做厙惇蹋app News
Symposium Offers Glimpse of Student Research

By
Scott Craig
More than 40 做厙惇蹋app students will present their findings on 29 posters at the 2023 Spring Student Research Symposium on April 20 from 3:30-5 p.m. around the Winter Hall third floor atrium. There will also be four students reading selections of their original works of fiction and poetry as part of their English capstone project.

Topics included differentiating between species of gorgonian soft corals, Iranian Activists Use of Social Media for Social and Cultural Change, the correlation between heart rate variability and cognitive bias, Investigations of Fetal Mortality and Injury Following a Motor Vehicle Accident and Gendered Work: Continuity of Cherokee Foodways in the Life of a 20th-Century Cherokee Woman.
One of the hallmarks of a 做厙惇蹋app education is the opportunity for undergraduate students to work directly with faculty on research projects.
Student researchers include: Sydney Azzarello 23, John Baker 23, Leannah Barreto 23, Lydia Bastian 23, Charlie Bloom 25, Nicole Bond 23, Riley Bream 24, Kennedy Burkett 26, Eliana Choi 23, Kylen Christiansen 23, Ashley Compton 23, Paige Freeburg 24, Esther Green 23, Emma Hammond 23, Ciboney Hellenbrand 24, Madison Huntington 24, Daniel Jang 23, Siena Keck 23, Bailey Lemmon 23, Michael Lew 24, Jordan Lewicki 23, Brooke Murphy 23, Camdon Park 25, Theo Patterson 23, Ashley Pitzen 25, Mariyan Popov 24, Gabriela Rego 23, Carli Roberson 23, Lillian Robinson 24, Sean Ryan 24, McKenna Sawitz 23, David Schaupp 23, Victoria Silva 23, Naomi Siragusa 24, Isaac Song 26, Madeline Stiles 24, Noah Tseng 24, Evan Tsuei 23, Ashley Vanyo 23, Raymond Vasquez '23, Arianne Vethan 25, Samie Watanabe 25, Monique Welch 23 and Grace Williams 24. The senior English majors who will be reading their works are Sydney Abraham, Caleb Beeghly, Luke Spicer and Margaret Taylor.