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Wednesday, November 9, 2005
Writer: Joelle Prine, 706/583-0727, jprine@uga.edu
Contacts: David Williams, 706/542-0532, dwilliam@uga.edu; Pamela Kleiber, 706/542-0530, pkleiber@uga.edu
Franklin College students among undergraduate researchers
at UGA connecting with faculty mentors through CURO Apprenticeship
Program
Athens, Ga. –– Twenty-eight University
of Georgia freshmen have been selected to work closely with
faculty mentors on year-long research projects through an apprentice
program offered by UGA’s Center
for Undergraduate Research Opportunities. The students will
receive a $1,000 stipend per semester for a maximum of four semesters.
The freshmen participants join 11 returning sophomores in the program.
The CURO Apprentice Program, housed in UGA’s Honors
Program, introduces undergraduates to the rigors of conducting
research ranging from the humanities to the sciences, while establishing
a community of scholars who connect with each other through CURO-sponsored
academic enrichment activities. These events include invited speakers
from other universities and outside organizations and service-learning
projects that reach out to the local community.
“I am pleased by the increase in the number of CURO apprentices
and am thankful for the strong support of Provost Arnett Mace
which has made this possible,” says David Williams, director
of the Honors Program. “Having this opportunity at the undergraduate
level kindles a passion for learning and inquiry in students that
is truly exciting to observe. The skills these students acquire
and the close interaction with our very best faculty members give
them a leg up on the competition as they go to graduate or professional
schools or head into their careers.”
One
benefit of the program is giving the apprentices the opportunity
to work with faculty with similar research interests. For example, Leigh
Creighton, a
second-year history major in
the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, has interests in international
law, human rights and public policy. By working with faculty mentor
Stephen Shellman and his NSF-funded Project Civil Strife, she is
gaining additional knowledge about her subjects and learning critical
thinking and problem-solving skills necessary for a career in a
social science field.
Project Civil Strife focuses on studying
the dynamic relationships among governments and terrorist groups,
guerilla groups and transnational insurgent organizations with
Creighton concentrating on the Philippines.
“My research mentor says he will provide assistance with
any individual project I want to do,” says the Stone Mountain
native. “All I knew about the Philippines before this project
was how the country had a Spanish background and U.S. relations.
Now I’m thinking about doing a project related to hunger,
diet, and how the American diet has changed the health of Filipinos.”
“It is important for undergraduates to get exposure to academic
research whether or not they plan to attend graduate school,”
says Shellman, a professor in international affairs and UGA alum
who has Creighton and four other apprentices on his research team.
“Knowing about the research process and participating in
it first-hand gives students an edge up in the real world in all
professional positions. They are able to make informed decisions
about the information presented to them and ask the right questions
concerning the validity and reliability of the research.”
Athens
native and Clarke Central High School valedictorian Christina
Huang understands another unique advantage of CURO – direct
contact with an outstanding researcher like Ying
Xu, the Regents-Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar
in Bioinformatics in the Franklin College's biochemistry
and molecular biology department. Huang, a chemistry and biology double
major, is learning how specially-designed computer programs analyze
DNA sequences and genes to better understand their complex structures
and functions.
“We sincerely want the CURO Apprentice Program to serve
as a magnet program for attracting students who value learning
along side faculty in the research environment,” says Pamela
Kleiber, associate director of the Honors Program who oversees
CURO. “With
the addition of a National Science Foundation grant last spring,
we were able to invite outstanding high school seniors, CURO ‘Promising
Scholars,’ to campus and six of the seven are currently
at UGA, having received apprenticeships and/or prestigious
scholarships.”
Four of the freshmen who are now apprentices – Allison
Bishop, Hannah Kamau, Gabrielle Gay and Jeremy Jones – were
recognized for their science and math achievements at CURO’s
undergraduate research symposium in April. They were able to
ask questions about the program and meet CURO participants.
Part of the continued success of the apprenticeship program
is due to the senior peer advisors, exceptional CURO apprentices
from the previous year who are nominated by their peers. They
help facilitate weekly research meetings and provide advice
and support to individual apprentices assigned to them. Franklin
College juniors Caelin
Cubeñas, a biochemistry
and molecular biology major; Brittany King, a psychology major;
and Anjan Deka, a microbiology and religion double
major, each mentor a group of 12 to 13 apprentices.
“I think it is incredibly important to have senior peer
advisors because within the first week of school, the apprentices
know three upperclassmen who they can talk to about classes, future
scholarships and goals. I’ve already had many students ask
me about how I applied for some of the scholarships I have received,” says
Cubeñas, who was recently named a Goldwater
Scholar.
UGA’s Provost’s Office and the Biomedical
and Health Sciences Institute provide funding for the apprenticeships.
The Graduate School also supports graduate student assistantships
critical to the management of the program.
Freshmen selected for
the apprenticeship program may continue through their second
year based upon a minimum 3.0 GPA, a satisfactory performance review
and available funding. Membership in the Honors Program is not
a requirement.
More information is available at www.uga.edu/honors/curo.
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