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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Most students do not get the opportunity to
gain insight simultaneously from three faculty members representing
different campuses, but for a new class of University of Alabama
and Stillman College students, it is an every class occurrence.
Nineteen UA students and six Stillman College students are enrolled
in The Language of Research, a new biology class, taught by Dr.
Kim Caldwell, an adjunct professor of biological sciences at UA.
The class, made possible by the 2002 Howard Hughes Medical Institute's
Undergraduate Science Education Program Grant and held for the first
time this semester, alternates meeting on the UA and Stillman campuses.
“It enables students to better develop a broad understanding
of how research is done and to arrive at that understanding earlier
in their academic careers,” said Caldwell of the new class.
This helps prepare the competitively selected students to participate
in UA’s undergraduate research program in biological sciences,
which is also made possible by the Howard Hughes grant, she said.
Dr. Ruth Washington from Stillman and Dr. Karen Rose from Shelton
State Community College, participate in the class.
Since UA’s Hughes-funded undergraduate research program
began following a 1998 grant, more than 40 students from UA and
Stillman have participated. In that program, students conduct independent
research during their junior and senior years. The program, now
available to sophomores at Shelton State who plan to transfer to
UA or Stillman, awards students research stipends as well as funds
to support their travel to regional or national conferences to present
their work.
A key element in the Language of Research class is assigning students
with mentors, comprised of faculty from UA and Stillman. Interacting
with the mentors on a regular basis, including a lengthy interview
of the scientists, provides students with the look at the “nitty-gritty”
of scientific research, Caldwell said.
“Focusing on the end result of a successful scientific project
is common, but gaining an understanding of the trial and error involved,
of all the pitfalls along the way, that’s a truer picture
of what scientific research is like,” Caldwell said.
The 2002 grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute awarded
UA $1.8 million to continue strengthening undergraduate education
in biological sciences. UA was selected for this 4-year grant, along
with 43 other institutions, from among 189 institutions that submitted
proposals.
UA is using the funds to redesign some of its teaching and research
laboratories and restructure portions of the biological sciences
curriculum; expand its undergraduate research program; broaden the
interdisciplinary experiments available to rural high school students
and teachers at their sites; expand its popular Rural Science Scholars
Summer Program, which brings high school students to campus to learn
more about science and its career opportunities; and develop interactive
Web-based technologies for use in integrated science programs for
middle schools.
The Howard Hughes Medical Institute is a medical research organization
whose principal mission is biomedical research. It employs 336 Hughes
investigators who conduct basic medical research in HHMI laboratories
at 70 medical centers and universities nationwide. Through its complementary
grants program, the Institute supports science education in the
United States and a select group of biomedical scientists abroad.
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