07/22/10

Nominations and Other Opportunities for CUR Members

Members of CUR have been receiving notices of opportunities to share their experiences and views related to undergraduate research on various Advisory Boards, Commissions and other panels in Washington, DC for some time.  Washington Partners monitors and identifies such opportunities, and shares them with CUR leadership, who subsequently passes them on.  Knowing that such one-topic e-mails might get lost in inboxes, going forward, these notices will be supplemented with an aggregate listing in this communication each month.  Please know that some opportunities are particularly time sensitive, and will still be shared individually, but Washington Partners is hopeful an aggregate listing is helpful to CUR members interested in such opportunities. 

In addition, CUR is working with Washington Partners to establish a resource that can be relied upon when opportunities to testify before Congressional, federal or other panels in Washington, DC or elsewhere arise.  Robin Howard of CUR’s staff recently sent an email to members regarding this effort.  If you haven’t already looked at that effort on CUR’s website, please do so at http://cur.networkats.com/members_online/members/viewmember.asp.

07/22/10

Senate Committee to Act on Undergraduate Research Policy

As recently as last week, observers thought it unlikely that the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee would act before the Congressional recess on legislation that would reauthorize the America COMPETES Act.  In May, the House passed legislation (HR 5116) to reauthorize the 2007 law and has been waiting for the Senate to follow suit, and CUR recently joined other groups in writing to Senate lawmakers urging them to act on the bill.

The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee is scheduled to mark up a number of bills on Thursday, July 22, including S 3605, the American COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010.  This bill, which was introduced by Committee Chairman John Rockefeller (D-WV), would maintain funding for programs at the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institutes of Standards and Technology, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, but is a proposal that differs a bit from the House-approved legislation.  That bill included a National Nanotechnology Initiative and other programs absent from the Senate legislation.

Supporters of the many programs authorized by the America COMPETES Act have long lamented the disappointing lack of federal funding for them.  While this bill does not represent a commitment to funding, there are proposed changes to certain programs that would benefit undergraduate research.  Undergraduate research and courses of study are paid more attention at the NSF and other agencies in the proposed changes, as are primarily undergraduate institutions of higher education.  There is a new provision of the research experiences for undergraduate students (REU) program that directs the Director of NSF to require that every recipient of a research grant from the NSF proposing to include one or more students enrolled in certificate, associate, or baccalaureate degree programs in carrying out the research proposed under the grant shall request support, including stipend support, for those students as part of the research proposal itself versus in a supplement to the proposal (unless participation of the undergraduate student was not foreseeable at the time of the original proposal).  The House-passed bill includes a similar provision.

More broadly, both the House and Senate bills propose changes to programs that recognize the important contributions primarily undergraduate institutions, two-year institutions and undergraduates can and do play in the research enterprise, and there are proposals to diversify collaborative research applications that embrace this notion.

The Council on Undergraduate Research supports this legislation and is hopeful that House and Senate lawmakers will work together to enact the measure before year’s end.  In coming weeks, CUR and Washington Partners, LLC will continue to monitor Congressional action and weigh in with lawmakers on the proposed changes that will benefit undergraduate research.

06/2/10

Meeting of Minds THANK YOU’s

Last month, the University of Michigan-Flint hosted the 18th annual Meeting of Minds Undergraduate Research Conference, an effort jointly sponsored by the Flint and Dearborn campuses of the University of Michigan and Oakland University. Over 300 people – including student presenters, faculty, volunteers, and guests gathered on campus throughout the day to celebrate the research and creative efforts made by our students. We had an amazing day!

