Category Archives: Meet the Students

20 College of Arts and Sciences seniors named Presidential Scholars

by Jeanne Baron

Of the 46 students  recognized as Western Michigan University’s top seniors for 2012 during the 32nd annual Presidential Scholars Convocation, 20 are seniors in the College of Arts and Sciences and two were personally recognized for meeting the challenge from President John M. Dunn to earn good grades for a year.

Two Western Michigan University students met a challenge to get top grades for a year and as a result, were treated to a March 28 lunch with WMU President John M. Dunn. From left are Dr. Timothy Green, Trista Kelly, Dr. Dunn, Raymond Enbody, Randy Ott and Dr. Charlotte Giscombe.

Raymond Enbody from Crystal, Mich., and Trista Kelly from Lawrence, Mich., won the challenge, which was put to students participating in the TRIO Student Success Program, and were treated to a luncheon with President Dunn and others from the program.

Kelly is a senior majoring in special education: cognitive impairment and learning disabilities who will be graduating this month. Enbody is a sophomore majoring in criminal justice who expects to graduate in April 2014.

Student Success Program participants were challenged in 2010 to obtain a cumulative 4.0 grade point average for a minimum of one academic year. Enbody and Kelly are the first to meet the challenge and win lunch with the president in recognition of their accomplishment.

Dr. Charlotte Giscombe, director of the Student Success Program, says the program provides services to 210 students each academic year. Services include priority registration, scholarships, job and leadership opportunities, tutoring, mentoring and academic advising.

Presidential Scholars Named

Each year, faculty members from across the University select the most outstanding senior in their various academic schools, departments and programs to represent their units as a WMU Presidential Scholar.

The designation is the highest academic honor that WMU can bestow on its undergraduates. Selection is based on the students’ general academic excellence, academic and/or artistic excellence in their majors, and intellectual and/or artistic promise.

The 2012 Presidential Scholars Convocation, which was by invitation only, included a program featuring a keynote address by Dr. John M. Dunn, president of WMU. Also making remarks were Dr. Peter W. Krawutschke, president of the WMU Faculty Senate, and Erin Kaplan, president of the Western Student Association.

A decorated military veteran also is among 2012′s top seniors—anthropology major Bryan L. Bommersbach who earned the Air Force Achievement Medal for his efforts during the conflict in Kosovo in 1999.

The Presidential Scholars Convocation is sponsored by WMU’s Faculty Senate and Office of the President.

2012 Presidential Scholars

  • Anthropology–Bryan L. Bommersbach of Kalamazoo.
  • Biological Sciences–Leah M. Grawburg of Mt. Pleasant, Mich.
  • Chemistry–Kim Lien T. Huynh of Kalamazoo.
  • Communication–Erin R. Gignac of Menominee, Mich.
  • Comparative Religion–Laura C Wagner-Kreider of Kalamazoo.
  • Economics–Nolan R. Sinkler of Grand Haven, Mich.
  • English–Christopher J. Hart of Lamoni, Iowa.
  • Environmental Studies–Susie E. Drust of Sturgis, Mich.
  • Foreign Languages–Danielle M. Rayman of Portage, Mich.
  • Gender and Women’s Studies–Sebastiene E. Bonifield of Kalamazoo.
  • Geography–Andrew C. Johnson of Brookfield, Ill.
  • Geosciences–Davina A. Wyman of Portage, Mich.
  • History–Tara M. Bell of Galesburg, Mich.
  • Mathematics–Christen E. McCool of Anacortes, Wash.
  • Philosophy–Alexander J. Lanning of Canton, Mich.
  • Physics–Garrett E. Marsh of Kalamazoo.
  • Political Science–Lauren B. Hearit of Portage, Mich.
  • Psychology–Garrett D. Warrilow of Ortonville, Mich.
  • Sociology–Jessica N. Pence of Dowagiac, Mich.
  • Spanish–Rachael L. Myers of Jackson, Mich.

For more information, contact Janice Anderson, faculty senate administrator, at faculty-senate@wmich.edu or (269) 387-3310, or Elena Gaudio, convocation committee member and executive secretary to WMU’s President, at elena.gaudio@wmich.edu or (269) 387-2351.

My study abroad to Beijing taught me how to take care of my health

WMU alum Keara Hopkins recalls her experiences abroad in China.

By Katy TerBerg

Keara Hopkins went to China’s Beijing Language and Culture University to further her education in a global way, but while there, unexpectedly learned a life lesson.

“One of the best things I learned from my study abroad to China was how to take care of my health. While there, I lost somewhere between 30 and 50 pounds,” said WMU alum Keara Hopkins, who earned her Bachelor’s in Global and International Studies in 2011. Hopkins spent a year studying abroad in Beijing.

“When we think of Chinese medicine, the first thing that people think of is a man in a room filled with the smell of incense,” said Hopkins.

