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U of I to celebrate alum Temple Grandin’s lifelong contributions with achievement award

Grandin's work has transformed the meat industry by introducing more humane animal handling systems, such as the widely adopted center track restrainer system used in beef plants worldwide. Photo: Contributed/Rosalie Winard / College of ACES


URBANA, IL (Chambana Today) -Animal behaviorist and an autism advocate Temple Grandin, has been selected to receive a 2025 University of Illinois Alumni Achievement Award, the highest honor given to alumni by the U of I’s Alumni Association. The honor recognizes alumni who have attained outstanding success and national or international distinction in their chosen profession or life’s work.

Grandin will be recognized during Homecoming Week at the 2025 Alumni Awards Gala on September 25 at the Pear Tree Estate in Champaign.

Grandin graduated with a doctoral degree in animal sciences from the college of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the U of I in 1989. She is a professor of animal sciences at Colorado State University, and is a trailblazer in the fields of livestock behavior and welfare. Her work has transformed the meat industry by introducing more humane animal handling systems, most notably the widely adopted center track restrainer system used in beef plants worldwide.

Diagnosed with autism as a child, Grandin has used her personal experiences to reshape public perceptions of neurodiversity. Her bestselling books Thinking in Pictures and The Autistic Brain, along with a critically acclaimed HBO biopic, have made her a globally recognized voice in animal science and autism advocacy.

“Dr. Grandin’s extraordinary contributions to science and society exemplify the mission of our college to cultivate socially responsible leaders who improve lives and the world,” said Germán Bollero, dean of the College of ACES.

Grandin is also one of USA Today‘s 2025 Women of the Year, a member of the National Women’s Hall of Fame, and was listed among TIME magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world in 2010.

To read more about Dr. Granding’s journey and her time at Illinois, read her 2019 alumni interview with the University of Illinois Alumni Association.

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