The Office of Research would like to extend our special thanks to the following individuals and departments for helping us make the event a tremendous success:

Departments
Gina Rose, Carol Wedel, Jessica Rawlings, and the Event Building Services staff
Stacy Lee and the Registrar’s staff
Chalmers Sanders, Kathy Howe, and the Public Safety staff
Melissa Storch and the Mediated Classroom Services staff
University Catering Services
Doron Pratt and the Bridges to Success staff
The Genesee Early College
Brian DiBlassio and the UM-Flint Jazz Ensemble

Event speakers
Dr. Ruth Person
Dr. Vahid Lotfi
Dr. Terry Van Allen
Carmin Burrell, doctoral student

Volunteers
Kenneth Litwin
Sandy Alberto
Heather Dawson
Quamrul Mazumder
Olanrewaju Aluko
Ryan Thomas
Amalie Helms
Roy Barnes
Bonnie Heckard
Sheril Howse
Peggy Roddy
Dana Dyson
Julie Broadbent
Tom Wrobel
Jennifer Hogan
Lola Carter
Sue Koehler
Marilyn Harvey
Megan Lloyd
Renea Rishmawi
Susanna Tippett
Gedaerah Morgan
Mary Bickes
John Collins
Andrea Yinger
Jeanette Routhier
Herb Bursch
Lona Wood
JiSoo Lee
Michael Lengyel
Darryl Howard-Coolin

We are looking forward to another spectacular Meeting of Minds event next year, when Oakland University will be the host.

Thanks for supporting MOM and undergraduate research at UM-Flint!

04/22/10

UM-Flint at NCUR

We’re happy to announce that senior UROP student, Nkemdilim Nwodo represented the University at the 24th annual National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR). This year’s NCUR was hosted by the University of Montana in Missoula, MT.

Nkemdilim presented her research project entitled “High School Dropout Rates in Michigan School Districts: The Influence of Poverty, Educational Attainment, and Location for the Years 2004-2007.” Dr. Dana Dyson from Political Science is her faculty advisor.

Congratulations on your efforts Nkemdilim!

02/9/10

Undergraduate Students Presenting at NCUR

We’re happy to announce that two of our students – Cameron Waites and Nkemdilim Nwodo – have been accepted to present at the National Conference on Undergraduate Research! Cameron (facutly advisors, Suzanne Selig and Maureen Thum) will be presenting his paper entitled “Oligodendrogenesis After Hypoxic-ischemic Stroke in the Mouse Brain” and Nkemdilim (facutly advisor, Dana Dyson) will be presenting her paper entitled “High School Dropout Rates in Michigan School Districts: The Influence of Poverty, Educational Attainment, and Location for the Years 2004-2007”

This year’s NCUR will take place on the campus of the University of Montana. Congrats, Cameron and Nkemdilim!

For more information about his year’s NCUR, please visit: http://www.umt.edu/ncur2010/default.aspx

01/12/10

Summer Research Internship at UM-Ann Arbor’s Survey Research Center

Applications are being accepted for the Survey Research Center’s (SRC) Summer Internship Program. The program is a 10 week, 20 – 40 hour per week paid position for undergraduate (completion of sophomore year or greater) and graduate students with an interest in social science research.  Interns typically will be assigned to an ongoing research study, attend appropriate seminars/courses on principles of survey research, and participate in a research symposium focusing on one of the research methodologies learned and/or the project in which they worked. The overall intent is to provide all interns with exposure to many facets of the survey process. Interns will be encouraged to apply for full-time positions upon completion of their internship or degree program.

The deadline to apply for this program is Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2010.

If you would like an application, contact Andre Louis at [email protected] or stop by the Office of Research in 530 French Hall.

For additional information about the program, please contact George Myers at (734) 615-4883 or via email at [email protected]. Also, visit the website for more details: http://sites.isr.umich.edu/DNN/Default.aspx?alias=sites.isr.umich.edu/dnn/sip

01/12/10

Undergraduates Sought for Nanoscale Device Research

The University of Massachusetts Amherst is seeking applications for the 2010 Nanotechnology Summer Undergraduate Research Experience (SURE) program. Applications are due by February 28, 2010. Selected students will spend 10 weeks, from June 1 to August 1, 2010, engaged in cutting-edge nanoscale device development research projects with faculty mentors and graduate student lab mates.

