning a bronze medal in the team sabre category at the International Wheelchair and Amputee Sports (IWAS) Federation World Cup in Warsaw in 2017. She and her team went on to win silver in the IWAS World Championships in Rome later that year, and silver in epee and sabre in the Italian Championships earlier this year. She鈥檚 planning to compete in the European championships later in 2018 and is positioning herself now to qualify for the 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of work to balance the sport with my career,鈥 says Dr. Pasquino. 鈥淚 only started to be very good at fencing in the last two years and it鈥檚 not possible to be competitive at such a high level as you get older, so I have about 10 years to go. It鈥檚 not easy to do everything and do everything well, but I鈥檓 going to do the best I can.鈥

And it鈥檚 an impressive career to balance.

Dr. Pasquino recently earned a spot as associate professor in chemical engineering at the in Naples. She鈥檒l be starting at that post in September. She met Queen鈥檚 engineering professor in 2011 while he was teaching a short course on polymer processing in Crete, Greece. They had a meeting of academic minds, so Dr. Giacomin successfully nominated Dr. Pasquino to visit Queen鈥檚 this summer through the Principal's Development Fund for Visiting Scholars. She鈥檚 working with Queen鈥檚 researchers to better understand ways to characterize polymers.  

鈥淭he plan was to understand how polymers scatter laser light,鈥 says Dr. Pasquino. 鈥淲e can get insight into a materials鈥 molecular structure 鈥 if, for example, molecules are branched, form linear chains, rings, or other structures.鈥

It鈥檚 work that could help industry to better determine the physical properties of the polymers they use in manufacturing for the purposes of quality control or for selecting the best materials for any given job.

鈥淲e are also studying polymer degradation in parallel-disk geometry and we will probably end up with a scientific paper at the end of my visit,鈥 she says.

To those who may find inspiration in Dr. Pasquino鈥檚 athletic and academic work, she has some advice:

鈥淪o much of life is about fear,鈥 she says. 鈥溾業 don鈥檛 want to travel because something bad could happen,鈥 or 鈥業 don鈥檛 want to start engineering because maybe I鈥檓 not good enough,鈥 or 鈥業 don鈥檛 want to fence, or try a sport because I鈥檓 not competitive.鈥 You just have to try. There are barriers you have to overcome, otherwise you don鈥檛 do anything. That鈥檚 how it is in any life.鈥

Dr. Pasquino is scheduled to practice at the Kingston Fencing Club, 83 Terry Fox Dr. Unit 4, Kingston, Tuesday evenings from 6 to 8 pm through August. 

Smith Engineering