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Jump into commencement with student speaker Jeeva Premkumar

A student wearing a fall coat smiles and stands with his arms crossed. He's standing on Bascom Hill on an autumn day.
Jeeva Immanuel Premkumar will address fellow graduates at Winter 2025 Commencement on Dec. 14, 2025. Photo: Althea Dotzour / UW–Madison

Jeeva Premkumar likes to say he took a formative leap — into an icy Lake Mendota — after he got to campus, but the soon-to-be University of Wisconsin–Madison graduate and this year’s student speaker for Winter 2025 Commencement was not necessarily new to taking big steps.

Born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Premkumar moved to Kenya for boarding school at age 10 and then to India to finish high school. He moved to Madison in search of a challenge that wasn’t just academic.

“I’ve always loved the sciences. And I’ve loved problem solving,” he says. “I wanted a program where research wasn’t just something you watched from a distance; it was something you participated in. I saw an opportunity at UW–Madison where I could work on impactful science from day one, and that sort of sealed the decision for me.”

So, he set off to yet another continent, for a major in chemical engineering and for a new community in an entirely unfamiliar climate. Enter: the lake (literally). Granted, that’s not really a UW–Madison-endorsed method of self-exploration for new students, but friends managed to talk Premkumar into taking the plunge. Premkumar was already struggling to get used to the Wisconsin cold. But the experience was far from a disaster. It was even a little fun.

“It sounds absurd, but I feel like a lot changed around that moment,” he says. “It helped me realize the importance of having the confidence to step out of my comfort zone, to reach for opportunities. That’s the message I want to share at commencement.”

As Premkumar prepares to take his next plunge, this time onto the stage as speaker at 10 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 14 at the Kohl Center, he is reflecting on the ways in which he’s been able to make the most of the hands-on opportunities that drew him to Wisconsin.

Premkumar was awarded an American Heart Association research fellowship, which supported his work using stem cells to study the structure and function of heart tissue in the lab of UW–Madison cardiologist Timothy Kamp. He also held internships with Moderna, contributing to research on new drug-delivery methods, and with Lactalis Heritage Dairy in Wisconsin, where he worked on utility plant upgrade projects.

His proudest leap was also a step toward home. Premkumar won a Wisconsin Idea Fellowship this year. Alongside nonprofit Let Africa Live, he has used the funding to expand educational access to children affected by civil war in the eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

“That was something personal to me,” he says. “But that’s part of being a Badger. UW–Madison offers opportunities like this to apply what you’ve learned in school, to have an impact on an international scale. I’m thankful for that.”

Because he’s made so many friends and met so many genuinely kind and curious people on campus, he suspects — he knows — that he isn’t the only commencement-bound student taking leaps.

The winter commencement student speaker is chosen through a competitive process conducted by the senior class officers, in consultation with the Office of the Chancellor. All winter graduates were eligible to apply. Naturally, in his application, Premkumar wrote that he wanted to speak at commencement because he was afraid of the idea. “I grew here because I kept doing the things that I was bad at, at first,” Premkumar says. “Watching my fellow grads grow alongside me has been an honor and a pleasure. Getting to see what they’ve accomplished has been just amazing.”