MURFREESBORO — Instead
of summer vacation at the beach, the Great Smoky Mountains National Park or
another popular destination, local high school students Helene Hamo and Edgar
Lozano are conducting chemical research in an MTSU Science Building lab for two
months.
It was their choice to work with MTSU graduate students and
Department of Chemistry chair Greg Van Patten after they were nominated and
selected as Project SEED recipients.
Project SEED (Summer Education Experience for the
Economically Disadvantaged), is sponsored by the American Chemical Society. It
is a summer research program that opens new doors, giving rising high school
juniors and seniors an opportunity to work with scientist-mentors on research
projects in industrial, academic and federal laboratories.
As they discover potential career paths while approaching
critical turning points in their lives, recipients receive a $2,500 fellowship
and learn fundamental laboratory skills and analytical methods during the
program.
An important feature of Project SEED is its emphasis on
career development and its motivation of students to pursue higher education in
the natural sciences.
Hamo, 17, of Murfreesboro, will be a senior at Stewarts
Creek High School in Smyrna, Tennessee. Chemistry teacher Kevin Vaughn
nominated her. Lozano, 16, of Murfreesboro, will be a senior at Central Magnet
School. Advanced Placement chemistry teacher Julie Mullane nominated Lozano.
They are working under Van Patten, who is investigating
nanomaterials called “quantum dots.” Together, the team will be working on
making and studying new types of quantum dots, which have been identified as
candidates in next-generation solar cells, lasers, energy storage devices and
quantum computers.
Van Patten has
served as a mentor for Project SEED students since 2013. Although the American
Chemical Society provides no monetary compensation for the researchers who work
with SEED students, Van Patten believes the program is worth the extra effort.
“The practice of
science is not a classroom endeavor, so I believe it’s critical to get
interested students involved in the research laboratory as early as possible,”
he said. “This program allows students to get involved after a high-quality,
one-year high school experience, and both of these students have that.”
To learn about Project SEED opportunities at MTSU for 2017,
contact Van Patten by calling 615-898-2956 or email Greg.VanPatten@mtsu.edu.
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