|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Seventeen students in the College of
Arts and Sciences received prizes for their research and creativity
in the third annual Undergraduate Research and Creative Activity
Oral or Poster Presentation Competition on The University of Alabama
campus.
The projects ranged from composing original works of music, to
conducting original historical and cultural research, to designing
and performing experiments in scientific labs. First, second and
third place prizes were recently given in both oral and poster
competitions and in each of the College’s three divisions.
The first place winners and the titles of their works in each
division are:
“The ‘Edward’ Ballade by Johannes Brahms” by
Susan Warner, a music major from Tuscaloosa; “The Controversy
over Pro-Anorexia Websites” by Melissa Anne Levine, an English
major from Acton, Mass.; “As the Merry-go-round Turns” by
Jarrod Stanley, an interdisciplinary major from Tuscaloosa; “Mood
and Memory” by Emily Anderson, a psychology major from Baton
Rouge, La.; “Design, Construction, and Test of a Portable
Nuclear Fusion Reactor” by Adam Parker, a political science
major from Florence; and “Investigating Potential Bacterial
Sources of Dopaminergic Neuron Toxicity in C. elegans” by
Shermeen Memon, a biology major from Tuscaloosa.
Second place titles and winners are:
“Visitations: A Play” by Kristen Anderson, a theatre
major from Kingston Springs, Tenn.; “The Creative Campus” by
Erica Crabtree, a communications major from Madison, and Kristi
Wilcox, an English major from Tuscaloosa; “Voy Perdiendo’:
An Exploration of Poetry in the Arty of Eating” by Laura
Godorecci, an interdisciplinary major from Tuscaloosa; “Developmental
Differences in Implicit Learning” by Dana Weathington, a
psychology major from Anniston; “Fish Utilization of Riffle
Habitat Created by a Dam Removal on the Cahaba River” by
Heath Howell, a biology major from Samson; “Designing Reversible
Single-crystal Transitions” by Timothy Kucharski, a chemistry
major from Aiken, S.C. and Jerry Oxsher, a chemistry major from
Smyrna, Texas.
Third place titles and winners are:
“Three Quarters to Him” by Jamie Coston, a dance and
political science major from Harvest; “An Analysis of Mound
V Material Culture from the Moundville Site, Alabama” by
Matthew Jared Mirarchi, an anthropology major from Opelika; “Cedar
Chest a Hand Drawn Animated Film” by Alicia Clark, an interdisciplinary
major from Montgomery; “Binding Energy of Supersymmetric
Atoms” by Tim Lovorn, a physics major from Mobile; and “Long-term
Growth Trends of Baldcypress (Taxodium distichum) in Relation to
Unregulated Streamflow of the Sipsey River, AL” by Byron
L. Comeens, an environmental science major from Double Springs.
One hundred and five students in the College of Arts and Sciences
participated in the out-of-class creative or research projects,
typically working closely with faculty mentors.
“There is no way I could have done a project of this magnitude
without the support of my mentors, Professors Guy and Kim Caldwell.
The research project took me over a year to develop and putting
my work up on a poster helped me visually see everything I had
worked on with the Caldwells come to fruition,” said Shermeen
Memon, a biology major from Tuscaloosa.
The first place prize was $250; second place won $100; and third
place winners won $50. The purpose of the competition was to showcase
undergraduate research or creative projects and to give students
practical experience in defending or performing their work before
judges. Faculty members in the College of Arts and Sciences judged
the projects.
“At the end, Dean Olin walked around and announced the winners,
and I was so surprised to win since I entered mostly to have fun
and as a learning experience,” said Memon.
Undergraduates representing all divisions of the College of Arts
and Sciences - the humanities and fine arts, the natural sciences
and mathematics, and the social sciences – presented their
research and creative works. The 86 projects included 48 from the
natural sciences and mathematics division, 29 from the social sciences
division and nine from the humanities and fine arts division.
“I provided extra credit to my 275 student general biology
class to attend the poster competition. I wanted these students
to become inspired by their peers who are going above and beyond
the typical classroom experience at UA. This experience has convinced
me that undergraduates are an underutilized talent and that many
professors and students could benefit from the creative synergy
that result from these exchanges,” said Dr. Kim Caldwell,
assistant professor of biological sciences and mentor for some
students at the competition.
The competition was held at the Heritage Room in the Ferguson
Center. Approximately 250 faculty and students were in attendance.
“I was impressed with each and every one of the competitors.
I know the judges had a difficult time deciding on the final winners
because of the excellence of all the presentations,” said
Dr. Jimmy Williams, associate dean in the College of Arts and Sciences
and coordinator of the event.
The College of Arts and Sciences is Alabama’s largest liberal
arts college and the University’s largest division with 350
faculty and 6,600 students.
|