Category: Research

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Nicholas Zolman
Nicholas Zolman

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

This summer, Nicholas Zolman (’12) of Mount Sterling is working with Dr. Tim Gorringe of the University of Kentucky’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, analyzing periodic and chaotic motion using a double pendulum.

1. Tell us a little about the research experience in which you are participating this summer that the Research Internship Grant is funding.

My project has two main goals. The first is to acquire data from a Wii remote, so that one could cheaply perform physics experiments in a high school, university, or some other setting. The second is to observe the chaotic motion of a double pendulum and apply the idea of Lagrangian Mechanics in order to come up with a good model of the motion.

2. How does this research experience or internship fit into your educational and professional goals?

Professionally, I wish to be a particle physicist. At first glance, double pendulum research seems to have nothing to do with particle physics. However, if one were to look deeper into the confines of my research they would notice that the ideas and concepts of Lagrangian Mechanics are vital to the structure of Quantum Mechanics.

3. What are you looking forward to the most about your second year at the Academy?

At first glance, most people would jump away from my schedule – Physics II, Differential Equations, Multivariable Calculus, and French II. However, I look forward to each of them! It incorporates the three subjects I love the most: Math, Physics, and la Français!

4. What is your biggest Gatton Academy accomplishment?

I am most proud of my ability to adapt. It was kind of weird to go to sleep and not wake up to a home of only three other people, I had to wake up to a home of more than a hundred people!

5. What do you love most about the Gatton Academy?

Personally, I love the opportunities I have here. I’m taking more math classes next year than my high school could offer through their entire curriculum; by the time I am out of high school, I will almost have a Math Major at WKU. But probably the greatest opportunity is to study abroad as a high school student. For instance, I will be studying English in England this summer.

Keaton Smith
Keaton Smith and Dr. Jeffrey Ward

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

Keaton Smith (’12) of Alexandria is performing research this summer at Northern Kentucky University’s Department of Computer Science with Drs. Richard Fox and Jeffrey Ward. Keaton is pictured with Dr. Ward on the NKU campus earlier this summer.

1. Tell us a little about the research experience in which you are participating this summer that the Research Internship Grant is funding:

I am working with Dr. Jeffrey Ward and Dr. Richard Fox at Northern Kentucky University on writing a program able to generate a musical composition that sounds good according to user input, music theory, and some other criteria. The program will use genetic algorithms in the generation process: several compositions will be selected by a scoring process from a pool of many, and those selected will be randomly changed and scored in turn. This can happen for many “generations” and at the end the one with the highest score will be output.

2. What does research mean to you as a young person interested in STEM?

Research has been a big consideration for me throughout my interest in computer science. It is a great opportunity to explore previously unknown areas and gain experience in real-world applications of classroom learning.

3. Will you be using this research experience as a launching point for any particular applications, competitions, or scholarships?

I hope to submit this project to the Siemens competition; regardless of the outcome, I think it will be good to have the experience of my work undergoing professional review.

4. What is the part of the summer experience you are enjoying most?

So far this summer I have really enjoyed being stimulated through an academic project but at the same time having the freedom to work on this project whenever I wanted.

5. How does the Gatton Academy help Kentucky from your point of view?

The Gatton Academy is really one of Kentucky’s biggest assets; it gives talented, motivated individuals the chance to achieve above and beyond what could be expected at a more traditional high school. The education that Kentucky’s young minds receive at the Academy can only help throughout their lives as they grow to become major influences on the world.

Jack Ferguson
Jack Ferguson

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

John “Jack” Ferguson (’12) of Union is working with Dr. Hemali Rathnayake of the WKU Department of Chemistry this summer on his project titled Fluorescein and FITC Derivatives Functionalized Silsesquioxane/Bridged Silsesquioxane Nanoparticles: Synthesis, Characterization, and Particle Morphology.

1. Tell us a little about the research experience in which you are participating this summer that the Research Internship Grant is funding.

