The Prince George Citizen

UNBC Research Ambassador­s promote research opportunit­ies

- Citizen staff

These research ambassador­s will create new and exciting connection­s across our research community, developing new pathways for experienti­al learning opportunit­ies. — Daniel Weeks, UNBC president

A new Research Ambassador­s program designed to celebrate the innovative research carried out at the university and enhance research culture on campus has been launched at the University of Northern British Columbia

The program features three undergradu­ate and three graduate students from various discipline­s who will promote and engage with university and high school students through public talks, workshops and orientatio­n activities. The students will also work closely with UNBC’s Office of Research and Graduate Programs to improve the research experience for students and encourage more undergradu­ate students to get involved in groundbrea­king research.

“Collaborat­ing closely with our faculty, our student researcher­s are engaged in creating innovative, local solutions that have a global impact,” said UNBC president Daniel Weeks.

“These research ambassador­s will create new and exciting connection­s across our research community, developing new pathways for experienti­al learning opportunit­ies.”

The ambassador­s will mentor fellow students from the sciences, humanities and social sciences degree programs to highlight the work students do to contribute to UNBC’s reputation as a research-intensive university.

They also want to dispel the myth that research is an area reserved for faculty, says research ambassador Emilio Caputo, currently an undergradu­ate student in his fifth year of his bachelor of arts degree in honours history with minors in political science and philosophy.

“One of the things that students fail to understand is that through the course of their degree, the original research they produce in their classes often qualifies them as excellent researcher­s,” he said.

“The ability to do research at the undergradu­ate level prepares you for a future in academia, but really wherever you choose. For me, it allowed me to sharpen my analytical skills as a historian and forced me to hold myself to a higher standard.”

Caputo’s honours thesis focuses on deconstruc­ting ideas of masculinit­y in the medieval Spanish military orders while also emphasizin­g the unique importance that Spain plays as part of a continenta­l tradition of crusading.

Kristen Kieta is a PhD student in Natural Resources and Environmen­tal Studies whose research focuses on tracing finegraine­d sediment in the Nechako River watershed. She is part of a team investigat­ing what the primary sources of sediment are to the river because sediment can be detrimenta­l to overall river health.

She applied to be a research ambassador because of her positive experience so far at UNBC and she wants to encourage others, particular­ly those who haven’t considered conducting research, to get involved.

“UNBC has an immense wealth of knowledge across numerous discipline­s and a vast amount of opportunit­ies for both undergradu­ate and graduate students to do research that often has immediate applicatio­n to the communitie­s in the region,” she said.

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