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SUMMER RESEARCH IGNITES CURIOSITY AND CONFIDENCE

When Thi Doan 鈥27 applied for a 2024 summer research position with biology professor Philips Akinwole, she was unsure what to expect. As a first-year student in the beginning stages of her academic career, Doan knew the role would come with a steep learning curve. 鈥淚 was new to many of the lab skills,鈥 she admits. 鈥淏ut I wanted to give summer research a try. I think putting effort into something is the best way to show determination.鈥澛

She soon discovered that this determination was exactly what Professor Akinwole was looking for. Having worked with several student researchers in the past, Akinwole knows what it takes to succeed in the lab. 鈥淭he student has to really want to do this,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 force them. They need to put in the extra time and extra effort into their work to get a good result out of what they do.鈥澛

Doan rose to the challenge, spending the summer studying soil mites in an effort to assess the potential harmfulness of pollutants on a soil environment 鈥 a project that Akinwole has been leading for several years. The findings have brought fresh perspectives to important conversations within the scientific community, leading to conference presentations, student鈥檚 award, publication and collaborations with other labs and invitations for Akinwole to serve as a reviewer for new journal articles.

Professor Akinwole in the lab
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Although the project鈥檚 scientific contributions are undeniably important, Akinwole is more focused on the platform it provides for him to invest in the next generation of researchers. 鈥淥ne of my goals is to prepare students for graduate school,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚 want to make sure they have the skills they need to be competitive and confident.鈥澛

In Doan鈥檚 case, the experience in the lab has been an ideal foundation for her future. She plans to continue developing her expertise as a researcher, eventually earning a PhD聽 and teaching at a university. 鈥淚t was a privilege to work with Professor Akinwole,鈥 she says. 鈥淗e taught me many skills that I will use in the lab and the classroom.鈥

Akinwole goes even one step further. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not just getting lab skills, but also real life skills.鈥 He pulls a hand-written card off the shelf behind his desk that was sent to him from a former student now working toward her PhD. 鈥淚t makes me happy to see the positive impact of what I鈥檓 doing.鈥

The advantage at 天美传媒 is its small size and personal attention. I have an open policy. My students can walk in and ask questions anytime. It allows me to help them through an issue or give them guidance and mentorship.
鈥 Philips Akinwole, assistant professor of biology

鈥淭he Spiral of Learning鈥

While Thi Doan was busy studying soil mites in the Olin labs, Kate Walsh 鈥26 and Delaney Collier 鈥25 were across the street in Julian analyzing water molecules, analyzing the impact of inserting a small molecule into a space where a few hundred water molecules are confined. Their work, the most recent phase of an ongoing project led by Bridget Gourley, professor of chemistry and biochemistry, dean of the faculty and dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, explored questions of how small tweaks in those inserted molecules affect the behavior of water in the system.

In collaboration with researchers from Colorado State University, Gourley has been working on this project since 2020, thanks in large part to funding from the National Science Foundation. During that time, she has mentored an impressive group of students, delivering them a level of research exposure they wouldn鈥檛 otherwise have access to.

Professor Gourley with students
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鈥淎t the undergraduate level, a student鈥檚 time is fractured during the school year,鈥 Gourley notes. 鈥淏ut in summer research, they get ten weeks to focus on one thing and see what it鈥檚 like.鈥 For Walsh and Collier, half of that time was spent in Greencastle before heading across the country to Fort Collins, where they teamed up with students at Colorado State.