I am working on the synthesis of fluorescein silsesquioxane nanoparticles with Benzyl Chloride. It sounds really complicated, but it’s basically attaching fluorescent particles onto silica spheres smaller than cells for bio imaging.

2. Will you be using this research experience as a launching point for any particular applications, competitions, or scholarships?

This research will be used on any applications I can fit it on, and I will be sure to enter it into the Siemens and Intel competitions.

3. What are you looking forward to the most about your second year at the Academy?

I am really excited for my new classes, but I think I am more interested in the new students coming to the Academy.

4. What is your biggest Gatton Academy accomplishment?

My personal favorite would be that I scored in the 77th percentile on the ACS organic chemistry II exam. I did better than 77 percent of college juniors across the nation.

5. What do you love most about the Gatton Academy?

The RC setup. The connection built between students on floors is great. We could all live in our own little worlds and not know each other, but the social atmosphere of the Academy has made me more friends than I’ve ever had before.

David Sekora
David Sekora

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

David Sekora (’12) of Franklin is researching in knot theory to study DNA with Dr. Claus Ernst of the WKU Department of Mathematics and Computer Science this summer.

1. Tell us a little about the research experience in which you are participating this summer that the Research Internship Grant is funding:

This summer, I am researching knot theory under Dr. Claus Ernst here at Western. I am mainly working on various Mathematica functions to help analyze and understand knots, but I am also learning a considerable amount of knot theory and sitting in on a complex analysis class too!

2. What is the part of the summer experience you are enjoying most?

I am enjoying the fact that this is pretty much like being at Gatton, without the classes! Most of my friends are here doing research, and I am immersed in math!

3. How is this different from the way you think most high school students spend their summers?

Most high school students spend their summers goofing off – playing video games, driving around town and getting in trouble, etc.. On the contrary, I am sitting here in an office, on a computer, not playing World of Warcraft but using Mathematica!

4. What are you looking forward to the most about your second year at the Academy?

I’m looking forward to being an Avatar. It will be cool to be a role model for the incoming juniors. Also, I like having the added responsibility of being part of the Academy’s PR team!

5. What do you love most about the Gatton Academy?

What I love most about the Gatton Academy is the sense of community. We have our own little world in Florence Schneider, with our own culture and sensibilities. There is a common Academy Spirit shared by most of the students that you just can’t find anywhere else.

Christian Jolly
Christian Jolly

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

This summer, Christian Jolly (’12) of Henderson is working on research with Dr. Steven Gibson of the WKU Department of Physics and Astronomy to analyze radio telescope data to investigate galaxy structure.

1. Will you be using this research experience as a launching point for any particular applications, competitions, or scholarships?

The research I’m doing is actually quite groundbreaking making any results fairly significant. This will definitely be a huge selling point for applications and scholarships and you can be sure you’ll see this around Intel and Siemens.

2. How does this research experience or internship fit into your educational and professional goals?

A better fit could not have been found. This is exactly the type of work a person of my desired profession will be doing on a daily basis giving me a strong foundation to base my decision on.

3. What is your favorite Gatton Academy memory?

My favorite academy memory is one that will live in the hearts of second floor boys forever. It was 2’am when a pipe burst above my room. The community factor was quickly realized as everyone pitched in by both moving furniture out of the room and sacrificing their towels in an effort to clean up!

4. What is your biggest Gatton Academy accomplishment?

My biggest accomplishment is taking on Astrophysics, a class with four pre-req’s that I was missing and only four other seniors willing to take on the load. I worked very hard in that class and was proud of the B I made.

5. How does the Gatton Academy help Kentucky from your point of view?

The academy shows youth that there are actually opportunities in their home state. Speaking from experience I always believed it would be necessary for me to go up north to do the type of specialized research I’m doing now!

Charlotte Humes
Charlotte Humes

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

Charlotte Humes (’12) of Bardstown is performing research with Dr. Matthew Nee of the WKU Department of Chemistry where she is designing, constructing, and using a time-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectrometer for the purpose of measuring energy and charge transfer in alternative energy materials.

