19 December 2007
REU at SICB
Myself and all the students in UTPA REU program will be attending the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology meeting in San Antonio next month. See you then!
28 November 2007
How to get noticed
Aaron Ellison's recruiting trip for his REU program went well. During his presentation, he mentioned one of those things that should be obvious but isn't, and is therefore very important.
Most research programs require some kind of essay, which I tend to call a "personal statement." Aaron noted that most of the applicants to his program wrote completely generic personal statements, and gave no indication of why they wanted to be in that particular program.
By saying something like, "I want to be in your program, because I see it focuses on bee research, and I have been fascinated by bees since I read this paper by Dr. Jones...", you might get yourself past the first cut of applications.
Most research programs require some kind of essay, which I tend to call a "personal statement." Aaron noted that most of the applicants to his program wrote completely generic personal statements, and gave no indication of why they wanted to be in that particular program.
By saying something like, "I want to be in your program, because I see it focuses on bee research, and I have been fascinated by bees since I read this paper by Dr. Jones...", you might get yourself past the first cut of applications.
20 November 2007
Recruiting visit
Aaron Ellison of Harvard Forest will be visiting our campus next Tuesday, 27 November 2007, to recruit for the Harvard Forest summer REU program.
Dr. Ellison is, among many other things, the co-author of the book A Primer Of Ecological Statistics. Which, he informed me when at dinner during an REU conference, was briefly outselling Bill Clinton's autobiography on Amazon.
Dr. Ellison is, among many other things, the co-author of the book A Primer Of Ecological Statistics. Which, he informed me when at dinner during an REU conference, was briefly outselling Bill Clinton's autobiography on Amazon.
Student profile: Cassie Rivas
What is your project about?
I am working on propagating plants using tissue culture methods. My focus is to find better protocols for the following plants: Nymphaea ( a water lily), Jatropha, and citrus.
What have you learned or enjoyed so far?
So far I have learned that every detail is extremely important as well as what tissue culture is and why it is used. What I really enjoy about research is that you really don't know what results your going to get and for me, that's exciting.
What are you looking forward to?
As time goes by I really hope that I get the results I am hoping for and I also look forward to attending the science events we are going to in order to learn more about what other type of science is being tested out there.
Supervisor: Andrew McDonald
I am working on propagating plants using tissue culture methods. My focus is to find better protocols for the following plants: Nymphaea ( a water lily), Jatropha, and citrus.
What have you learned or enjoyed so far?
So far I have learned that every detail is extremely important as well as what tissue culture is and why it is used. What I really enjoy about research is that you really don't know what results your going to get and for me, that's exciting.
What are you looking forward to?
As time goes by I really hope that I get the results I am hoping for and I also look forward to attending the science events we are going to in order to learn more about what other type of science is being tested out there.
Supervisor: Andrew McDonald
14 October 2007
Student profile: Natali Meijia
What is your project about?
Seagrass stress. Taking seagrass from its natural environment to a controlled tank and dropping the salinity to see if the seagrass endured any stress.
What have you learned or enjoyed so far?
I have learned that field and lab work are not as hard as suspected. I have become better acclimated with lab equipment and have become more educated in biology. I have also learned that the professors/mentors are very helpful in any way possible and help set a comfortable, stress free environment. I also learned that I enjoy doing both field and lab work.
What are you looking forward to?
As I go through the program I am looking forward to learning much more through hands on experience and completing a research project. I would also like to continue meeting many people who could help me succeed in the future.
Supervisors: Hudson DeYoe and Mike Persans
Seagrass stress. Taking seagrass from its natural environment to a controlled tank and dropping the salinity to see if the seagrass endured any stress.
What have you learned or enjoyed so far?
I have learned that field and lab work are not as hard as suspected. I have become better acclimated with lab equipment and have become more educated in biology. I have also learned that the professors/mentors are very helpful in any way possible and help set a comfortable, stress free environment. I also learned that I enjoy doing both field and lab work.
What are you looking forward to?
As I go through the program I am looking forward to learning much more through hands on experience and completing a research project. I would also like to continue meeting many people who could help me succeed in the future.
Supervisors: Hudson DeYoe and Mike Persans
03 October 2007
Student profile: Maria Calagui
What is your project about?
