• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

LINFIELD NEWS

New and Information for the Linfield Community

  • Events and Activities
  • Give
  • Apply
  • Contact
Linfield University logo
  • Latest News
  • Linfield Magazine
  • Press Resources
    • Photos for Download
    • Contact Us
  • Voices of Linfield
  • Linfield University Home

Randy Schekman inspires with science at Oregon Nobel Laureate Symposium

April 13, 2025 by Kathy Foss

By Kathy Foss

Randy Schekman speaks during his keynote lecture.
Dr. Randy W. Schekman gives the keynote lecture at the Oregon Nobel Laureate Symposium. Photo by Andrew Beauchamp.

When Nobel Prize-winning scientist Randy W. Schekman took the stage at the Oregon Nobel Laureate Symposium at Linfield University, he didn’t start with his research or even his award. He started with a toy microscope.

Speaking to a captivated audience of Linfield students, McMinnville community members and local science enthusiasts, Schekman shared how that childhood gift — and a drop of pond water — sparked a lifelong fascination with biology.

“I saw an explosion of life,” he recalled. “I was blown away.”

Held April 10–11 across Linfield’s McMinnville and Portland campuses, the symposium is a showcase of scientific thought and inspiration. This year’s featured speaker, Schekman is the winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. He delivered a keynote Thursday night to an at-capactiy crowd, tracing the arc of his career from curious kid to global scientific leader.

From curiosity to career

Though he originally intended to pursue medicine, Schekman’s path shifted during a freshman chemistry class at UCLA. It was a turning point that led him into cellular biology and, eventually, groundbreaking work on how cells transport proteins.

His message to the Linfield community emphasized the power of unexpected detours.

“You don’t always end up where you think you’re going,” he said. “But if you follow your curiosity, you’ll find where you’re meant to be.”

Now a professor at UC Berkeley, Schekman used his visit to Linfield to reflect not just on past discoveries but on the urgent challenges that lie ahead.

A personal fight against Parkinson’s

Schekman spoke passionately about his current focus: Parkinson’s disease, which he called a growing pandemic. The issue is personal — his wife battled the disease and, in his words, “suffered terribly.”

“In 200 years of studying Parkinson’s, nothing has been discovered that changes the progress of the disease,” he said. That sobering reality led him to become chair of the Scientific Advisory Board for Aligning Science Across Parkinson’s (ASAP), a collaborative research initiative backed by philanthropist Sergey Brin and The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research.

Through ASAP, Schekman is working to reshape how science gets done. Rather than siloed labs chasing individual recognition, ASAP supports teams that openly share data, protocols and results — what he likens to open-source software development.

“Basic science is great,” he said. “But the reward structure for academic science is about the individual. Collaboration is how big problems get solved.”

Science in action at Linfield

Throughout his time at Linfield, Schekman met with students from across the university’s science programs, as well as hundreds of high school and community college students invited to campus. The symposium’s unique structure allowed Schekman to connect directly with students, answering questions about research careers, ethical challenges and how young scientists can contribute to meaningful change. He ended the event on Friday discussing Parkinson’s with students in Linfield’s School of Nursing.

“I predict in the next decade we’ll be able to map the entire neural network in the brain,” he said. “In the next five years when I’m done, I expect we’ll be able to identify targets to meaningfully affect [Parkinson’s] disease.”

For the next generation of scientists — some sitting just a few feet from the stage Thursday night — Schekman’s story served as both roadmap and rallying cry.

The Oregon Nobel Laureate Symposium is part of Linfield’s ongoing effort to connect students with the world’s leading minds in science and medicine. The last symposium was held in 2023 and featured physicists William D. Phillips and David J. Wineland. Learn more at linfield.edu/nobel.

Photos from around the Oregon Nobel Laureate Symposium

[Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”127″ gal_title=”2025 Nobel”]

Filed Under: Events, Latest News, Linfield University Tagged With: Events, Oregon Nobel Laureate Symposium, School of Nursing

Primary Sidebar

Search Linfield News

Categories

  • Center for Wine Education
  • College of Arts & Sciences
  • Events
  • Latest News
  • Linfield University
  • Online and Continuing Education
  • School of Business
  • School of Nursing
  • Wildcat Athletics

Past News

Footer

LINFIELD UNIVERSITY LOCATIONS:

MCMINNVILLE CAMPUS
900 SE Baker St
McMinnville, OR 
97128
503-883-2200

PORTLAND CAMPUS
2900 NE 132nd Ave
Portland, OR 
97230
971-369-4100

|

eCAMPUS
Learn anywhere
Online degrees and certificates
503-883-2213

Linfield University
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • TikTok
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
Safety and Support | Diversity | Title IX/Sexual Misconduct | Campus Maps | Contact Us