1. Tell us a little about the research experience in which you are participating this summer that the Research Internship Grant is funding.

I am working in the Chemistry department under the instruction of Dr. Nee. The lab in which I am working is home to a number of lasers, but unfortunately, most of them are currently not working. During this summer, I’m fixing a couple of the lasers with the intent of making them ready for use in fluorescence measurements.

2. What is the part of the summer experience you are enjoying most?

I really enjoy the setting of research. Going home to see family during the summer is always nice, but the chance to spend part of my summer in a very independent, highly academic, environment is a great opportunity. It allows me to have a foretaste of what it will be like to live on my own.

3. What does research mean to you as a young person interested in STEM?

Research allows me to really become involved in a subject I love. It allows me to use my interests and curiosities as a springboard for ideas—I can pursue the questions I truly care about answering.

4. What do you love most about the Gatton Academy?

Everything! The Academy has provided me with an opportunity for which I am so grateful. Your experience at the Academy is what you make of it, and you have wonderful resources at your fingertips. It has allowed me to take courses that force me to think, has taught me skills (such as computer programming) I would never have been able to learn otherwise, and provided me with a community of so many amazing people.

5. How did you feel on your first day at the Gatton Academy? Now?

I was actually the first person to arrive on move-in day, and I remember being ecstatic to finally be there, practically skipping in to the dorm. Last year, going to the Academy felt like embarking upon an adventure; this year, it feels like coming home.

RICE, Benjamin
Benjamin Rice

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

Benjamin Rice (’12) of Somerset is working with Dr. Phillip Womble at WKU’s Applied Physics Institute this summer, assisting in the development of a data analysis system for a project with Northrup Grumman.

1. What is the part of the summer experience you are enjoying most?

I enjoy the freedom the most. At my old high school, I would not have as much freedom that I do at the Gatton Academy.

2. How is this different from the way you think most high school students spend their summers?

It is completely different. If I were at home now, I would probably be working, but instead I have the opportunity to do research.

3. What do you love most about the Gatton Academy?

My favorite part about the Gatton Academy is being able to take advanced classes that I would have not been able to take at my home high school.

4. What is your biggest Gatton Academy accomplishment?

My biggest accomplishment at the Gatton Academy so far is making an A in physics 255. It was a very challenging class that really pushed me to my limits.

5. What do you aspire to achieve in the next ten years?

In the next ten years I plan to graduate from the Gatton Academy, graduate from the United States Naval Academy with a degree in aeronautical engineering, and become a NAVY pilot.

Alex Gutierrez
Alex Gutierrez

Since 2010, the Gatton Academy has offered students the ability to pursue summer research experiences through the Gatton Research Internships Grants (RIG) program.  Made possible through the generous support of Mr. Carol Martin “Bill” Gatton, the program offers competitive grants to Gatton Academy students between their junior and senior years to support summertime research internships across the Commonwealth and the world.  By providing a funding mechanism, the program directly creates new avenues for growth and exploration.  Throughout the summer, we’ll share insights from students who are the recipients of our 2011 grants.

Alex Gutierrez (’12) of Mt. Washington is doing research in Dr. Kathryn Saatman’s lab at the University of Kentucky’s Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center this summer, researching mild (concussive) brain injuries.

1. Tell us a little about the research experience in which you are participating this summer that the Research Internship Grant is funding.

I am working with Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 or IGF-1, which is a natural occurring protein in the body that acts as a neurotrophic factor, inducing the survival of neurons after Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). The lab I’m working at is working with the over-expression of IGF-1 in mice to see if the effects would be more beneficial than natural IGF-1, as the natural IGF-1 acts as insulin and is all around the body rather than concentrated in the brain like in the Transgenic mice.

2. What is the part of the summer experience you are enjoying most?

I love the fact that each trial is significant rather than a tedious repetition of an experiment in which the outcome is fully expected. Often talking with my peers, I find that they have lots of hypothesis on what they anticipate to happen with each experiment, however there isn’t one set answer and there have been times where the results are different than predicted.