We are cloning genes from the DNA of metal tolerant plants and expressing the genes in yeast.
What have you learned or enjoyed so far?
I’ve come to respect and acknowledge the amount of effort brought into research. I’ve enjoyed meeting other students who are also in research thus establishing long lasting friendships and networking.
What are you looking forward to?
I’m looking forward to finishing my research project, presenting my results for my honors thesis and discovering where my interests lay.
Supervisor: Mike Persans
We are cloning genes from the DNA of metal tolerant plants and expressing the genes in yeast.
What have you learned or enjoyed so far?
I’ve come to respect and acknowledge the amount of effort brought into research. I’ve enjoyed meeting other students who are also in research thus establishing long lasting friendships and networking.
What are you looking forward to?
I’m looking forward to finishing my research project, presenting my results for my honors thesis and discovering where my interests lay.
Supervisor: Mike Persans
02 October 2007
HESTEC Science Symposium
Now that the madness of HESTEC is over, I can share a few pictures from our visiting mentor's visit.
The audience at the Science Symposium, quivering with anticipation.
Zuleyma at the lectern.
Zuleyma describing her early experiences with animal behaviour, which included a close encounter with a deadly Venezuelan snake.
Lunch break! I'm to the right of Zuleyma, then Dean Ed LeMaster is barely visible to my right, then Hashim Mahdi, John Villareal, Jo Rampersad, Mircea Chipara, Lawrence William, Robin Fuchs Young, Irma Jimenez Conti, and Jon Lieman.
Zuleyma and students listening to a roundtable discussion hosted by M.D. Anderson Science Park faculty Robin Fuchs Young and Irma Jimenez Conti.
The audience at the Science Symposium, quivering with anticipation.
Zuleyma at the lectern.
Zuleyma describing her early experiences with animal behaviour, which included a close encounter with a deadly Venezuelan snake.
Lunch break! I'm to the right of Zuleyma, then Dean Ed LeMaster is barely visible to my right, then Hashim Mahdi, John Villareal, Jo Rampersad, Mircea Chipara, Lawrence William, Robin Fuchs Young, Irma Jimenez Conti, and Jon Lieman.
Zuleyma and students listening to a roundtable discussion hosted by M.D. Anderson Science Park faculty Robin Fuchs Young and Irma Jimenez Conti.
18 September 2007
Student profile: Mike Torres
What is your project about?
Well, I am going to be using in-situ hybridization to note the expression of Hox, Distal-less and Engrailed genes specifically at the abdominal region where these spring appendages in Collembola are located.
What have you learned or enjoyed about research so far?
Learning is a constant occurrence for me in the lab, whether it's learning a completely new protocol or learning how to do something more efficiently as well as becoming familiar with the snags that we hit along the way. I pretty much enjoy all of it, especially when my reactions work well!
What are you looking forward to most as you go through the program?
I'm looking forward to seeing the in-situs when they're done and also the RNAi which is later on in the project.
Supervisor: Matt Terry
Well, I am going to be using in-situ hybridization to note the expression of Hox, Distal-less and Engrailed genes specifically at the abdominal region where these spring appendages in Collembola are located.
What have you learned or enjoyed about research so far?
Learning is a constant occurrence for me in the lab, whether it's learning a completely new protocol or learning how to do something more efficiently as well as becoming familiar with the snags that we hit along the way. I pretty much enjoy all of it, especially when my reactions work well!
What are you looking forward to most as you go through the program?
I'm looking forward to seeing the in-situs when they're done and also the RNAi which is later on in the project.
Supervisor: Matt Terry
17 September 2007
Student profile: Tracy Muniz
What is your project about?
I am going to determine if Couch's Spadefoot Toad has a subterranean thermal and soil moisture preference.
What have you learned or enjoyed about research so far?
By being a part of the REU program I have enjoyed constructing my own research project.
What are you looking forward to most as you go through the program?
I look forward to seeing the end result of my project.
Supervisor: Dr. Fred Zaidan III
I am going to determine if Couch's Spadefoot Toad has a subterranean thermal and soil moisture preference.
What have you learned or enjoyed about research so far?
