麻花影视

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Ready to Start Your Research Journey?

An inside look at the program that helps first- and second-year students gain hands-on experience learning about the many facets of research.
Close up of a test strip and reader measuring hydration levels.

Experiment one: Apply a saliva test strip to the tip of your tongue to measure hydration level.

Experiment two: Attach electrodes to your hands and feet and send an electrical current through your body to determine its composition.

Experiment three: Step inside a Bod Pod, displacing air to measure your body volume.

Analyze: Examine data collected, compare hydration differences after consuming sports drinks and water, ask questions and create a report.

This is what undergraduate research at 麻花影视 can look like.

鈥淚 always like to encourage undergrads to know that research is a fun, creative process,鈥 said Jessica Garay G鈥18, G鈥23, assistant professor of nutrition and food studies at the , who led one cohort of the (SOURCE) Explore program. 鈥淚 hope this showed them that there are fun, hands-on things you can do that are research and can be applicable to your life, regardless of your career path.鈥

Introducing Research Opportunities

Student sitting inside of a "Bod Pod", a large device that measures hydration levels.

With assistance from exercise science doctoral student Meredith Krieger, health and exercise major Gabe Patel 鈥29 enters the Bod Pod at Falk College during a SOURCE Explore workshop that examined the relationship between body composition and hydration status.

Garay鈥檚 work with the students was one of six six-week workshops featured in the SOURCE Explore program, which introduces first- and second-year students to research and ongoing opportunities with SOURCE. Health and exercise science major Gabe Patel 鈥29 appreciated that the experience related to his major and career alignment. 鈥淪OURCE is such a good opportunity to get into research,鈥 he said. 鈥淗aving this program as a steppingstone really opens up a lot of possibilities.鈥

Other workshops focused on archival research, artificial intelligence, communications, fashion design and military history. The students were also mentored on creating poster presentations and giving pitches on their research. They presented their findings at a poster session on Feb. 27.

鈥淔irst- and second-year students sometimes don鈥檛 feel like they have the skills or confidence to pursue research, and the Explore program shows them that not only can they learn and develop these skills, but they bring a lot to the table themselves,鈥 said SOURCE assistant director Odette Marie Rodr铆guez G鈥25. 鈥淭hese projects have pushed the students to grow and test themselves and have also shown that they have the kind of skills necessary to pursue undergraduate research.鈥

Capturing Veteran Stories

Two ROTC students present their research findings at a poster session.

Air Force ROTC cadets Eleanor Rogowski 鈥28 (left), a history and international relations major, and Jake Carlson 鈥29, an information management and technology major, discuss highlights of the interview they conducted with Army veteran Doug Schmidt, curator for the 10th Mountain Division and Fort Drum Museum.

Grace Chavez 鈥29, an Army ROTC cadet majoring in political science, and Alec West 鈥28, a history and economics major, embraced the opportunity to contribute to an oral history project with military veterans. 鈥淭he preservation of oral history is incredibly valuable not just for historical purposes but also for understanding how to work with veterans in other areas,鈥 Chavez said.

Under the guidance of associate professor Beth Patin, assistant professor Sebastian Modrow G鈥15 and doctoral student Isaac Meth, six students contributed to a collaboration with the Army鈥檚 10th Mountain Division Foundation and Fort Drum Museum and the University鈥檚 to test different recording technologies and develop a digital archive of veterans鈥 stories.

These projects have pushed the students to grow and test themselves and have also shown that they have the kind of skills necessary to pursue undergraduate research.

Odette Marie Rodr铆guez G鈥25, SOURCE assistant director

The students designed and conducted artifact-based interviews鈥攁 method championed from the start. 鈥淲e鈥檝e learned that when people have artifacts鈥攁 map, a picture, an item鈥攖hey can often lock into that item and tell stories differently than if we were just having conversations,鈥 Patin said.

That approach proved its power when Chavez and West conducted a studio interview with retired 10th Mountain Division Lt. Col. Marc Cleveland. A social work graduate student who served as a project facilitator, Cleveland shared a binder of letters and pictures from his time in the service. 鈥淗e emphasized that these artifacts kept him going when the going got tough,鈥 Chavez said. 鈥淚t reminded him that he had people back home cheering him on.鈥

Patin and Modrow were impressed with the students鈥 dedication and effort in moving the project forward鈥攁nd look for students to continue contributing to the project. 鈥淵ou could really tell they were as excited about the project as we were,鈥 Modrow said. 鈥淵ou could feel their enthusiasm and passion, and it carried through the entire process.鈥

Weaving Looms on the Horizon

Jane Moss 鈥29 working on a loom to create a textile pattern.

Jane Moss 鈥29, a public relations major with fashion design minor, creates a design pattern, working on a loom.

Students in the fashion design workshop, led by associate professor Todd Conover 鈥95, G鈥21 and assistant teaching professor Kirsten Schoonmaker, explored the relationship between materiality, structure and form and their interaction in different applications or environments. They were encouraged to see design as a system, reviewing pieces from a 1970s collection by the late fashion designer Bonnie Cashin. They also studied materials under a microscope. And while arts-based majors sometimes struggle to recognize their creative work as a form of research, Schoonmaker and Conover sought to shift that perspective through Explore, helping them see how their creative practices are research methods and tools for exploring themes and answering questions. They looked to demystify 鈥渞esearch鈥 for the students, noting it鈥檚 the act of asking questions, including sifting through information and following curiosity.

Close up shot of a student weaving a textile design on a loom.

Weaving on a loom requires a steady hand to manage the fibers.

鈥淚t was interesting to see the thought process of people who design clothes,鈥 said fashion design major Leila Pierre Louis 鈥28, who researched the history of the knitting machine and put the fashion design program鈥檚 one to use. 鈥淭here are so many limits to the knitting machine. It was a lot of experimentation to see what鈥檚 possible, especially since you want to create unique designs.鈥

Fashion design major Shalease Allen 鈥28, who has an interest in fiber engineering and sustainability, discovered she liked to weave materials on a loom. 鈥淚t was a great learning experience,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 learned a lot during the hands-on process of research and a lot more about myself and what I like in fashion.鈥

That鈥檚 exactly what Conover and Schoonmaker had in mind when they had the students use the program鈥檚 knitting machine and looms to create their projects. They watched as the students鈥 approach changed from tentative to all in. 鈥淏y the end, they鈥檇 taken ownership of it,鈥 Schoonmaker said. 鈥淚t gave them a great opportunity to become confident in their ability to explore.鈥

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