3. How is this different from the way you think most high school students spend their summers?

I think very few high school students pass as undergraduates working with graduate students and post-docs in a research center, nor do I believe most high school students have had to intake a crash course on neuroscience.

4. What is your favorite Gatton Academy memory?

I would say everyday of Adventure Week. Just the feeling of being somewhere new and connecting to all these individuals from around the state, it sets you in awe. I also wasn’t very busy so there were plenty of heartfelt shenanigans such as singing on the balcony together with my friends and the obstacle group building place we went to. I still remember running up this one wall like a ninja so that nobody would have to lift me up.

5. What do you aspire to achieve in the next ten years?

Hopefully make it into medical school, settle in my new environments when I’m out of the Academy. I could even try to finish any of the novels I’ve had in my head a long time. When you’ve left your home at age 16 and experienced so many things you thought you’d never even see the light of, anything seems possible.

Three students at the Carol Martin Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky at WKU are trying to solve a 12-year-old murder case.

Daniel Dilger of Union, Luke Yap of Carrollton and Samantha McKean of Cecilia are working with Dr. Bruce Kessler, the Associate Dean of the Ogden College of Science & Engineering, to decrypt the notes released from the Ricky McCormick murder investigation.

In 1999, 41-year-old McCormick’s body was found in a field in St. Louis. Police found two encrypted notes in the victim’s pants pockets, which provide the only clues about the case.

The notes use a code based on numbers, letters and parentheses. The FBI’s Cryptanalysis and Racketeering Records Unit (CRRU) and the American Cryptogram Association have been unable to solve the code.

The Gatton group’s research will help develop a cryptographic analysis infrastructure to potentially break the code.

“We’re in the stage of trying to get strategies together based on reading cipher codes,” Dr. Kessler said.

Very little is known about McCormick aside from him being a high school dropout.

“Part of what makes the project so difficult is that we don’t know anything about Ricky McCormick’s personal life,” Dilger said. “There isn’t any information available like his writing style or family history that could help us guess at what he was writing.”

Those who knew him said he used the code many other times throughout his life, but no one could ever understand what it meant.

“We’ve got to get inside this guy’s head and figure out his language,” Dr. Kessler said. “So little is known about him anyway and it’s as if he just floated on the fringe of society.”

Dr. Kessler said decoding the notes could introduce new ideas about the case. There’s a chance McCormick’s death wasn’t even a murder.

The students researching are currently working on computer programs that could help them generate more information about the code.

“Since McCormick wrote the notes by hand the cipher is probably simple, but we don’t know what technique he used,” Dilger said.

The group’s research will continue into the fall semester, and the students hope to present their findings in a report at the Kentucky Academy of Sciences.

Contact Bruce Kessler, (270) 745-4449.

Students recently participated in the NCSSSMST Student Research Conference in Maryland.
Six rising seniors recently participated in the NCSSSMST Student Research Conference in Maryland.At the Gatton Academy, students spend the months of the traditional academic year engaged in a variety of learning opportunities that both mirror and differ from traditional high school experiences.

Students at Western Kentucky University’s Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science find their academic year is often very different from that of traditional high school students.  A full slate of college coursework, living away from home, and a host of research and non-traditional learning experiences fill the month of September to May.  Perhaps even more unique, though, are the exploits of Academy students during the summer months in Kentucky and at locations across the globe.

Three out of five of the current Academy students and recent alumni have current plans to participate in an academic or career exploration during the months of June, July, and August that will take place across the world.  More impressively, 85% of rising seniors are participating in a summer experience. Derick Strode, the Academy’s coordinator for research, internships, and scholarships expressed both the geography and educational experiences of these students will be wide-ranging.

“These summer experiences represent the broad scope of STEM interests that our students enjoy,” Strode said.  “Gatton Academy students are performing research this summer in medical, chemical, national security, and computer science settings—just to name a few—that will shed positive effects on human lives in the not-so-distant future.”