By being a part of the REU program I have enjoyed constructing my own research project.
What are you looking forward to most as you go through the program?
I look forward to seeing the end result of my project.
Supervisor: Dr. Fred Zaidan III
30 August 2007
Our inaugural visiting mentor
I am pleased to announce that Dr. Zuleyma Tang Martinez will be our REU program's first visiting mentor, and will be a featured speaker at the HESTEC Science Symposium, and participate in Latinas' Day.
Zuleyma studies animal behavior, particularly social behavior and communication. She was born in Venezuela and has been affiliated with the University of Missouri-St. Louis since 1976, where she has published over 20 journal articles, edited several symposium proceedings, given over 75 conference presentations, and over a dozen invited presentations.
Zuleyma served as President of the Animal Behavior Society in 1993-1994, and founded the society’s Latin American Affairs Committee in 1996. This year, she was given the society’s Distinguished Service Award (pictured) for her efforts to diversify the Animal Behavior Society and increase participation of Central and South Americans.
Dr. Martinez’s other awards include being named O'Neil Ray Collins Distinguished Minority Scientist, at University of California, Berkeley in 1995, and receiving the Educational Equity Teaching Award for Higher Education, 1995 from the St. Louis Educational Equity Coalition.
Zuleyma is an outstanding scientist, and will be a fantastic guest for HESTEC. I couldn't be happier with having her as the first person to visit UTPA as part of our REU program.
Zuleyma studies animal behavior, particularly social behavior and communication. She was born in Venezuela and has been affiliated with the University of Missouri-St. Louis since 1976, where she has published over 20 journal articles, edited several symposium proceedings, given over 75 conference presentations, and over a dozen invited presentations.
Zuleyma served as President of the Animal Behavior Society in 1993-1994, and founded the society’s Latin American Affairs Committee in 1996. This year, she was given the society’s Distinguished Service Award (pictured) for her efforts to diversify the Animal Behavior Society and increase participation of Central and South Americans.
Dr. Martinez’s other awards include being named O'Neil Ray Collins Distinguished Minority Scientist, at University of California, Berkeley in 1995, and receiving the Educational Equity Teaching Award for Higher Education, 1995 from the St. Louis Educational Equity Coalition.
Zuleyma is an outstanding scientist, and will be a fantastic guest for HESTEC. I couldn't be happier with having her as the first person to visit UTPA as part of our REU program.
24 August 2007
We will, we will, doc you
Brian May of Queen, international rock star, defended his Ph.D. in astronomy yesterday. 37 years after he started.
Congratulations!
Note to students in our program: You are expected to graduate with your graduate degrees on a significantly shorter timeline.
Congratulations!
Note to students in our program: You are expected to graduate with your graduate degrees on a significantly shorter timeline.
01 August 2007
Confirmed, plausible, or busted?
Dude! The MythBusters are slated to come to HESTEC. These guys are doing some of the best television – never mind science television or education television – on American screens right now.
It's going to be a challenge to make our REU program's contribution to HESTEC top that. But we'll try!
It's going to be a challenge to make our REU program's contribution to HESTEC top that. But we'll try!
31 July 2007
A Queen among grad students
Brian May, of the legendary band Queen, has finished writing his doctoral thesis on space dust. Thirty years after he started it.
Good luck on the defense!
Good luck on the defense!
11 July 2007
Los Arcos
The REU program is featured in the new issue of Los Arcos, the university's alumni magazine. It just hit my mailbox today. Click on the image to read it.
(The edges are a little cut off because the magazine is printed in an oversized format. The pages literally don't fit on my flatbed scanner!)
The first cohort of students officially start their program tomorrow!
(The edges are a little cut off because the magazine is printed in an oversized format. The pages literally don't fit on my flatbed scanner!)
The first cohort of students officially start their program tomorrow!
11 May 2007
Drumroll...
Our first cohort of students is:
Cassandra Rivas
Tracy Muniz
Natali Mejia
Maria Calagui
Derek Martinez
Michael Torres
More about these students soon!
Cassandra Rivas
Tracy Muniz
Natali Mejia
Maria Calagui
Derek Martinez
Michael Torres
More about these students soon!
