Category: WKU

Home / Category: WKU

Will Bickett
Will Bickett

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.

William Bickett (’12) of Owensboro is conducting research this summer with Dr. Phillip Womble at WKU’s Applied Physics Institute.

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

I have been working on subjecting samples to neutron radiation and measuring the emitted gamma-rays at various angles in my research over the summer. I’m doing this in order to get a better feel for how the Doppler Shift effects the readings of gamma ray based explosive detectors. My research requires me to do a large variety of things, from working in the machine shop, creating various components of our setup, to running complex and expensive equipment such as neutron generators.

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

I will ideally use my research to participate in the Siemens Competition, try for a Goldwater Scholarship, and several other endeavors.

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

This research experience has allowed me to get first-hand experience in the type of workplace that I hope to one day end up in.

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

The thing I am looking forward to most about my senior year at the Academy is probably my new residential situation. ADA Room: Check, Cool Roommate: Check, Cool Suitemates: Check, Girls wing of the building: Check.

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

The thing I love most about the Academy is that its full of kids like me and that I feel like I belong there.

Tucker Joyce
Tucker Joyce

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.

Tennessee “Tucker” Joyce (’12) of Harrodsburg is working with Dr. Richard Schugart of the WKU Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, continuing his research that started at the beginning of his Academy experience.

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

Research to me means that I can work creatively on a new, unsolved problem. It means that the work I am doing here can have an impact on the world and help people.

2. 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 doing research under Dr. Richard Schugart in the WKU Mathematics Department. I am working on part of an ongoing project involving a new model of the process of wound healing for chronic wounds. I am working mostly with the mathematical aspect of the problem, gaining qualitative results and estimating parameter values.

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

Yes, definitely. I plan on applying to the Siemens Competition, Intel Competition, and probably some others too. The research experience here lends itself naturally to such competitions and this is one of the great benefits of doing research.

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

I feel that the Gatton Academy’s main benefit to Kentucky is to allow young people with potential to better use it. Graduates of the Gatton Academy are prepared to succeed in college more than they ever would be otherwise and will probably go on to improve Kentucky after college more than ever thanks to the opportunities they received at the Gatton Academy.

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

The thing I love most about the Gatton Academy is the idea that 128 of the most gifted students in the state are able to live and work together in one place. I feel that students as talented as those at the Gatton Academy can achieve much more when they can communicate with each other. The Gatton Academy creates a unique community in which this is possible and the opportunities that this provides are what I love about the Academy.

Rebecca Brown
Rebecca Brown

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.

Rebecca Brown (’12) of Boston, KY is spending part of her summer working with Dr. Michael Carini of the WKU Department of Physics and Astronomy studying Optical Monitoring of TeV Candidate Blazars.

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

To me, research is being able to produce new data. By doing research, you’re contributing something new to the scientific community.

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

My research is in astronomy/astrophysics. I’m staying on WKU campus for five weeks continuing the research I started last semester. From 9 to 5 on weekdays, I work in the Physics and Astronomy Department reducing data from images of blazars taken from the Kitt Peak telescope in Arizona. The data I’m collecting is a measurement of the blazars’ magnitude, or brightness, which in turn indicates whether or not it’s actively consuming matter.

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

As part of the internship, I have to write a research paper. This paper closely follows those for Siemens competition entries, so I hope to use a polished version of the research paper to enter.

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

In the short-term, it allows me to catch up on the backlog of data the tends to accumulate with the pictures I’m working with by allowing me more consistent time to research. In the long-term, it gives me experience which will help me attain my career goals (astrophysicist and professor). In addition it ensures that I actually know what I’m getting into with my field, and won’t end up backing out halfway through a degree.

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

I’d like to attend a reputable college with a good astronomy department and eventually work my way up to a Ph.D. I would continue research along the way.

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.

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.

The Gatton Academy was ranked #5 in Newsweeks 2011 list of best high schools.
The Gatton Academy was ranked #5 in Newsweek's 2011 list of best high schools.

The Carol Martin Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky at WKU has been recognized byNewsweek magazine as one of the nation’s top five high schools.

America’s Best High Schools 2011, released today (June 20), recognized more than 500 schools from across the United States.  The Gatton Academy appeared on Newsweek’s list of “Public Elite” high schools in 2009 and 2010. This is the first occasion in which the Gatton Academy received a fixed rank.

Only the School of Science and Engineering Magnet in Dallas, School for the Talented and Gifted Magnet in Dallas, BASIS Tucson in Tucson, and Stanton College Preparatory in Jacksonville, Fla., finished higher on the list.

Newsweek unveiled a new methodology for its rankings this year that seeks to highlight schools that focus on providing solutions to the challenges of 21st century education and prepare students for both college and life.

Each school’s score is comprised of six components: graduation rate (25 percent), college matriculation rate (25 percent), Advanced Placement (AP) tests taken per graduate (25 percent), average SAT/ACT scores (10 percent), average AP or International Baccalaureate (IB) scores (10 percent), and AP courses offered (5 percent).

Dr. Julia Roberts, executive director of the Gatton Academy, expressed her excitement for the Academy’s recognition and added that the methodology describes only a part of the unique learning opportunities available to students at the Academy.

“The students at the Carol Martin Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky deserve the outstanding recognition that comes from being named fifth in Newsweek’s list of Best High Schools,” Dr. Roberts noted. “In addition to the academic considerations for Newsweek’s list, Gatton Academy students have opportunities to engage in research, make presentations and publish journal articles, study abroad, and experience leadership in numerous capacities.”

More than half of Gatton Academy students engaged in study programs abroad during the previous academic year, with opportunities in Italy, France, Spain, the United Kingdom, Costa Rica, China and Switzerland.  Moreover, 70 percent of Gatton Academy students participated in a research project sponsored by a university faculty mentor.

Faculty and staff, particularly those at WKU, play an important role in the development of students both in and out of the classroom, according to Gatton Academy Director Tim Gott.

“This recognition would not have been possible without the full partnership we have with Western Kentucky University,” Gott said. “Having access to top professors and instructors, the university’s research facilities and the overall focus on excellence on campus, provide the rigor, relevance and relationships that are imperative for student success.”

Gott also explained the honor is something that is shared with the 100-plus public school districts in the state that have partnered with the Gatton Academy to engage students from more than 103 Kentucky counties.

“This honor highlights the outstanding students from across the state,” he said. “We share this recognition with each of the schools these students represent.  Being among the top schools in the nation shows the strength and caliber of young people across the Commonwealth.”

The Gatton Academy, which opened in 2007 and is funded by the Kentucky General Assembly, is the commonwealth’s only state-supported residential high school with an emphasis in math and science.

“The Kentucky General Assembly is to be commended for making such an opportunity available for Kentucky high school juniors and seniors with talent and interest in careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics,” Dr. Roberts said.

Other Kentucky schools recognized include duPont Manual in Louisville (62), Beechwood in Ft. Mitchell (192), South Oldham in Crestwood (270) and Ballard in Louisville (319).

Contact Corey Alderdice, (270) 745-6565.