A new emphasis of the summer learning experience, is a study abroad component.  For the first time, seventeen Gatton Academy students will travel to the United Kingdom for an Honors English 200 course.  The Introduction to Literature course, based at Harlaxton College in Grantham, will be taught by Dr. Alison Langdon of the WKU Department of English.  The experiences do not stop there.  Eight Gatton Academy students will participate in the Chinese Bridge Summer Camp sponsored by the Confucius Institute at WKU, Hanban, and the North China Electric Power University.  This two week camp will give the following students a chance to visit China, learning the language and culture along the way:

“I am also happy to note the increase in Gatton Academy students learning abroad this summer,” Strode added. “Gatton Academy students will be on four continents for educational programs over these next few months.”

While some high school students may consider research, internships, or study abroad programs less preferable than time at the beach, Gatton Academy students see these opportunities as a way to build on their learning and interests.

“Flexibly structured so that students can remain learning over summer while exploring career and educational interests, our internship program offers options for the motivated Gatton Academy student body.  We have students who have chosen to pursue advanced research or shadowing work in STEM fields of their interest right in their own backyards across the Commonwealth this summer.  Other students are further investigating their interests across the United States and the globe,” Strode said.

Keep checking back with the Gatton Academy website this summer as we further spotlight these students explorations and adventures.

For more information, contact Derick Strode at (270) 745-6565.

Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REUs):

Three Gatton Academy students will be participating in the REU titled Mammoth Cave/Upper Green River Watershed Project at Western Kentucky University.  REUs are funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and offer students full-summer research opportunity with travel, food, and lodging provided as well as a generous stipend.  REUs are one of the most prestigious and selective of summertime opportunities.

  • Logan Eckler (’12) of Covington (Mentor: Dr. Matthew Nee)
  • Brandon Farmer (’12) of Lexington (Mentor: Dr. Matthew Nee)
  • Natalie Schieber (’11) of Elizabethtown (Mentor: Dr. Bangbo Yan)

International Research Experiences for Scientists:

Two students have been selected to participate in an NSF International Research Experiences for Scientists program at the National Chung Hsing University in Taichung, Taiwan.  This program, on the same level as an REU, offers students fully paid travel to Taiwan, food, lodging, and a stipend.

  • Michael Crocker (’12) of Bowling Green (Mentors: Dr. Ru-Jong Jeng and Dr. Rong-Ho Lee)
  • Ellis Shelley  (’12) of Albany (Mentor: Shing-Yi Suen)

Crocker will be studying dendrimer synthesis and immobilization onto a silica or membrane support and dendrimer membrane on ITO glass.  Shelley will be studying protein purification by IMAM.

Research Science Institute (RSI) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Lukas Missik (’12) of Danville is one of only 80 rising high school seniors from across the globe to be admitted to this prestigious, cost-free high school STEM program to conduct research at MIT for six weeks.  Lukas will be conducting research in Artificial Intelligence or Game Theory.

Undergraduate Research Program in Molecular Biology at Princeton University

Sarah Schrader (’11) of Bowling Green has been admitted from a nationwide pool into the Undergraduate Research Program in Molecular Biology at Princeton University.  In this nine week program, Schrader will be studying in Molecular and Quantitative & Computational Biology.  Travel, housing, and a generous stipend are provided.

EarthWatch Student Challenge Awards Program:

Erin Walch (’12) of Alexandria has been accepted into the prestigious EarthWatch Institute’s Student Challenge Awards Program.  She will be a part of a research team traveling to the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa Mountains in Riverside California to study Plant Life of California’s Mountains for two and a half weeks.  Walch’s award includes full travel expenses, food, and lodging for her trip to California.

Kentucky Professional Education Preparation Program (PEPP)

Three Gatton Academy students will participate this summer in the Commonwealth’s PEPP programs.  Lori Lovell (’12) of Florence and Erin Walch (’12) of Alexandria have been admitted to the Pikeville College School of Osteopathic Medicine’s PEPP program.  Shelby Martin (’11) of Mt. Washington has been admitted to the University of Kentucky’s PEPP Step II.  These residential programs offer a variety of educational experiences targeted to enhance students’ personal interest in a medical or dental career, add to their understanding of the elements of a medical/dental education, and expand their awareness of how medicine/dentistry is practiced in a rural setting.

