“SRAP gives you a little bit of an insight into what being
on your own is going to be like,” Leo says. “In the program you’re pretty much
independent and on your own. You have to take care of yourself and manage your
time. I think that SRAP was pretty helpful and it helped me get a pretty good
feel for the UW campus too.”
SRAP is an EPSCoR program which aims to encourage more
underrepresented groups to pursue degrees and careers in science and to further
their education after high school. The program gives students hands-on experiences
in science labs at UW, where they conduct their own projects with a mentor and
are paid to do so. Leo was in SRAP two years in a row, in 2009 and 2010.
“The first time I worked with Dr. Mark Gomelsky in Molecular
Biology,” Leo says. “And then the second time I was with Kiona Ogle in the
Botany department. That’s actually how I got my job. When Kiona went to
Arizona, one of the grad students moved to a different lab and I got my job
through him.”
Leo is an undergraduate lab technician in one of the Botany labs at UW. As a
SRAP student, he studied water uptake and the ecosystem of sagebrush. The
project has expanded since then, and now he is working on the broader grassland
ecosystem.
While Botany and Petroleum Engineering do not exactly mesh
well, Leo has found that his involvement in the lab has contributed to his
education.
“I am learning the research process and how to run
experiments, which could be valuable because I am thinking about staying at UW
and getting my Master’s degree,” Leo says.
In his first two years at UW, Leo has been involved in a
variety of academic as well as extra-curricular activities, including the
collegiate Future Farmers of America (FFA). He has enjoyed having familiar
faces from high school in UW’s FFA and networking with new people.
“College in general has been a lot of fun,” he says. “It was
pretty difficult at first because I was adjusting to everything, including big
classes, but I’m in the groove now and I’m doing pretty well with everything.”
As he reflects on the last few years, he looks again at
SRAP. It introduced him to different fields of science but also to a group of
new friends he would not have met in his hometown of Glendo, Wyoming.
“The whole experience in general was a complete blast!” he
says. “You really get a taste of all different cultures. In Wyoming, you don’t
get to experience that too much. Both summers in SRAP we had students from all
over the country, so you really meet people from a lot of different
backgrounds. I always thought that was pretty cool.”
This diversity and networking is exactly what EPSCoR aims
for in SRAP and what SRAP encourages in the broader scientific community.
The deadline for this year’s SRAP applications is March 15th.
More detail and applications can be found at: http://www.uwyo.edu/epscor/fellowships-and-student-programs/srap/index.html
By Kali S. McCrackin
By Kali S. McCrackin
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