05 May 2007
Writing a personal statement: Part 2
Make sure your name is on your personal statement. On every page.
Sometimes pages get separated in the course of handling paper. Or maybe they aren't filed immediately. Or correctly. You do not want someone working though applications to find pages that they just couldn't associate with any one person. That's not good.
You might think, "I stapled the pages of my personal statement together, so I only need my name on one page." The problem there is that quite often someone might want to make copies of your papers. And often the fastest way to do that is to take out the staples and run the papers through the photocopier autofeed.
After all, it's called a personal statement for a reason -- and what's more personal than your name?
29 April 2007
Writing a personal statement: Part 1
For our REU program, we asked applicants to submit a personal statement. For the benefit of those of you who might want to apply next year, here are some tips.
Step One. Look innocuous.
"But wait," I hear the cries. "What about all those workshops and books that say they can tell you how to write a resume that stands out?" Let me refine that: Your personal statement's first task is just to get past the first round of inspection. Don't draw attention to yourself for the wrong reasons.
"Usually the first task in reviewing job applicants to reduce a large pile of resumes to a small pile--that is to begin to look for quick rejects. So avoid supplying gratuitous reasons for rejection--such as typos, spelling errors (its/it's, for example), unexplained long gaps in employment history, weird designs, statements about "my objective", no contact phone number, email addresses of the form plaigarist@wildthing.enron," wrote Edward Tufte on his forum.
Tufte mentions a personal bugbear above. Quick! Which of these are real words? Its'. It's. Its. The last two are. Now, for the bonus round, which of the last two is a possessive pronoun and which is a contraction? Seth Godin put it well here: apostrophes exist "to expose apostrophe ignorance."
For you biology students, species names are like apostrophes: they expose ignorance. Learn to format species names correctly.
Humans, for example, are Homo sapiens or H. sapiens. Not Homo Sapiens, H. Sapiens, Homo Sapiens, H. Sapiens, Homo sapiens, or H. sapiens.
Species names are always italicized. If it isn't italicized, it's wrong.
The genus name (first word in name) is capitalized, and the species name (second word in name) is not. This is important to recognize, because some word processors want to capitalize anything following a period, because a period normally signifies a new sentence, and the first word in new sentences are capitalized.
Formatting species names incorrectly screams "amateur hour" and can be a fast way to drag an application to the bottom of the pile. And not being able to write a species name correctly has been known to drive some biology instructors into dangerous berserker rages of the sort depicted.
24 April 2007
The pool
23 April 2007
The (recruitment) circle is (nearly) complete
Today is the application deadline, so tomorrow I will have to take down this poster and many others. Yes, it's another riff on the "dark side" theme, playing a bit more with the idea that this is an apprenticeship.
And, say what you will about the faults in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, the design is striking. It's pretty hard to not to look at that poster when you see it in the hall printed two and a half feet wide. I've actually had a fair number of compliments and comments on the posters so far.
But back to applications. So far, I have a respectable number of incomplete applications, and a few completed ones. I am going to be very, very curious to see the final total number of applications.
And then, the tough part: choosing from those applications.
20 April 2007
The big honkin' poster
This is the first recruitment poster I made, and it's actually the biggest. Over three feet high and five feet wide.
And let me tell you, it's really embarrassing when you make something that huge and in your face and make a mistake on it.
I don't think you'll find it on the picture at left, since I took advantage of this being the digital age and fixed the mistake before posting it on this blog. I thought about fixing the mistake on the big posters in the hall, but then I thought, "Why draw attention to it? Probably nobody will notice." Unfortunately, at least one person did. Drat.
19 April 2007
I'm not what you're looking for
In talking to people as art of recruitment, it's interesting to hear the occasional student saying, "But I'm not..." and list some perceived fault. Not a 4.0 GPA student. Not a pre-med. Not enough experience. Not smart enough. Not tall enough. Not enough time. Not enough money. Not a Bio major (that one came in literally as I was typing this entry up).
Our biggest challenge is to get students to stop taking themselves out of the pool.
Every application is a collection of pluses and minuses. Students look at their minuses, and think they have no pluses. Or that the competition they picture in their imagination has no minuses. To any student reading: That applicant you have in your mind that you think you're competing against? Does. Not. Exist.