Gatton Academy Research Internship Grant recipients:

Twelve rising seniors were chosen to receive Gatton Academy Research Internship Grants (RIG) from the Gatton Academy to support research work this summer.  The 2011 RIG recipients, their research locations, mentors, and projects are listed below:

  • William Bickett (’12) of Owensboro will conduct research with Dr. Phillip Womble at WKU’s Applied Physics Institute.  His study is on Gamma-ray Spectra in Neutron-Based Explosives Detection Systems.
  • Rebecca Brown (’12) of Boston will be working with Dr. Michael Carini of the WKU Department of Physics and Astronomy.  Brown will study Optical Monitoring of TeV Candidate Blazars.
  • John “Jack” Ferguson (’12) of Union will be working with Dr. Hemali Rathnayake of the WKU Department of Chemistry on his project titled Fluorescein and FITC Derivatives Functionalized Silsesquioxane/Bridged Silsesquioxane Nanoparticles: Synthesis, Characterization, and Particle Morphology.
  • Alex Gutierrez (’12) of Mt. Washington will be doing research with Dr. Kathryn Saatman at the University of Kentucky’s Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center.  Gutierrez will be researching mild (concussive) brain injuries.
  • Anthony Gutierrez (’12) of Mount Washington will perform research with Dr. Alexander Rabchevsk of the University of Kentucky’s Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center, studying locomotor dysfunction after spinal cord injuries.
  • Charlotte Humes (’12) of Bardstown will conduct research Dr. Matthew Nee of the WKU Department of Chemistry where she will design, construct, and use a time-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectrometer for the purpose of measuring energy and charge transfer in alternative energy materials.
  • Christian Jolly (’12) of Henderson will be working on research with Dr. Steven Gibson of the WKU Department of Physics and Astronomy to analyze radio telescope data to investigate galaxy structure.
  • Tennessee “Tucker” Joyce (’12) of Harrodsburg will be working with Dr. Richard Schugart of the WKU Department of Mathematics and Computer Science to continue his mathematical analysis of wound healing models.
  • Benjamin Rice (’12) of Somerset will be developing a gamma ray spectroscopy system to estimate elemental intensities of neutron interrogated samples under the direction of Dr. Phillip Womble of the WKU Applied Physics Institute.
  • David Sekora (’12) of Franklin is researching in knot theory to study DNA with Dr. Claus Ernst of the WKU Department of Mathematics and Computer Science.
  • Keaton Smith (’12) of Alexandria will be doing computer science research with Drs. Richard Fox and Jeff Ward of the Northern Kentucky University Department of Computer Science.  Smith will be using artificial intelligence to plan algorithms and genetic algorithms to produce computer-generated music.
  • Nicholas Zolman (’12) of Mount Sterling is working with Dr. Tim Gorringe of the University of Kentucky’s Department of Physic and Astronomy to analyze periodic and chaotic motion using a double pendulum.

NCSSSMST Student Research Conference:

Six Gatton Academy students will be presenting research this summer at the National Consortium for Specialized Secondary Schools of Math, Science, and Technology (NCSSSMST) Student Research Conference at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD.  From June 1-4, these students will join 109 other students from across the country to share their research work through oral and poster presentations.  Gatton Academy representatives and their presentation titles are:

  • Andrea Eastes (’12) of Mayfield will give an oral presentation titled “Isolation of the Bacteriophage Liberi”
  • Jack Ferguson (’12) of Union will present a poster titled “Synthesis of Fluorescein Isothiocyanate Functionalized Nanoparticles”
  • Samantha Hawtrey (’12) of Union will present a poster titled “Isolation, Characterization, and Annotation: the Acquisition of a Novel Bacteriophage Genome”
  • Lori Lovell (’12) of Florence will do an oral presentation titled “Isolation of Novus, a Novel Bacteriophage Isolated from Florence, Kentucky”
  • Benjamin Rice (’12) of Somerset will present a poster titled “Gamma-ray Spectra in Neutron-Based Explosives Detection Systems”
  • Nicholas Zolman (’12) of Mount Sterling will give an oral presentation titled “A Light in the Darkness: Finding Type Ia Supernovae in the CANDELS Hubble Space Telescope Survey”


