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December 2007 Issue
At right:
Jordan DiBona, left, poses with Kazak horsemen he met exploring China.
Hometown: Austin,
Texas Major:
Business administration & Asian studies
One of the most
rewarding experiences
I have had as a teacher
at Austin College has
been directing the
projects of some of our
most talented student
writers and
researchers.

Kathleen McLaughlin

Jacob Primeaux

Leah Wolf

December 2007 Issue

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Student Achievers
Summer with a Nobel Peace Prize Winner
A hometown summer job is a pretty common way for
college students to spend their time between spring and fall academic
terms. Austin College economics and business administration major
Redwanul Hoque ’10 found his 2007 summer away from campus
anything but common. Hoque, an international student from Bangladesh,
spent his summer in Dhaka on a four-week internship with Grameen Bank
and Mohammad Yunus,co-2006 Nobel Peace Prize winners.
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Mohammad Yunus, left, visits with summer
interns, including Austin College sophomore
Redwanul Hoque, at far right. |
Grameen Bank and Yunus were honored “for their
efforts to create economic and social development from below,”
according to the Nobel Prize Web site. Yunus established Grameen Bank
in 1983 after attending Dhaka University of Bangladesh and earning a
doctorate in economics while on a Fulbright scholarship at Vanderbilt.
He established the bank with the motivation to eradicate poverty by
providing small personal loans, called micro lending, to the poor with
suitable terms and “by teaching them a few sound financial principles
so they could help themselves,” according to the Web site.
“He believed in the concept of credit as a basic
human right and detested the conventional view of banking that
required individuals to have collateral for taking out loans,” Hoque
said of Yunus. Hoque said the internship program at Grameen Bank
was setup to “make students and the next generation of potential
bankers aware of the fact that micro credit could be the most
effective eradicator of poverty in economies.”
Hoque spent his time learning about the bank’s
lending processes, visiting bank branches, and meeting borrowers — 95
percent of whom were female, he said.
“Describing the four weeks spent at Grameen Bank
merely as an eye-opening experience would be an understatement,” Hoque
said. “I had the privilege to interact with the women and men who were
benefited by the micro loan programs of the bank and also to observe
how the entire system of Grameen Bank worked.”
Hoque also had the opportunity to meet and talk with
Yunus for one day. “He is indeed an inspirational personality,” Hoque
said. “Always cheerful and humble, he explained to us that he was glad
the interns present there took the initiative of learning about the
bank and that it made him feel proud.” It’s not in every summer job that a college student
has the chance to work with a Nobel Laureate.
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Student Works for Burma Awareness
|