“In reality, I found myself in a smog-filled city. People walked around in masks if the smog was bad enough; other times the masks were used by cooks and hospital workers. They didn’t always look like plain hospital masks. Lots of times, they had Hello Kitty, or a popular Chinese cartoon character, Xi Yang Yang,” she said.

After some time in Beijing, Hopkins and her friends bought 10 sessions with a personal trainer at the on-campus gym. While the gym looked like any gym you would find in America, the trainer, Dave, was brutally honest, criticizing her weight and appearance without reservation.

 ”It’s important to understand that Dave wasn’t saying any of this to insult me or belittle me. To him, this was just another fact. No need for him to use any tact…bluntness is widely accepted in Chinese culture,” Hopkins explained.

In addition to Hopkins’ interest in fitness, she developed a fascination for acupuncture and visited a Chinese doctor who practiced Traditional Chinese medicine. “He thought I was extremely cold and needed not only acupuncture but another treatment that I called the fire-stick. I decided to try it for weight loss. He suggested for the best results, I come in three times a week for both treatments,” she said.

“With this adventure in health, I learned quite a bit,” said Hopkins. “I learned as much about health and fitness in that one year in China as I learned in my classes.”

Links:
WMU Study Abroad

Study Abroad in Japan

Beijing Language and Culture University

 

Meet the students, Part II

How did senior Presidential Scholar, Tara Bell choose WMU’s Public History program (one of only two available in the country) and what’s she done since?

Links:

Department of History

Public History Program

 

Undergrad earns fellowship to Columbia College for MFA

Creative Writing major Samantha Schaefer has been given the Follett Graduate Merit Award to pursue her MFA at Columbia College.

By Katy TerBerg

Samantha Schaefer, a WMU creative writing major who graduated cum laude from the Lee Honors College on April 28, is the recipient of a Follett Graduate Merit Award from Columbia College Chicago.

The award, offered to just four incoming students annually, recognizes outstanding accomplishments and the potential for continued excellence in the college’s Creative Writing-Poetry MFA program. Samantha will receive $12,100 toward tuition and fees each academic year. “It’s basically a merit award given to an applicant whose portfolio is considered of esteemed quality,” said Schaefer.

While a student at WMU, Schaefer was involved in a number of activities, including Gold Company II and Onomatopoeia Writer’s Society, a reading series for undergraduate creative writers that she co-founded. She also served for three years as the peer advisor and assistant of the Department of English’s Prague Summer Program, which she attended as a student in 2009.

“I studied abroad twice, once in Prague, Czech Republic and once in Rome, Italy,” said Schaefer.

Her writing has been published on campus in the “Laureate,” the “Albion Review” and “Asylum Lake Press.” Schaefer is the co-editor of the “Black Tongue Review (a charitable literary arts magazine based out of Chicago).”

“While attending CCC I plan on obtaining my MFA in Poetry as well as hopefully exploring alternative forms of poetry including Erasure poetry and three dimensional poetry. I am planning on taking a teaching pedagogy course this fall so that I can teach as an adjunct professor in the spring of 2013,” said Schaefer of her graduate college goals.

“My advice for any and all creative writing majors would be to find a mentor, said Schaefer. “Having a good relationship with my professors is what has really helped me to explore and develop as a writer. I would also advise students to study abroad if it is at all possible. One’s writing undergoes enormous growth under the pressures and joys of travel.”

Links:
Department of English

Samantha Schaefer’s blog
Follett Graduate Merit Award

Meet the Students-III…Ben Langton and Racha El Kadiri, geology students with a passion for rocks

“The relationship you have with each other and your professors is not like any other relationship I’ve ever known. You get to know your professors on a whole different level.”—Ben Langton

 

“Being an international student, at first, I thought it was going to be harder, but Western has such a diverse cultures, being together and studying the different earth systems across the world, make the experience even more beneficial.” —Racha El Kadiri

 

And what makes the program so successful?

…students like these!

 

Links:
Department of Geosciences

More stand-out student awards

Graduate Programs in Geosciences

Seita Scholars program helps former foster youth

Heather Nichols graduated from Western Michigan University in April with a bachelor’s degree in exercise science. Nichols, a former foster youth, is the first four-year graduate of the Seita program—a scholarship program that sends foster youth to college tution free—but by no means of the imagination is Nichols the only student benefiting from the Seita Scholars program.

The idea for the Seita Scholars came about in 2007, when WMU financial aid director Mark Delorey, and two colleagues, heard John Seita speak at a conference. Seita, a former foster youth, spoke about his experiences at WMU, including a cold Thanksgiving he spent alone on campus.

“To me, being a Seita Scholar means everything…it gives me an opportunity to prove everybody wrong that ever had a negative thought about me.”

According to the Detroit Free Press, Michigan recently expanded the foster care age limitation from 18 to 21, which means even more students will have access to the Seita Scholars and other programs.

“Being a Seita Scholar means I’m not alone anymore.”