National Youth Policy Summit:

Four Gatton Academy students will be participating in the National Youth Policy Summit at the Keystone Science Center in Keystone, CO.  This year’s summit on Energy Innovation will take place from June 11 – 18 and will bring together 40 of the brightest students from across the nation to come up with a proposal of policy solutions to the world’s energy needs.  The following Gatton Academy students will participate:

  • Laura Claytor (’11) of Berea
  • Melanie Hurst (’11) of Bronston
  • Samantha McKean (’11) of Cecilia
  • Rachel Metcalfe (’11) of Eminence

Experiences Abroad:

This summer, 28 Gatton Academy students will travel internationally for research, language acquisition, credit-based study abroad, and education and cultural travel.  Students will be in China, England, Morocco, Switzerland, and Taiwan.  International research experiences are listed in the former section; other international experiences are:

National Security Language Initiative-for Youth (NSLI-Y):

Two Gatton Academy students have accepted an NSLI-Y scholarship which covers all program costs, travel to the student’s destination, tuition, housing, activities, and more for six weeks. These merit-based scholarships are for high school students studying less commonly taught languages.

  • Charlotte Humes (’12) of Bardstown
  • Brandon Kerr (’11) of Edmonton

England

For the first time, the Gatton Academy has partnered with Harlaxton College in Grantham, England to offer a three week study abroad course.  The following students will study Introduction to Literature under the direction of Dr. Alison Langdon of the WKU Department of English.  The following students will study romantic poets in the Lake District, Dracula in Whitby, the Brontës on the famed moors near Haworth, and Shakespeare in London’s Globe Theatre, just to name a few of many stops:

  • Daylynn Allison (’12) of Mayfield
  • William Bickett (’12) of Owensboro
  • Lydia Brothers (’12) of Madisonville
  • Andrea Eastes (’12) of Mayfield
  • Nathan Lasley (’12) of Owensboro
  • Taylor Leet (’12) of Louisville
  • Lori Lovell (’12) of Florence
  • David Sekora (’12) of Franklin
  • Keaton Smith (’12) of Alexandria
  • Caroline Stivers (’12) of Berea
  • Aaron Stolze (’12) of Somerset
  • Erin Walch (’12) of Alexandria
  • Layne Webb (’12) of Shepherdsville
  • Nicholas Zolman (’12) of Mt. Sterling

China

Eight Gatton Academy students will participate in the Chinese Bridge Summer Camp sponsored by the Confucius Institute at WKU, Hanban, and the North China Electric Power University.  This two week camp will give the following students a chance to visit China, learning the language and culture along the way:

  • William “Christopher” Brown (’12) of Russell Springs
  • Curtlyn Kramer (’12) of Ashland
  • Matthew “Stephen” Mattingly (’12) of Elizabethtown
  • Samantha McKean (’12) of Cecilia
  • Rachel Metcalfe (’12) of Eminence
  • Holly Morris (’12) of Bowling Green
  • Tyler Parke (’11) of Henderson
  • Makka “Annie” Wheeler (’12) of Guthrie

Switzerland

Alexandra DeCarlo (’12) of London and Luke Yap (’12) of Carrolton will be studying literature abroad in Switzerland with Dr. Lloyd Davies of the WKU Department of English.

Other Notable Individual Experiences:

Kia Allen, a graduating senior from Georgetown, will be volunteering at Saint Joseph Health System in Lexington.

Claci Ayers, a graduating senior from Bowling Green, will be shadowing pediatrician Dr. Kelly Kriess and volunteering at the Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital.