So you're not a perfect student. Does that mean you're not even going to try?
Seriously, you can't know what we're looking for. Often, we can barely articulate that ourselves...
Gonna be a party in Kentucky tonight
Congratulations to UTPA alumnus Matt Garcia!
Matt is defending his Ph.D. today. He's in the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology at the University of Kentucky.
Matt was an Honors student in my first year here. His thesis was the first I was involved in as a committee member, because he had done work in neurobiology. Matt graduated in 2002. I ran into him at a Society for Neuroscience meeting a few years later, and he seemed to be doing well for himself.
Matt did his Honors undergraduate work elsewhere. I think it may have even been Kentucky, and it wouldn't surprise me if it was an REU program. But his story is an excellent example of what we're trying to accomplish in our REU program.
Matt is defending his Ph.D. today. He's in the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology at the University of Kentucky.
Matt was an Honors student in my first year here. His thesis was the first I was involved in as a committee member, because he had done work in neurobiology. Matt graduated in 2002. I ran into him at a Society for Neuroscience meeting a few years later, and he seemed to be doing well for himself.
Matt did his Honors undergraduate work elsewhere. I think it may have even been Kentucky, and it wouldn't surprise me if it was an REU program. But his story is an excellent example of what we're trying to accomplish in our REU program.
18 April 2007
Another young turk
This poster was another riff on the Goodall poster I posted earlier, trying to remind students that a lot of significant scientific discoveries are made by people when they're young. In mathematics, it's almost cliché.
The downside of making such posters is that they can be quite depressing for the maker. As Tom Lehrer said, "It is a sobering thought, for example, that when Mozart was my age, he had been dead for two years!"
17 April 2007
No excuses
This recruitment poster came pretty directly out of some email exchanges with an interested student who was worried about whether she could devote enough time to the program because she worked. So I told her that the REU positions were not just honorary things, but that they pay -- and pays pretty darn well.
I had been trying to focus more on other benefits to being in the program besides just the paycheque -- oops, translation to American -- paycheck. There were several reasons for that. One of which was that I didn't want it to appear that I was trying to undercut some other research programs, because the REU actually pays more over the whole program (But students work longer in the program, too.)
But the conversation reminded me that for a lot of our students, the money is a big factor.
16 April 2007
13 April 2007
Don't wait
I was listening to an interview with Jane Goodall on the Science Show recently, and as a result, I was tooling around and found the picture I used in this poster at right. Click to enlarge.
I liked it, because it was a reminder that while we often see pictures of "distinguished scientists," but often the work that made their reputations was done when they were quite young. Many major discoveries in biology were made by people in their 20s -- more than now, because the science has become much more regimented than it was in, say, the 19th century. One day, I'll have to start compiling a list.
12 April 2007
The full picture
10 April 2007
More recruiting
Another slide I used at a recruiting presentation. This was inspired by our tendency to calling getting into research "joining the dark side," but by this comic from Jorge Cham.
Steal from the best, I always say.
09 April 2007
Truth in advertising
I showed this slide at a Biology Club meeting last week, as I was trying to drum up applications for the REU program. The inspiration for the slide was easy.
Almost every faculty member around here refers to getting a student excited about research as "joining the dark side."
It is, of course, a joke. Just making that clear for the humor-deprived in the audience.
Because so few students come in the door wanting to do research, convincing them to go into research sometimes feels like trying to convince people to turn to a mysterious and often uncertain path.
07 April 2007
Page 3 boy
In certain British tabloids, there's a tradition known as the "Page 3 girl." Let's just say that I don't qualify, but I am on page three of this article (PDF format) in our student newspaper, The Pan American, describing our REU program.
And so it begins
Science is all about experiments, and this blog is no exception.
I am hoping that the participants in this REU site -- both mentors and students and others -- will occasionally post here to give an idea of what our undergraduate research experience is all about. What makes this an experiment? It's an experiment because program managers of other REU Sites have said there wasn't much interest in blogging among their students.
But then, we have a much different REU program from most others. So we shall see.
Meanwhile, I've added a picture to answer a frequently asked question about anything concerning our university.
"UTPA? Where's that?"
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