Rutgers undergraduate participants with the Aresty Research Center have the opportunity to do research abroad under university faculty

Andrea Kennedy leafed through rare 18th-century texts in a London library, while Syed Abbas and Nicholas Greene visited Nigerian farmland to study crops that might grow in New Jersey. Anna Sherman witnessed the challenges facing a bilingual Arab-Israeli elementary school in Israel, and Martin Mosteiro Romero compared green building practices in Switzerland to those in New Jersey.

Anna Sherman
For these and other Rutgers undergraduate participants with the Aresty Research Center, the opportunity to do research under the tutelage of renowned university faculty was truly a “Jersey Roots, Global Reach” experience. Their research projects took them to Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Central America, and Europe, where their encounters breathed life into data and literature they had been studying, in some cases for years leading up to their trips.

The students’ projects will be among 340 on display this week at the sixth annual Aresty Undergraduate Research Symposium. More than 425 students will present their research April 23 in panel discussions and a poster session at the Rutgers Student Center from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

As in past years, student presentations are representative of the diverse disciplines found at Rutgers, including the life, social, and physical sciences; mathematics; engineering; and the arts and humanities. The symposium is just one of the many programs that thrive in the center, thanks to the generosity of the late Jerome Aresty and his wife Lorraine, who provided the funding to start the center in 2004.

Each student researcher works with a Rutgers faculty advisor whose scholarly research and interests are relevant to the student’s project. Advisors mentor and guide students through the process of designing their research projects and carrying them out, often earning their mentees’ praise for “keeping me on track.”

Overseas, they might find mentors to help guide their Rutgers projects. Sherman was drawn to her project by a professor at

Kate Barbour
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel, who was among the first Bedouin women to earn a doctorate. Mosteiro Romero’s Rutgers advisor connected him with mentors at a Zürich university institute. Jessica Martin, a senior Spanish major who studied the Limonese Creole language spoken by a tiny black minority in Costa Rica, was connected with an Afro-Costa Rican writer by her adviser, Thomas Stephens.

In some cases, faculty advisors are by their sides on their journeys. Jack Harris, professor of anthropology and director of the Koobi Fora Field School in northern Kenya, advised Kate Barbour, whose vegetation study during the 2009 field school was intended to shed light on the plant life that nurtured humans and non-human primates in prehistoric times.

“Going to Africa gave Kate an extraordinary opportunity to develop her skills and to conduct innovative research,” Harris said. “By attracting bright, young undergraduate students like Kate, I can expand aspects of my research that would not possible in smaller groups.”

Whether doing their projects close to home or traveling abroad, undergraduates come away with confidence in their research abilities, and valuable skills and experience for the next stage of their academic or professional lives, according to Justine Hernandez Levine, director of the Aresty Research Center.

“Rutgers prepares students to take on the challenges of the world,” Hernandez Levine said. “It makes sense for us to give our undergraduates the opportunity to try real problem solving in the world and to give them the support they need to make a genuine contribution. Our students do this in our New Jersey back yards, but it is important to us that they are also able to do so globally.”

Read more about the students' projects by clicking on their names:

Syed Abbas
Syed Z.Abbas and Nicholas Greene traveled to Nigeria last summer to study traditional vegetable crops such

Nicholas Greene
as waterleaf and green amaranth that might one day be cultivated on New Jersey farms and served on the tables of Garden State residents. Working with Rutgers plant biologist Albert Ayeni, who coordinates international programs at the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, the students are paving the way for new varieties of produce.

 

Andrew Glaser
Andrew Glaser studied the difficulties faced by Kenyan farmers in the central highlands of East Africa, where agronomic, socio-economic and environmental challenges hinder them from growing healthy, profitable crops. His studies of African traditional leafy vegetables showed that improving conditions for their cultivation could be a "win-win" for everyone.

 

Andrea Kennedy
Andrea Kennedy was intrigued by the contradictions she'd found in the depiction of women in 18th-century literature while studying the Age of Enlightenment with Associate History Professor James Delbourgo. Her questions took her on a journey to England and France, where she was able to examine rare primary source materials and explore her hypothesis pointing to two male spheres reflected in literature of that period. 

 

Jessica Martin - thumbnail
Jessica Martin traveled to Central America in January to study an endangered English-based Creole language spoken by the black minority living in Puerto Limon, Costa Rica. To save a dying language rapidly being replaced by the dominant Spanish, Martin found a need to raise awareness among Costa Ricans of their diverse languages and cultures before it is too late.


Martin Mosteiro Romero
Martin Mosteiro Romero spent two months last summer in Zürich studying how that city's "green" building practices compare with those in New Jersey. His research, part of a collaboration between his Rutgers advisor, Uta Krogmann, and his Swiss hosts at the university-based Institute for Construction Engineering and Management, taught him that "green" practices don't necessarily refer to exactly the same thing in the two countries

 

 

Media Contact: Sandra Lanman
732-932-7084, ext. 621
E-mail: slanman@ur.rutgers.edu