Anthony Bombik, a graduating senior from Union, will be a Teacher’s Assistant in the Center for Gifted Studies’ camp for Verbally and Mathematically Precocious Youth (VAMPY) at WKU.

Madeline Buhr, a graduating senior from Cecilia, will participate in the Teenage Volunteer Program at Hardin Memorial Hospital in Elizabethtown.

Clarice Esch, a graduating senior from Somerset, is interning at the Baker Arboretum in Bowling Green.

Sean Freeman, a graduating senior from Hebron, is programming iPhone apps.

Katherine Goebel, a graduating senior from Simpsonville, will be shadowing veterinarian Dr. Rocky Oliver of the Shelby Veterinary Clinic.

Madeline Lauzon, a graduating senior from Owensboro, will be volunteering with the Theatre Workshop of Owensboro.

Jae Lee, a graduating senior from Hopkinsville, will be volunteering at a local nursing home in Hopkinsville and shadowing various health care professionals.

Justine Missik, a graduating senior from Danville, is volunteering with the Sierra Club.

Jake Moore, a graduating senior from Crittenden, has been admitted to the highly competitive Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Summer Internship Program for Science Students.  Moore will be interning under Dr. John Bissler, studying Nephrology and Biomedical Engineering.

Michael Phillips, a graduating senior from Benton, is conducting research under the direction of Dr. Edward Kintzel at the WKU NOVA Center and will be a teaching assistant at VAMPY.

Tejas Sangoi, a graduating senior from Owensboro, will be volunteering in the Owensboro Medical Health Systems.  He will also be attending national conferences for FBLA and HOSA.

Chandler Santos, a graduating senior from LaGrange, will be tutoring with VAMPY.

Suzanne VanArsdall, a graduating senior from Frankfort, will be returning to Cape Town, South Africa to help with the reconstruction of a safe house for women and children.

Paras Vora, a graduating senior from Owensboro will be shadowing cardiologist Dr. Kishor Vora.

Celia Whelan, a graduating senior from Bardstown, will perform in The Stephen Foster Story and The Wizard of Oz with Stephen Foster Productions.

Lydia Brothers, a first-year student from Madisonville, has been admitted to the seven-week Summer Research Program for High School and Undergraduate Students at the University of Tennessee Space Institute in Tullahoma, TN.  Brothers will receive travel expenses, room and board, and a stipend.

Jordan Currie, a first-year student from Rockfield, will participate in the Music City Drum Corps.

Daniel Dilger, a first-year student from Union, will be developing a cryptographic analysis infrastructure under Dr. Bruce Kessler of WKU to attempt to decrypt the recently released notes from the Ricky McCormick murder investigation.

Andrea Eastes, a first-year student from Mayfield, will be assisting Dr. Michelle Monje of the Stanford University School of Medicine in a research study on Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG), a lethal pediatric brain tumor.

Samantha Hawtrey, a first-year student of Union, will represent the 2010-11 WKU Genome Discovery and Exploration Program when she presents research findings at the 3rd Annual Science Education Alliance Symposium at the Janelia Farm campus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Ashburn, VA.

Nathan Lasley, a first-year student from Owensboro, will be attending a Boy Scout Summer Camp at Roy C. Manchester Boy Scout Camp.

Jesse Matherly, a first-year student from Nicholasville, will be conducing Alzheimer’s research under the direction of Dr. Linda Van Eldik at the University of Kentucky Sanders-Brown Center on Aging.

Benjamin Rice, a first-year student from Somerset, will be participating in the Naval Academy Summer Seminar in Annapolis, MD.

Aaron Stolze, a first-year student from Somerset, will be participating in the Naval Academy Summer Seminar in Annapolis, MD.  He will also be participating in the Christian Leadership Institute in Danville.

Joseph “Joey” Tutor, a first-year student from Franklin, will be interning at Electronic Warfare Associates in Bowling Green.

Layne Webb, a first-year student from Shepherdsville, will be doing astrophysics research under the mentorship of Dr. Lutz Haberzettl of the University of Louisville’s Department of Physic and Astronomy.