
Ana Arias—back on campus after her nanotech
internship.
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Engineering Meets Business Economics Meets
Nanotechology
Let’s face it—long before move-in day, college-bound
students hear enough opinions, advice, reminders, and suggestions
to fill up a 10-week course. Even so, one of the oldest refrains
still applies: Your undergraduate years are for discovering what
you most want to do in life—and for helping you get there.
Of course, some students have wanted to be doctors, research scientists, artists,
or engineers ever since they first climbed on a skateboard—and many stay
their original course. But since all students encounter electives, broad requirements,
and new perspectives, even the most single-minded can change their minds.
Ana Arias is a case in point. In her senior year, Ana switched her major from
computer engineering to business economics with an emphasis in
accounting. When she first
came to the campus from Santa Maria, California, she was determined to be an
engineer. “I took all my hard-core science, engineering, and mathematics
courses in my first three years, and I really enjoyed my classes,” says
Ana, who was on the board of Los
Ingenieros; a student chapter of the Society
of Hispanic Professional Engineers.
But as she completed electives, acknowledged her own personality (“I’m
very people-oriented!”), and assessed her strong interests beyond the
workplace, Ana realized she wanted a different kind of career. Her goal became to
creatively blend her engineering background and strong writing skills with
her affinity for business by working in a company like Boeing, where her path
could include accounting, auditing, communications, and more.
A nanotech internship that will enhance a business
career
Despite of Ana’s decision to change her focus, she continued
to build on her knowledge and skills by applying in her junior
year to a highly competitive internship program of the National
Science Foundation’s National
Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network, or NNIN. (The nanotech network consists of 13 university
research centers, each focusing on a different aspect of nanoscale
science, technology, and engineering; one node is Nanotech at UCSB.)
National
Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network interns.
Ana was accepted to an NNIN
Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program, which
sends talented and highly motivated college sophomores and juniors
to sites (not their own campus) including
UCSB. A native Californian, Ana traveled to Cornell University,
in Ithaca, New York, to work in a new NNIN area, Social
and Ethical Implications of Nanotechnology. The field bridges
engineering and the social sciences and is a departure from the
network’s
traditional technical efforts.
"I worked directly with Bruce Lewenstein, associate professor
of science communication,” Ana says. “My
project,
which was part of his research, focused on the media’s
coverage of nanotechnology in order to explore the extent to
which social and ethical issues surrounding the new field are
reflected in the media and public opinion.” In addition
to everything she learned from her research, Ana mastered a highly
sophisticated statistics program during her stay.
“It was a wonderful experience!" she adds. "
I enjoyed
working with my faculty mentor and as a team with graduate
students, and it was great to bond with the other NNIN interns
from different
universities. Three on the campus were from UCSB!”
Twelve UCSB undergrads did research at other campuses; nine
other university students came to UCSB to work with senior
faculty
and graduate students. At the end of the summer, all NNIN interns (see photo above) presented their research findings as part
of a network convocation at Pennsylvania State University.
For more information about NNIN REUs, contact Angela Berenstein,
at berenstein@ece.ucsb.edu
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