‘Excited for what’s next:’ Senior Katy Bearden believes 鶹Լ has her prepared for post-graduation plans

The Chemistry and Criminal Justice double major was also the Women’s Soccer team captain. 

Katy Bearden

DECATUR, Ill. – When celebrates its graduating seniors at on Sunday, May 18, 2025, it will be the conclusion of the undergraduate chapter for more than 270 graduates and the beginning of another one as they begin the next phase of their lives.  

For some, the relief of graduation can also be tied with anxiousness about where those post-鶹Լ days will lead them, while for others, taking those steps across the Kirkland Fine Arts stage is an exciting beginning to use the experiences that 鶹Լ has prepared them for.  

“I’m excited for graduation and not nervous at all. I'm going off to work and I'm going to get to do some traveling before that,” said 鶹Լ senior Katy Bearden about her feelings on her four years at 鶹Լ coming to an end. “I’m sad to leave my friends, and I've made so many of them here at 鶹Լ, but I'm also excited about what's next.” 

Katy Bearden
鶹Լ senior Katy Bearden (left) and Professor of Chemistry Dr. George Bennett. 

What’s next for Bearden, a and double major, is a position with the Chicago area-based . Bearden landed an internship at INX last summer, which is a global manufacturer of high-performance printing inks and coatings for commercial, packaging, and digital printing, and used the experience to be hired full-time beginning this summer as a Research and Development Chemist focusing on adhesives and coatings.  

During my internship, I would make ink and try to find replacements for the chemicals already in the ink. It was trial and error, so it's figuring out what works and what doesn't,” she said. “ I made a lot of connections, and I still talk to many people today from that company. I had a very good time, and it was a great experience.” 

Katy Bearden
鶹Լ senior Katy Bearden was the team captain of the Big Blue Women's Soccer team for three seasons.

Originally from Plainfield, Ill., Bearden knew she was going to follow her interest in science after high school, deciding to focus on chemistry, but it was the opportunity to continue to play soccer that brought her to 鶹Լ.  

“I originally planned to go to a larger school and not play soccer, but a 鶹Լ coach came to one of my tournaments, so I looked into the school. Then I came to campus, and I fell in love with the look of it. I got to know the coach and some of the girls coming in, and I loved them,” Bearden said. “I wasn't ready to have my last game, and I wanted to go on and continue to play at a higher level.” 

Katy Bearden

Playing at center defender, Bearden played a crucial role in defending 鶹Լ’s goal, and she quickly made a big impact on the team, being named team captain as a sophomore, and earning second-team all-CCIW honors this past season.  

“Thinking back, I was very much a quiet person coming in. I've definitely changed a lot throughout my college career,” she said. “Starting off, I was more of the observant type of captain and was in the background. But by junior year, it was in more of a leadership role.” 

Katy Bearden

After graduation, Bearden will be heading to Italy with her Big Blue Soccer teammates on a team trip to Rome, Vatican City, Florence, and Milan, playing in exhibition games along the way. After returning home and spending some time with family, Bearden will be off to the INX labs, a career opportunity that she feels 鶹Լ was instrumental in preparing her for.  

“I think 鶹Լ prepared me very well. At INX, we did different training days where they would send me to different subgroups of the company, and everyone said I was able to catch on really quickly,” she said. “They told me I caught on with what they were doing in three months, what takes other people five years.  I think 鶹Լ has prepared me greatly.” 

As she begins her career as a chemist, Bearden remembers the initial struggles she experiences during her first Inorganic Chemistry course. The personal assistance and support she received from 鶹Լ’s faculty kept her motivated about the program and stoked her interest in the field.  

Katy Bearden

“Particularly in my sophomore year, I was struggling. I was in a lot of hard classes, and Dr. Paris Barnes, who taught Inorganic Chemistry, made sure to set aside time for me twice a week to come in and learn more about it,” Katy said. “Even when you have the same question over and over, he would rephrase it a million times. My professors have gone out of their way to help, and Inorganic Chemistry ended up being one of my favorite classes.

“Graduating from 鶹Լ is definitely bittersweet, but I’m already planning with my roommates when we're all going to come back. Two of my roommates are staying at 鶹Լ for an MBA, and  I'm definitely coming back to visit them on Homecoming and Soccer senior night. My 鶹Լ experience has been amazing.”