More than 100 students have convened at Occidental for the annual 10-week research program, some living and learning on campus for the very first time.
Ever heard of a leech nursery? Anahy Lizarraga ā23 can tell you a thing or two about it.
This summer, the Pomona native is studying the bacterial community of a leech from the genus Branchellion that lives (and feeds) on the undersides of round stingrays. Her project is titled āThe Blood Suckers of the Sea: Investigations on the Branchellion leech from Southern California and its Microbial Community.ā
Lizarragaās faculty mentor is Professor of Biology Shana Goffredi, with whom she did research remotely as a sophomore. The biology major is thrilled to be back on campus again, and her work has already been fruitful. After a couple of weeks of collecting and analyzing leech specimens from the Cabrillo Marine Aquarium, she discovered Branchellion hatchlings in the nursery, which came from 0.5 mm cocoons hidden in the sand.
Along with 115 other students, Lizarraga is a participant in the Undergraduate Research Centerās Summer Research Program (SRP), which has returned this summer in a partially in-person format (the August 4 conference will remain virtual) and runs from June 1 to August 6. The new URC director this year is Associate Professor of Philosophy Clair Morrissey.
Some students are taking advantage of the opportunity for funded, dedicated research as a way to refine their techniques and methodologies and get ahead on their senior comps and grad school preparation. Some are passionate about continuing research they began earlier in their undergraduate career. But they are all happy to be on campus with their peers after nearly 15 months of remote learning.
āI was so ready to come back to campus again,ā says Lizarraga, who only got a semester and a half in Eagle Rock as a first-year before COVID-19 sent everyone home.
āIt has been great to see familiar faces and meet new people. Itās only been a couple of weeks and I have already made a lot of friends,ā she adds.
A sight for sore eyes
When insurrectionists stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6, Rowan Hoffman ā22 was compelled to better understand how we as a nation arrived at this pointāand where it all started.
āIām looking at the origins of media polarization in television by focusing on the late 1960s and early 70s,ā says the history and Media Arts and Culture double major from Portland, Ore. āDuring this period, television news began to explode in popularity and ushered in a new form of journalism.ā
Recently, he was sitting under the jacaranda trees on campus during a Thursday Pod Lunchāwhere SRP participants all eat together in distanced podsānoticing all the students spread across the Quad, talking and laughing. āIt was a sight for sore eyes, to say the least,ā he says.
So far this summer, heās been surprised by his ability to focus deeply on his project. āThat might sound funny, but it was a very long year being on Zoom in your room,ā he explains. Heās grateful to be able to work in the library again, which makes engaging with his research easier and more normal-feeling.
āIām a far happier student now than I was, say, five months ago,ā he says.
Support that goes above and beyond
Britney Aboagye ā22 knew she was on to something important when her interviews with Black marketing professionals kept yielding the phrase, āI donāt want to get fired for saying this, but ⦠ā The sociology major from Newark, N.J., is interested in the influence of Black culture on entertainment, music, fashion and innovation, and her project is called āDo it for the Culture: Black Cultural Agency in Social Media.ā
Sheās planning to write a 30-page paper that will become her senior comps. She and her adviser, Assistant Professor of Sociology Benjamin Weiss ā16, have also talked about longer-term goals, such as turning her project into a journal article, book or documentary.
āHeās gone above and beyond in supporting me beyond this three-month project, saying, āthis could be something you devote your life to and Iām here to support you in any way, shape or form.ā Iām really appreciative of that,ā Aboagye says.
Bringing chemistry to life
Chester Cahill ā24 of Los Angeles is excited to be working in a lab for the first time in his college career. A chemistry major, he intends to complete the 3-2 engineering program. In addition to letting him get ahead academically, summer research is also allowing him to see science in action and providing him with faculty mentorship.
āAlthough I knew chemistry and chemical engineering are things Iām academically interested in, I wanted to learn more about the real applications of these fields and what the daily life of a chemist is like,ā Cahill says.
His research, overseen by REAP Director and Associate Professor of Chemistry Emmanuelle Despagnet-Ayoub, relates to redox flow batteries and how to maximize their energy storage. Cahill is analyzing a specific molecule that can be bonded to a carbon-based structure, which will allow more of that molecule to be added to the fluid within these batteries and hopefully increase their energy potential.
He enjoys working closely with his five other labmates and professor, and says being on campus for the first time is āa breath of fresh air.ā
āHaving that in-person interaction and collaborationāthereās just nothing else like it.ā