Undergraduate Research

News - Largest REU Program in Northwest

July 7, 2009

CONTACT: Merik H. Metos, Office of Undergraduate Education Communications Intern, mmetos@wsu.edu, 509-335-8070
Dave Bahr, director, WSU Undergraduate Research, professor, School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, 509-335-8523, dbahr@wsu.edu

Six NSF-Funded Summer “Research Experience for Undergraduates” Programs, plus Two Related Programs, Underway at WSU; Most Sites in the Northwest

PULLMAN, Wash.-Nearly 100 undergraduates from Washington and the nation are participating in National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded “Research Experience for Undergraduates” (REU) and related programs at Washington State University this summer.

Six separate, 10-week REU sites—plus two REU-related or REU-like programs—are running in Pullman this summer, the most at any university in the region.  In each, students are paired with top WSU faculty members who incorporate them into meaningful work in new or ongoing research.  While much of the research and learning will take place in local labs and classrooms, one program—the Laboratory for Atmospheric Research’s new REU— is sending three students for a week to a multi-university “campaign” research site in northern Michigan as part of its program.

A public poster session July 31 in the Smith Center for Undergraduate Education will highlight the research results of all of the students. They include more than 20 WSU undergraduates as well as students from as close as the University of Idaho to as far away as the University of the Virgin Islands.  This year, the sophomores through seniors are investigating topics such as artificial intelligence-based smart environments, side effects of muscle-related drugs, and atmospheric chemistry in deciduous forests, among many other things.  Their work requires them to use scanning electron microscopes, lasers, florescent dyes, ultrasonic baths, and molds, for example.

“WSU has offered REU programs for many years, but this summer we have more departments and units participating than ever before,” says Dave Bahr, director of WSU undergraduate research and professor in materials science.  Bahr organizes the July poster session, helps the REU programs line up housing for the students, and assists REU program directors as needed.  He also has his own REU site and students to mentor.

“The REU programs have brought in more than $400,000 in external support from the NSF this year alone.”

The summer 2009 REU programs at WSU are:

Sponsoring an REU for the first time are both Chemistry and LAR.

Two REU-related programs are:

REUs nationwide support active research participation by undergraduate students in any of the areas funded by the NSF.  Students’ work may be part of an ongoing research program or one designed for the REU.  Students apply directly to REU sites.

Features on students participating in REU’s at WSU this summer are available on this Web site.



EECS REU student Erin Buehler (EWU senior) stands beneath a motion sensor in WSU's smart apartment.  She researches where she lives.

LAR REU student Chelsea Rosenkrance (WSU junior) checks equipment headed to Michigan this summer as part of a multi-university research campaign on forests and the atmosphere.


 

Polymer films created by MSE REU student Gavin Mitchell (WSU senior and Honors College student) in the lab.  They may improve products like noise-cancelling headphones.

 

WSU Undergraduate Research, Smith CUE 509, Washington State University, PO Box 642920, Pullman WA 99164-2920, 509-335-8523, Contact Us