Claire Balani, far left, takes part in the
vigil in Dallas. |
Claire Balani ’10 helped coordinate a
candlelight vigil Oct. 6 in Dallas for the Global Day of Action for
Burma, which included demonstrations in cities around the world. She
hoped the Dallas event, with some 200 participants, would raise
awareness of the plight of the Burmese people. The effort was welcomed
by the Venerable Panna Dipa, who moved to the U.S. 12 years ago to
teach Buddhism and meditation and has lived in Garland more than a
year.
Balani became interested in Burma through
involvement with Amnesty International. “Iread about a prisoner of
conscience named Ma Khin Khin Leh who was sentenced to life
imprisonment for holding a peaceful protest against the government in
her village. Even under the military junta, life imprisonment for a
woman is a very rare occurrence. So, I was shocked by the depravity of
the junta, and the stark oppression and impoverishment that the
ordinary people must deal with every day. I looked online to learn
more about Burma and found the U.S. Campaign for Burma (USCB).
”Balani traveled to the Thailand-Burma border in
March with USCB and interned with the program in summer2007 through an
Austin College Lilly internship. As a regional coordinator for USCB,
she helps create new student and community chapters in Texas,
Oklahoma, and Louisiana.
“I've worked on many human rights issues,” Balani
said, “but in many ways Burma found me. It’s an issue that once you
find out about it, you just can’t let it go. You have to do
something.”
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|
No other
school could
have allowed me
the opportunity
to graduate with
three terms of
Chinese under
my belt, a double
major, a year in
Beijing, and
internships
abroad. |
Like many Austin College students, when Jordan
DiBona ‘08 graduates in May, he won’t have received all his
undergraduate education from Austin College professors, classes, or
textbooks. Jordan, a double major in business administration and Asian
studies, spent summer and fall 2006 as well as spring 2007 in Beijing,
China. “Before I went to China, I often felt as if I was idly standing
by while China was beginning to change the world we live in,” he said.
“I wanted to know how it was doing that, and I wanted to be a part of
it.
”Jordan’s interest in Asia was sparked by Don
Rodgers, assistant professor of political science, who taught
Jordan’s freshman Communication/Inquiry course at Austin College. As a
sophomore, Jordan already planned to study abroad his junior year. He
decided to fulfill his foreign language requirement at the same time
so picked the Chinese language, studied abroad in that country, and
returned to the United States bilingual. “No other school could have
allowed me the opportunity to graduate with three terms of Chinese
under my belt, a double major, a year in Beijing, and internships
abroad,” Jordan said.
During his fall term abroad, Jordan completed an
internship at a publishing company. He explained that he worked on
several articles of his employer’s choice, but none were published
despite his strong desire and efforts. It wasn’t until his internship
was at an end that he learned his boss wanted an English speaker to
help her son prepare for a test. After the internship, Jordan emailed
her and offered to assist her son. Though his boss had already found a
tutor, one of Jordan’s articles appeared in the next issue of the
magazine. “Going the extra mile to prove that you want, as opposed to
need, a relationship goes a very long way in China,” he said.
Jordan also discovered that his perceptions of China
as a communist nation were different from what he actually
experienced. “Before going to China, I had visions of censorship and
unhappy people shying away from what it was they really wanted to
say,” Jordan said. “Politics is a common topic of conversation in
China, and while a level of censorship does indeed exist, the overall
vibe is nothing of complete government control or a ‘rule with an iron
fist’ mentality.”
Jordan discovered there was more to learn from China
than just the language. “Going abroad changed everything for me,”
Jordan said. “While it accelerated my life, it also helped me gain the
ability to slow down and really put my shoulder into something that
matters to me. The most important thing I learned about the world is
that it isn’t as big as I thought it was.”
Jordan next plans to put his shoulder behind law
school. “I put a high value on academic momentum, and I don’t want to
lose it,” Jordan said. “I’ve taken the LSAT and plan to enter law
school and study international law.”
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Student and Faculty Teams ‘Put Their Heads Together’
Two minds are better than one, especially when
student and faculty minds come together at Austin College where
student-faculty collaboration is highly encouraged because of the
benefits to both students and professors. “I believe that
undergraduate research is one of the most important learning
experiences students can have because it puts them into situations
where no one knows what is going to happen or what the right answer
is,” said Karla McCain, assistant professor of
chemistry. “I see doing research with undergraduate students not only
as the means to pursue my own scholarly interests, but also as an
important part of my teaching and mentoring of Austin College
chemistry students.”
The number of Austin College chemistry, biology, and
physics students participating in research projects with faculty
members has seen tremendous growth in recent years. From 2002 to 2007,
almost 75 percent of students in the sciences were involved in some
type of student-faculty research — compared to 25 percent from 1997 to
2001. Each year, the Science Division holds a poster session to allow
students to present and display their research. In spring 2007, 30
students participated and that number may grow to 40 in 2008,said
Kelly Reed, associate professor of biology.“ Traditionally,
we do it as a poster session because in science that is a common
avenue of presenting your work,” she said.
Reed is taking collaboration a step further through
the Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute undergraduate research
program. Reed and her entire spring 2008 microbiology class will
undertake genome sequencing for the program. “It involves a lot of
troubleshooting, which we just don’t have time to do in a regular
course,” said Reed. “In these sorts of experiences, students really
get the opportunity to see what it’s like being a scientist. ”
Beyond the Sciences
Though the sciences may offer an abundance of
opportunities for student-faculty collaboration, similar opportunities
can be found throughout humanities and social science courses as well.
|

