SAU Honors College

The SAU Honors College was founded in 2003 by Dr. David Rankin, president of SAU. Dr. Lynne Belcher served as founding director and is retired from SAU. The Honors College seeks and admits qualified students who seek to pursue a serious academic program with equally gifted peers and committed teachers. Honors classes are small and provide academically enriching opportunities for students and the faculty who teach them. Currently, SAU enrolls nearly 170 honors students and graduates about 66% of admitees in four years or less. Anyone interested in applying to the Honors College or seeking further information should contact the director, Dr. Edward P. Kardas at epkardas@saumag.edu or at 870 904-8897.
Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Two Lead Authors! Rennard and Bretz

 Two Honors College students recently each published articles in the Proceedings of the 9th North American Conference on Industrial Engineering and Operations Management Washington DC, USA, June 4-6, 2024.


Noah Bretz (above) was lead author (with Hayder Zghair and Jeffrey Sumner) of: 

Machining variables optimization for sustainability manufacturing.


Zachary Rennard (above) was lead author (with Hayder Zghair and Jeffrey Sumner) of:

Power consumption optimization for substainable manufacturing operation.

Way to go! Publishing as an undergraduate is unusual and demonstrates a willingness to go the extra mile.

Friday, May 31, 2024

Corbitt Lead Author

 Recent SAU Honors College grad, Anna Corbitt, is the lead author of the article below. Way to go Anna!


Anna Corbitt

 

A. Corbitt, W. G. Schwartz, C. Farnell, J. C. Balda and H. A. Mantooth, "The National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission Test Facility," in IEEE Open Journal of Power Electronics, doi: 10.1109/OJPEL.2024.3405311.

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Thomas and Zghair Publish!

Honors student Aspen Thomas and assistant professor of industrial engineering Hayder Zghair recently published an article in the Proceedings of the 7th North American International Conference on Industrial Engineering.
 
 
Aspen Thomas
 
The article was titled: Inflow-Outflow Net Equivalents for Recovery Point Analysis
of Improvement Model.
 
Here is the Abstract:
 
One of the major expenses to operate facilities is the cost of energy. An education enterprise such as school facility requires every year major budget consideration for the consumed electricity; especially, facilities need to be powered day long. This project tries to an analysis of adding basic improvement technology for dorms in a typical public-school by using investment recovery approach. Equivalents flow model has been developed to the consumed electricity system for five years term, and used to test the improvements. Analyzing the result showed the payback period is 6.275 years while the lifespan of windows tint on average lasts 10 years, therefore investing in this technology instillation is strongly supported decision to decrease the amount of electricity consumed which provides more saving in the budget as a result of annual evaluation. 
 
View the entire article here Thomas and Zghair, 2022 
 
Congrats to both. 
 
FYI, the Honors College provided partial financial support for the research. 

Tuesday, November 15, 2022

McLelland wins SAU research grant

 Impacts of sedimentation, fecal coliform, total fecal chloral chloriform in small ponds is the title of Grace McLelland's research. It was recently awarded an SAU Research Committee grant.

The research is designed to sample "non point" impacts on several campus ponds. McLelland notes:

"This pollution of freshwater ponds can be divided into two types: point pollution which is an identifiable source of pollution where the pollution is discharged, meanwhile non-point pollution comes from multiple different places that run into a specific source but cannot be pinpointed."

She follows that up: "The interest is to see how the different areas of land affect the different ponds in sedimentation, fecal coliform, and total coliform in the ponds."

She hopes to collect, analyze, and present her data in a variety of fora including the Southern Regional Honors Council meeting in Charlotte, NC. That meeting will be held from March 30 to April 1, 2023.

Good luck!

Friday, December 3, 2010

Large Crowd Attends Student Research Meeting

Students listen as Candice Canaday (right) describes her internship experiences at the University of Maryland's Chesapeake Biological Laboratory


A large crowd of about 30 students gathered to hear about the internship experiences of junior and senior Honors College students. Catherine Smead Phillips described her research in the psychology of risky behavior. That research, conducted with two other non-honors students (Alaina Atkinson & Zach Seaton), was recently submitted as a poster to the Southwestern Psychological Association. That group will meet in April 2011 in San Antonio.

Samson King and Courtney Fricks discussed their research on Alzheimer's Disease. They will send questionnaires to about 120 local area physicians in order to determine what medicines they prescribe for Alzheimer's patients. Their research proposal was recently approved by the SAU IRB. Both King and Fricks had to complete NIH training in research ethics first.

Nitish Narula spoke about the biological internship he attended at MIT in the summer. Narula said that the MIT internship was his second one. The summer before he had attended another similar internship at the University of Arkansas. He noted that while he had applied to internships after his freshman year, none of those came through. He speculated that the those who run such programs may be looking for students with credits in upper division courses.

Perry Grant, Clayton Martin, Martin Hawron, and Noe Cuevas talked about the research they conducted at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. There, they worked on cutting-edge research in astrophysics. They shared a three-bedroom house ($2000/month rent) in Berkeley's Chinatown. Their expenses were covered by the program. However, they reported that food was expensive and Walmart nonexistent (in Berkeley itself, that is).

Carter Jones reprised some of his experiences in Russia (see HERE for a more complete report). Carter spent two week in Russia thanks to the SAU endowment donated by Amy and Pat Sixbey to honor retired professor David Sixbey. Carter said he was the only applicant and that he could have stayed longer had he wanted to. He also pointed out that students could apply and go even if they could not speak Russian.

Biology students Xi Wu, Kate Curtis-Dockter, and Candace Starr Canady also were present. Canady told of her work with coral research in Maryland.

All of the internship winners and student researchers expressed strong desire to attend graduate school. Many plan to wait a year after graduation before applying, however. All urged attendees to apply to internships because they provided very valuable experiences, and those would help their grad school applications stand out. When asked, all agreed that their undergraduate education at SAU had been sufficient preparation for their internship work. Narula said that was especially true on the theory side of things, but that his internship had provided him with laboratory experiences he could not duplicate here.

Students who wish to apply for internships in the future should secure STRONG letters of recommendation from faculty. That means, of course, that they should develop early and fruitful interactions with faculty at SAU. Nearly all of the internship winners agreed that making and nurturing those kinds of relationships was easier at SAU than at bigger schools. That is one of the big advantages of pursuing an undergraduate education at SAU. Naturally, a strong GPA is another requirement.

Dr. Bachri added that off campus research was a good deal for students and faculty. When he first arrived at SAU he quickly realized that he'd have to go elsewhere to conduct his own personal research. Thus, he found research programs (e.g., the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) where he and his students could work on research, a real win-win situation for both.

In the future, the SAU Honors College will collect information about internships in all disciplines and post them on its Web server. The Honors College is also interested in qualifying students for major awards such as Eisenhower, Truman, and Goldwater fellowships and scholarships.

Watch this blog for announcements of future meetings like this one. The promotion of undergraduate research and its concommitant effect on the promotion of academic engagement is one of the major goals of any honors program.