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Opportunities/ Summer Undergraduate
Research Program
What I Did Last Summer
Early in the summer of 2006, Sonia Fang ’08 traveled to the shores of
Laguna Beach, Calif., with three Pomona students and Assistant Professor
of Biology Nina Karnovsky to scrutinize the little-understood grunion—a
small, silvery fish with the remarkable habit of emerging completely
from the water during a few nights each year to spawn on Southern
California beaches.
Over the course of the investigation, they dug for egg clutches, hatched
eggs and assessed human impact on beaches. Fang collected tiny grunion
ear bones for examination to determine the relationship, if any, between
the age of the fish and the night it spawns.
“This research project showed me what it is really like to do biological
research in both the field and the lab,” says Fang, whose preliminary
results indicate that on nights when more fish flopped onto the sand,
they tended to be younger. “Although we get a limited amount of such
experience through our classes, this experience was much more difficult,
intense and rewarding. The research also was validating in the sense
that now I know I would enjoy a career in research or fisheries
management.”
In mid-July, Karnovsky took students, including Allison Bailey ’07, to
the Arctic to study small, barrel-shaped birds called dovekies. Living
in the Polish Polar Station in Spitsbergen, the group from Pomona
College worked with a nearby bird colony, watching chicks’ growth,
measuring the birds’ stress levels and monitoring what they ate. Several
days aboard the three-masted research vessel Oceania allowed for
discovery of the birds’ foraging waters and related oceanographic
conditions.
“It takes at least two people to make these measurements so having a
student was extremely important,” Karnovsky says, adding that Bailey was
“able to participate in an interdisciplinary, international research
project, to be trained in the techniques used in this type of polar
marine science, to carry out an independent project and to collect
samples for a senior thesis project.”
Fang and Bailey were among a select group of students who took part in
the College’s Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURP), a
competitive program that provides up to $3,750 in financial support for
four to 10 weeks of extended, focused research. Students either work
directly for a professor as summer research assistants or pursue
independent research projects with faculty guidance.
While Pomona affords students other options to engage in undergraduate
research, SURP is the largest organized opportunity offering financial
support. Because it takes place in the summer, students can devote
themselves to their project without school-year distractions.
A particular strength of SURP, says Associate Dean of the College
Cecilia Conrad, is that students may undertake explorations in any
discipline—liberal arts or sciences—regardless of the student’s area of
study.
“A religious studies student doing a biology project is probably
something that would not happen at a large university,” says Conrad. “I
think it is an important part of the exploration that goes on here at
Pomona.”
Not surprisingly, SURP is a popular program, with more students applying
every year to participate.
“The program is growing,” says Conrad, who notes that out of 156
proposals from students hoping to do summer research this year, only 70
were funded—up from 49 in 2002. “Our only constraint is in terms of
financial resources.”
The money for SURP—$217,000 this summer—comes from the College’s
operating budget, several grants and endowments established by donors,
including the Craddock-McVicar Award, the Richter Scholars and The Elgin
Fund for Summer Student Research created this year by Robert Elgin ’66
and Sarah “Sally” Elgin ’67.
“We believe that a research or internship opportunity is one of the most
important parts of undergraduate education, and that a full summer
devoted to this is generally the best experience,” says Sally Elgin.
“Most colleges and universities have limited resources to support such
work, and most students need summer earnings. Frankly, we believe that
funding for summer research should be built into the college or
university endowment, like any other part of the curriculum, and hence
the contribution.”
The inaugural recipient of the Elgin’s generosity is biology major Bobby
Mendenhall ’08, who studied whether a particular enzyme helps plants
tolerate environmental stress, such as high temperatures, that could
otherwise disrupt photosynthesis.
“I took a lot away from this experience,” says Mendenhall. “I’ve learned
skills and outlooks that I can carry with me and use in the future, both
inside and outside of the lab.”
For their part, the Elgins—both of whom took part in undergraduate
research at Pomona—are well aware of the advantages such opportunities
afford students. Making everyone else conscious of those benefits is a
goal for Sally, a biology professor involved with undergraduate research
at Washington University in St. Louis.
Sally initiated the Survey of Undergraduate Research Experiences (SURE).
Conducted in 2003 by David Lopatto, professor of psychology at Grinnell
College, SURE questioned 1,135 summer research participants from 41
colleges. The respondents overwhelmingly reported that summer research
was a positive experience in which they learned a lot and would like to
repeat. The study found no differences between college and university
students and no differences among men, women or minority groups. “I’m
very pleased with that,” commented Elgin. “It means that we scientists,
collectively, are doing a good job mentoring a
diverse group of students in different settings.” In a follow-up survey
of some of the same students, most said the experience made them more
active learners, improved their ability to think independently and made
them more motivated to learn.
“Students gain both academic skills and general self-confidence, helping
them decide whether a lab career is right for them,” says Elgin of
undergraduate research. “More important, they gain the insight and
motivation to become more self-directed learners, more confident about
asking questions.”
Similar results were reported in Pomona College’s survey of the 2005
graduating class, where students who participated in undergraduate
research reported greater satisfaction with their major and a higher
level of intellectual excitement.
Anecdotal accounts from Pomona students support the survey findings.
American history major Cameron Blevins ’08 traveled to Connecticut this
summer on a SURP grant funded by the Hart Institute for American
History—established by trustee emeritus Gurnee Hart ’51—to examine the
importance of land and property in the life of Venture Smith, an
18th-century slave who bought his freedom and became a successful
businessman. “I’ve spent one day
a week participating in an archaeological excavation of his former
property, which has been fascinating because I know nothing about
archaeology, and the other days I’ve been doing research,” says Blevins.
“The experience has been invaluable.”
Katie Lenhoff ’07 says the SURP experience helped solidify her plans to
attend graduate school. Lenhoff, a Russian and Eastern European studies
major, reviewed representations of women and motherhood in Soviet
posters of the 1920s and 1930s. “At the end of last semester, I no
longer knew if I would ever want to go to graduate school to pursue my
Russian studies,” she says. “After doing this SURP, my feelings have
changed. This project reminded me of what drew me to Russian studies in
the first place.”
Not surprisingly, undergraduate research also benefits professors and,
by extension, their classes.Assistant Professor of Chemistry Charles
Taylor had three students working in his lab this summer analyzing
arsenic levels in playground groundcover. One student, Sam Farina-Henry
’07 was supported by a SURP grant from the Schulz Environmental Studies
Award—established by Jean Schulz ’59—while the other two were paid
through a Joint Science Department Mellon Environmental Fellowship and
Chemistry Department
endowed funds.
“The SURP benefits me by extending my ability to do research,
essentially providing me more than my own hands to perform the work and
additional minds to think about the results,” says Taylor. “I had not
planned on performing this type of research when I came to Pomona, but
having this additional support makes it possible. Some of the lessons
learned in this work will be extended to my Instrumental Analysis course
this fall.”
While undergraduate research is a hallmark of education at liberal arts
colleges like Pomona, its advantages are attracting notice from larger
universities. “Large schools are seeing the value of undergraduate
research and building their own programs,” says Conrad. “We cannot
afford to slack off on this. In addition to it being key to our mission,
we have some competitive
pressure.”
Investing in Talent
The SURP program is, for many students, a defining feature of the
undergraduate experience at Pomona College. The program offers young
scholars a hands-on experience that allows them to collaborate with
Pomona faculty in developing and carrying out a research project.
Additionally, SURP offers many members of the Pomona College
community—alumni, parents and friends—the opportunity to invest in our
talented students. To learn more about endowing a SURP, please contact
the Office of Major Gifts at (909) 607-7441.
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