Funding from the National Science Foundation provides each student with a $3,400 stipend, lodging, travel to campus, and a number of activities and events outside the lab. Women and persons from underrepresented groups are strongly encouraged to apply.

For more information, contact the SURE program director at [email protected].

11/6/09

Undergraduate Research Conferences

Upcoming deadlines for Undergraduate Research Conferences:

Posters on the Hill

As a final notice, the deadline for the 2010 Posters on the Hill Conference is on Tues. Nov 10, by 11:59 pm. Posters on the Hill is a poster conference hosting by the Council on Undergraduate Research where selected students from across the nation have the opportunity to present their research at the Nation’s Capitol. The deadline to submit an abstract is coming up soon! 

For more information about Posters on the Hill, please visit: http://www.umflint.edu/research/student_programs/CUR/posters_hill.htm or directly on the CUR website at: http://www.cur.org/pohcall.html 

National Conference on Undergraduate Research 

It’s not too late to register for the National Conference on Undergraduate Research. The event showcases the work of hundreds of students from across the nation. Though NCUR is celebrating its 24th year now, UM-Flint has just recently began having students present at the event. If you would like to take your research up a notch and present at the national level, NCUR is for you. 

This year’s event will take place at the University of Montana. Once I know how many students are accepted to present, we will make our arrangements. The last date to submit an abstract is Dec. 4, 2009  The last date to submit an abstract has been extended to Dec. 9, 2009 by midnight.  Any interested students must have a faculty advisor and must list me as the institutional contact. Submit before it’s too late! For more information, please visit: http://www.umflint.edu/research/student_programs/NCUR/home.htm

10/19/09

Faculty Presenters Needed!

Earlier this year,  a brief study was conducted examining faculty perceptions of undergraduate research at UM-Flint. A central theme pointed out by many of you was the general lack of research skills students possessed. Even if students had an interest in doing research, they did not always have the requisite skills; thus calling for you to devote even more time preparing and training students. In response to your comments and suggestions, the Office of Research plans to launch a series of workshops next semester; designed to improve general research skills of our students. Tentatively, here are the following topic areas:

  • Getting started (identifying research interests, forming research questions, finding a faculty mentor)
  • Conducting literature reviews
  • Library Research
  • Research Design
  • Statistical Analysis and Interpretation
  • Writing Research Papers
  • Creating a Research Presentation
  • Submitting a Paper for Publication
  • Research Opportunities on Campus
  • Panel Discussion: “From the Students’ Mouths: Perspectives from Research Students” (I plan to recruit some of my UROP students for this panel, but I’d love your suggestions for student researchers)

We plan to host these 1-hour sessions in the winter semester, leading up to Meeting of Minds (which, by the way, will be hosted by UM-Flint this year. More on that in the upcoming months). But before we can start publicizing, we need faculty willing to facilitate any of the workshops above. Also, if you have any other research topic areas you would like to cover (ideally, of a general nature), your suggestions are welcomed!

If you’re interested in presenting on any of these areas, please contact Andre Louis. We would like to have a roster in place by December 1st.

Thanks for all you do in support of undergraduate research on our campus!

09/1/09

UM-Flint student receives Google Scholarship

From Mlive:

FLINT, Michigan — University of Michigan-Flint student Miyako Jones is among 18 students in the country and two from Michigan to receive a $10,000 academic scholarship through Google and the United Negro College Fund.

As a Google-United Negro College Fund scholar, Jones will also receive an all-expenses paid trip to the Google Headquarters in California in 2010.

The annual Google-UNCF scholarship is awarded to a group of African-American students pursuing undergraduate and graduate degrees in computer science or computer engineering with a minimum 3.5 GPA.

The program offers “last dollar” scholarships based on unmet financial need for students majoring in computer science or computer engineering.

On the trip to the Googleplex, Jones will have the opportunity to meet other scholars and attend technical talks and professional development workshops while exploring the San Francisco Bay area.

Miyako is also an active participant in our Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program. Congratulations on this accomplishment Miyako!