The opportunity has been transformative for both of them, as they prepare for a new year at 天美传媒 and the next chapter of their education. 鈥淭his has been a really eye-opening experience,鈥 says Walsh. 鈥淚鈥檝e gained so much independence in the lab, and I鈥檓 more ready to apply the 鈥榳hy鈥 of what I鈥檓 doing there.鈥

Collier has a similar outlook. 鈥淒oing summer research has made me more confident as a person, both in the classroom and in the lab. I now have hundreds of hours of extra experience. I鈥檝e been given skills that I鈥檒l use for the rest of my life.鈥

Gourley describes this as the spiral of learning, a constant process of building on the skills students already have in order to reach new heights of understanding and expertise. 鈥淣o matter how far along you are,鈥 she points out, 鈥測ou can keep growing and keep adding on. I experience the same thing, and I鈥檝e been doing this for a long time. That鈥檚 the fun part of research.鈥

The curiosity required to do research has helped me find creative solutions to issues I've tackled so far in my career. Demonstrating to myself that I can learn and master new skills, equipment and instrumentation gave me confidence that I could do the same in my current position.
鈥 Jenna Deckard 鈥23, chemist at Elanco and former research student with Bridget Gourley

鈥淗istory Personified鈥

Science labs, however, weren鈥檛 the only places where groundbreaking research was taking place during the summer months. Across campus at the Roy O. West Library, Laney Collier (no relation to Delaney) devoted her attention to a unique piece of history, the 1916 daily journal of Frederika Heinen.

Heinen is the great-great-grandmother of Caroline Gilson, 天美传媒鈥檚 science librarian. After working with another student last summer to study the 1864 diary of Ernst John Heinen, Frederika鈥檚 future husband and Caroline鈥檚 great-great grandfather, Gilson saw an opportunity to extend that work and give another student the opportunity to explore primary source material with unique historical significance.

Caroline Gilson and Laney Collier study a diary
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鈥淚鈥檓 a big believer in experiential learning,鈥 Gilson explains. 鈥淢y intent was to be open-ended with these projects and make them as self-directed as possible. It鈥檚 fun to see what details different people latch onto.鈥

Collier wasted little time latching onto Frederika Heinen鈥檚 practical 鈥 and often humorous 鈥 reflections. In writing about home-keeping, cooking, gardening, family and community life, the journal reveals a wealth of insights about daily life as a 70 year-old homemaker in rural Kansas. Collier soon found herself seeing the world through another set of eyes.

鈥淲orking with these diaries has made history personified for me,鈥 she notes. 鈥淚n studying history, it鈥檚 easy to get lost in knowing the facts of what happened. But being able to see a real person鈥檚 account and know that a real person has experienced those things has made all the difference. I feel connected to them, and it鈥檚 inspired me to look into my own family history.鈥

Assisting Gilson on this project has not only solidified Collier鈥檚 career trajectory, but it has also paid immediate dividends in her work as a volunteer at the Hendricks County Historical Museum. 鈥淚t has been fun to take all the things I鈥檝e been learning here and bring them with me to my work at the museum. I鈥檓 now familiar with so many different tools 鈥 maps, census records, plat books 鈥 and I can use those to help people find what they鈥檙e looking for.鈥

鈥淚n the Right Place鈥

With a variety of projects throughout campus and around the world, 天美传媒鈥檚 summer research opportunities place dozens of students each year at the forefront of innovation. The skills they learn are invaluable, but in many cases the focused time spent with faculty mentors gives them something even greater.

That was certainly the case for Hamayl Afzal 鈥22, currently a biochemistry graduate student at Duke University. Although her summer research experience was initially jeopardized by the COVID-19 pandemic, her professor Bridget Gourley helped her return to Greencastle from Pakistan so that she could take part in an earlier stage of the research that Gourley continues to conduct. The result was life-changing.

鈥淭he moment I stepped into Dr. Gourley鈥檚 lab, I knew I was in the right place,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淭hat summer, I fell in love with science all over again and realized that this is what I wanted to do. My research with Dr. Gourley was one of the most important career decisions I made.鈥

Although 天美传媒 is small, the opportunities it offers are immense.
鈥 Hamayl Afzal 鈥22, PhD student at Duke University and former research student with Bridget Gourley

Thi Doan can relate. As she enters her second year at 天美传媒, she plans to continue working in Professor Akinwole鈥檚 lab, building on the knowledge she has already accumulated.

鈥淚 think I found my passion,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen I first came to 天美传媒, I wasn鈥檛 sure what field I wanted to go into. But now, I鈥檓 more clear about the pathway I want for my future.鈥

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