This image is one of many collected
for the set preparation of
How I Learned to Drive. |
The theatre program received funding for a Mellon
faculty/student special project to develop a multi-media set design
for the fall 2006 theatre production of How I Learned to Drive by
Paula Vogel. The director wanted to use imagery of roads, cars,
driving, and driver education, and to extend the imagery into the set,
using projections of still and moving images. Developing that set
required researching equipment and set-up options, researching and
selecting appropriate images from available sources, and creating new
images. The faculty/student research team of Kirk Everist,
assistant professor of communication studies, and department majors
Rachel Aker ’07 and Hannah Hubbard ’08 spent
many hours researching and collecting images as well as studying
possible projection setups to enhance the production. In all, they
collected or created more than 2,000 images, including video and
photos of cast members in costume. The images were loaded onto
computers and projected by three projectors onto three screens that
formed the backdrop for the production.
Mark Hamilton’08 is completing majors
in biology and English and is a prime example of student-faculty
collaboration. Though he considered himself “aliterature person,” he
became interested in a career in biomedical research after a summer
project with Brad Smucker, assistant professor of
chemistry. In his final year at Austin College, Hamilton is using
micro-arrays to study yeast cells with Lance Barton,
assistant professor of biology, while also writing an honors thesis in
English with Roger Platizky, professor of English.
Platizky has worked with a number of students on
honors theses and Mellon research projects. “One of the most rewarding
experiences I have had as a teacher at Austin College for the past 17
years has been directing the projects of some of our most talented
student writers and researchers,” he said. “As a researcher and
scholar myself, I am grateful for the opportunity Austin College has
given me to work with such a promising group of young scholars.”
David Griffith, associate professor of
business administration, and Geoff Wescott ’08, an
economics and business administration double major, have been working
together on a project that investigates the relationship between
bilingualism and income from entrepreneurship and self-employment
among Hispanics in the United States.
Once the research is finished, Wescott plans to
present a paper at the Eastern Economics Association Undergraduate
Conference and also at the Federal Reserve Undergraduate Conference in
spring 2008. “Thebenefit of doing research with a professor is, first
of all, the relationship that is built,” Wescott said. “David is my
adviser for my honors thesis but he has also put me in touch with job
opportunities and special opportunities around campus I never would
have been involved in without his guidance.”
The stories of faculty and students who have
collaborated on research could continue for pages and touch on nearly
all academic disciplines of the College. Todd Penner,
associate professor of religious studies, and Lillian Cates
’07 worked on a project that they presented in three venues, and
their final report was accepted for the peer-reviewed journal The
Bible and Critical Theory. Kevin Simmons, associate
professor of economics, worked with several students in the past few
years who have participated in conferences with him and who have
continued their research and presentations beyond graduation.
A Place to Shine
In 2004, Austin College faculty and students began
an interdisciplinary undergraduate conference that has developed into
an annual event. Largely run and organized by students, the conference
provides an opportunity for students to share their work, build
professional relationships, and better prepare for graduate studies.
The call for abstracts goes to colleges throughout the country, and
the April conference features student research presentations as well
as a scholar roundtable and plenary sessions. The conference has
focused on varying topics: “Environment and the Humanities” in
2004;“Race, Nation, and the Humanities” in 2005;“Gender and the
Humanities” in 2006; and “Religion and Science” in 2007. Julie
Hempel, assistant professor of Spanish, and Ivette Vargas,
assistant professor of religious studies, have worked with students in
organizing the past two events.
Acumen, published each spring,
provides another venue for students to share their research. All
students on campus may submit their research papers for review and
possible inclusion by the student editorial staff. The above was a
special issue focusing on the work of the Mellon Fellows.
Back to the Top
2007 Mellon Fellow Projects Include
Timely Research of Chinese Product Recalls
Recalls of pet food, toys, and toothpaste provided
frightening moments for some Americans during summer 2007. For Will
Radke ’08, the recalls meant more material for his summer
research. An Austin College Mellon Fellow, Radke spent the summer in
Guangzhou and Shanghai, China, examining the Chinese role in diverting
branded goods to pirated markets, including a look at the relationship
between “Westernprices” for goods and the “street price” in Asia. His
research resulted in his paper, “Circumnavigating Legal Avenues:
Pirating the Intellectual Property System in Asia.” David Griffith,
associate professor of economics, advised Radke on the project, which
also is the topic of Radke’s senior honors thesis in economics.
Radke was one of six 2007 Mellon Fellows, selected
by a faculty committee from among more than 20 applicants and research
proposals. Other 2007 Mellon Fellows, their research, and their
faculty advisers are listed below.
|

Janice Dean |
Janice Dean ’08 — “Exotic Exorcists and the
Spectacle of Identity: Naxi Healing in the Midst of Chinese
Modernization” (exploring the Naxi ethnic group and its practice of
exorcism as a means for negotiating traditional and modern identities
in China, particularly with respect to the public display of
previously private rituals).
FACULTY ADVISER: Ivette Vargas, assistant professor of
religious studies
Kathleen McLaughlin ’08 — “A Critique of
Modern-Day Ecclesiology from the Theology of Karl Barth”
(investigating plurality of belief and practice in contemporary
churches).
FACULTY ADVISER: Steve Stell, associate professor of
religious studies
Jacob Primeaux ’08 — “Arthur Fine and Bas van
Fraaseen on Empiricism and Realism” (researching the epistemological
debate between realist and anti-realist stances in the relationship of
scientific practice to objective knowledge, with particular focus on
the mediation of those positions by Fine).
FACULTY ADVISER: Karánn Durland, associate professor of
philosophy
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Haley Smith |
Haley Smith ’08 — “A New Social Role for
Marsyas in Rome” (analyzing the shift that this Phrygian satyr
underwent when relocated from the Greek to the Roman context).
FACULTY ADVISER: Robert Cape, professor of classics
Leah Wolf ’08 — “Que Haria Jesus?: Conflicts
of Ideology and Application Between Christianity and Capitalism in a
Latin American Context” (studying the incompatibility of Christianity
and capitalism, with special emphasis on liberation theology’s
analytic for this interaction).
FACULTY ADVISER: Rod Stewart,
professor of philosophy
Austin College’s Mellon Summer Research Grants in
the Humanities and Social Sciences have funded projects for 24
students during the four years of the program’s existence. Many of
those students have presented their work at professional conferences
and a few have had their work published in peer-reviewed academic
journals. Each Mellon Fellow receives a $3,000 stipend for a 10-week
summer research project. The students work closely with their faculty
advisers on designing the research plan and after several weeks of
independent research, meet with the supervising professors to analyze
the materials and organize the writing projects to follow. The
students may take one or two terms of directed study for academic
credit to finish the project.
This summer, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of
New York approved an additional $150,000 award to Austin College to
fund continued student-faculty collaborative research in the
humanities and social sciences.
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