Celebrate Learning! Spring 2013 (Volume 4, Issue 2) | Page 3

for undergraduate research, most think of STEM—science, technology, engineering, and math. But that definition is too narrow—for a number of reasons, one of which is that all of our students need some fluency in science: how it works, how it’s conducted, what it means, what are the limits and what is the purpose. Nothing helps to answer these questions better than the process of science and research itself. Mary Phillips. The photographs below are courtesy of Mary Phillips, Southeast Campus biology professor. Moreover, our institutions and the entities that govern them are not designed to support this kind of work—however much they tout and champion the cause. US education remains a behemoth—cumbersome systems ingrained in an antiquated edifice—lumbering toward what we can only hope is improvement. student, Kelly Markwardt, presented their research poster on Conservation Biology Research and Community Service Projects. Conservation biology research students are required to work on various research projects, such as biosurveys of the Cross Timbers and dendrochronology studies of ancient trees. In addition, the students are required to participate in community service projects. Kelly Markwardt is designing and developing a butterfly flowerbed for the West Campus Child Development Center. This flowerbed will showcase native plants with textures, smells, colors, and pollinators. Dr. Diana Spencer, Biotechnology Coordinator, and five of her Molecular Biology and Techniques students ─ Hunter Bearden, Andrew Teaching is harder these days—for a myriad of reasons. Brown, Mang Chang, Bobby And with all the buzz around and about education, I am drawn to Daughtery, and Minji Sohn ─ presented their poster on Mothe bottom line—analysis, application, evaluation, synthesis, lecular Scatology Using DNA problem solving, information literacy, and creative thinking. Barcoding: Genetic IdentificaTeachers use these skills to make classrooms relevant tion of Zoological Specimens and dynamic and to help our students bring their own critical and Diet Using Mitochondrial thinking to life. and Plastid Loci. The students For our students, facing a global economy and the prob- extracted DNA from feces of animals housed at the Tulsa lems of the 21st Century—pummeling our shores and drying up Zoo. They amplified and sethe heartland—creative thinking, cross-discipline thinking, and Sasha Townsend quenced particular bar-coding problem solving should be at the center of what we do in the genes and analyzed the seclassroom. I will be the first to say this 3-prong approach to teaching is much harder—much harder to plan, prepare, roll out, quences using five separate bioinformatics tools. and manage. Patty B. Smith, West Campus biology professor, and her The next five years are crucial. Footnote: As I write, Channel 6 reports that Oklahoma’s legislature is working to pass a bill that will exempt students from science curriculum that conflicts with the student’s beliefs. Kelly Markwardt and Patty B. Smith “ Research is Teaching” TCC Well Represented at Oklahoma Research Day Dr. Vladimir Kozhevnikov, Metro Campus physics professor, and three of his students Sasha Townsend, Jon Snellgrove and Tyler Nitsche, presented their research poster on Size and Mass of Cooper Pairs in Superconductors. The size (distance between electrons in a Cooper pair) and mass of Cooper pairs were measured using low-energy muon spin rotation spectroscopy (LE-uSR) and polarized neutron reflectometry (PNR). This project is funded by the National Science Foundation. Many former TCC research students presented their current research posters at Oklahoma Research Day. Presently, these students are conducting research at four-year universities, such (Continued on page 4) Dr. Patty B. Smith Thirty-five faculty, students, staff, and administrators attended and / or presented posters at Oklahoma Research Day on March 8 of 2013. Dr. Doug Price, Dean of Global and Engaged Learning, and Angela Summers, Faculty Director of the Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching, arranged for bus transportation to the University of Central Oklahoma in Edmond. The bus transportation was funded through the Office of Global and Engaged Learning and Faculty Innovation Grant (FIG) for Undergraduate Research and Scholarly Activities awarded to Patty B. Smith, Dr. Diana Spencer, Dr. Bryan Coppedge, Dusti Sloan, and Andrew Brown, Bobby Daugherty, 3