According to the Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative, a St.-Louis based nonprofit organization, one-in-five, or more, foster youth will be homeless after age 18;  half will be employed at 24; fewer than three percent will earn a college degree by 25, and one-in-four will be incarcerated within two years of leaving foster care. However, with the Seita program these problems will decrease and more students will be able to receive a college education.

“I tell everyone about it (the Seita program). I’m proud. I’m proud of what I can do and I’m proud of what I’ve done. Look–four years. I did it.”

 

Links:
Seita Scholars Program

WMU College of Arts and Sciences

Making strides in MSA research

By Katy TerBerg

“Multiple System Atrophy (MSA) is what I would describe as a puzzle with 1000 pieces that a minute number of researchers are strategically putting together piece by piece,” notes Ashley McKinney-Bostic, a master’s student in the Department of Biological Sciences. “I have seen, firsthand, the daily suffering of an MSA sufferer, and the severe symptoms that worsen over time.”
—Ashley McKinney-Bostic

Ashley McKinney-Bostic shows off her Miracles for MSA support bracelet during her research poster presentation.

Is there a cure for Muscular System Atrophy (MSA) anywhere on the near horizon? Researchers at Western Michigan University aren’t sure, but they are finding consistencies in their research leading them to some hopeful results. Ashley McKinney-Bostic is one of those researchers (now a graduate) and she talks about how MSA awareness has led her to do her research.

“My initial interest in science actually started with a love for animals as a child,” said Ashley McKinney-Bostic, a graduate student at WMU pursuing a master’s in biological sciences. “Upon my acceptance to Western Michigan University, my major was biological sciences, as I wanted to become a doctor. During my undergrad career, I decided that I wanted to be a doctor and researcher,” she said.

She and other researchers, along with Professor Charles Ide of the Environmental Studies Program at WMU, have been working tirelessly to raise awareness of and research activities for MSA, a neurological disease in which autonomic functions of the body, such as blood pressure, and internal organs slowly atrophy or shut down as a result of rapidly depleting muscle tissue.

McKinney-Bostic’s research focused on the promising, “CD68 Immune Cell Involvement in Purkinje Cell Degeneration in the Cerebellum of Multiple System Atrophy Patients.” She tested the hypothesis that CD68 cells are associated with neuropathology, including Purkinje cells, which normally function as a means of cleaning up diseases.

Bob Summers raises awareness for MSA with wife Sue, who passed away May 4, 2012.

For the past several years, MSA patient Sylvia (Sue) Summers and husband Bob, have been warriors for MSA and have worked in cooperation with WMU to accelerate efforts for a cure. The Summers  began Miracles for MSA, a charity to raise awareness and promote treatments for the disease. Much of McKinney-Bostic’s interest derived from their tireless efforts to promote awareness.

As a researcher, McKinney-Bostic has learned the trials and tragedies of MSA, and lamented,”Could you imagine not being able to converse with your family and friends, walk, enjoy eating your favorite meal, and struggle to carry out life’s daily activities? MSA sufferers are faced with these challenges daily. This is why I embraced MSA research. I wanted to help put the pieces to the puzzle of MSA together, even if it was only a few pieces.”

Other researchers hard at work on the MSA puzzle include:

  • Derrick Hilton, Ph.D. student about to defend his thesis on proteins, including immune system proteins, involved in cell death in a tissue culture model for MSA and in MSA brain tissues.
  • Karen VanWagner, a master’s student who is studying MS like immune cells in the MSA brain
  • Megan Welter, a master’s student who looks at special immune system proteins that allow them to enter the MSA brain, an organ that does not normally allow entry of immune system cells
  • Junjie Hu, a master’s student who is looking at immune system proteins in the MSA brain that can be indicative of other aspects of MS.
  • Jessica Song, a just-graduated undergraduate who is helping VanWagner analyze MS type immune cell frequency in the MSA brain.
  • Subhanwita Paul, a new Ph.D. program student who will revisit our gene expression data from blood cells of MSA and control patients to further establish an autoimmune link to MSA pathology.

Editor’s Note: Sue Summers passed away Friday, May 4 after a long and active battle with MSA. Condolences go to her husband, Bob, and Susan’s friends and family during this difficult time. Sue Summers was no doubt a warrior in the battle to fight MSA.

In lieu of flowers, Summers has asked donations be directed to: Western Michigan University, College of Arts and Sciences, Dr. Charles Ide, 1903 W. Michigan Ave., Kalamazoo, MI 49008. Make checks payable to Western Michigan University MSA fund or donate online here.

Links:

Department of Biological Sciences.

MSA Research: McKinney-Bostic and Dr. Charles Ide

“LIKE” Miracles for MSA

Partner story: Hope for MSA’s Frank Cervone

 

 

Meet the Students-Part I

In this first of a series of videos, meet geosciences students who are crazy about their programs.

What is it about rocks and Ann Gilchrist?

Allie Wyman is headed for her master’s degree at WMU.

Links:

Department of Geosciences