
Earth Science Professor Frank Spera asks Amanda
about her project at an undergraduate research presentation.
|
Amanda Mummert ’06
Really, Writing a 36,000-Word Research Paper
is a Good Thing
“I’ve developed skills I can
apply in many different directions.”
—Amanda Mummert
2006 recipient,
(See below for what Amanda gained—but
didn't expect--—from her research experience)
When professors—who typically have a 10-page
project in mind—first say the words research paper to their
undergraduate students, chances are they’ll hear mutters
and sighs. Say the same words (or say senior honors thesis) to
Amanda Mummert, and she’ll probably smile. If asked, she
also might mention that the award-winning paper she wrote filled
144 pages. And she’ll be quick to say that writing her
thesis (an original point of view based on research) helped her
in ways she never would have expected.
Path to the prize
South
central Peru was Amanda's summer laboratory. |
Born and raised in Lancaster, California, in the Mojave Desert,
Amanda is the first in her family to go to college. After completing
most of the requirement for a degree in organic chemistry, she
realized that, for her, the subject didn’t involve enough
personal interaction to be fulfilling. So she switched to anthropology
and “absolutely loved it.”
Physical rather than cultural anthropology interested Amanda
because of the science involved. Her focuses were osteology and
morphology—the studies of bones and the body’s form and
structure. “Learning how the body adapts to changing conditions
is really interesting to me,” she says.
At an undergraduate Anthropology Student Union meeting, Amanda
learned about a researcher leading an excavation in south central
Peru. She applied to join
the field crew and spent five weeks analyzing cranial remains of 40 individuals
from the ancient Cotahuasi people. She assessed their general health, looked
for injuries such as fractures or weapon marks, and studied the skulls’ shape
to determine the individuals' sex and age. “Using the tools of bioarchaeology [a fusion
of physical anthropology and archaeology], skeletons can reveal a lot about past
cultures,” says Amanda, who plans to become a professor.

As
part of her research, Amanda studied cranial remains
of an ancient people for evidence
of disease or injury |
The data she reported in her paper, combined with her historical
research, clarifies
how the Cotahuasi’s health, diet, and identity were affected under the
Wari Empire (CE 700–1000) during a time of likely social upheaval. By comparing
her data with information about other people the Wari influenced, Amanda produced
new findings about culture, society, and politics at the time.
“Her research
is significant to the field of anthropology,” says department chair and
professor Barbara Voorhees.
Paper payoff
To present outstanding research effectively was Amanda’s goal from the
beginning—but what were the unexpected benefits? Her list is long:
1. For starters, “My writing greatly improved!”
2. The paper was a big factor in Amanda's being hired as a research analyst and
technical writer at
Thomson Medstat, in Goleta. She is examining how health-care fields are attacking disease
and is saving money for graduate school.
3. “Now that I know how to produce a large scholarly paper, that’s
one thing I won’t have to figure out
when I get to graduate school!"
4. “Phillip Walker, my faculty mentor, guided me as I prepared two articles
based on my research for
publication. They will be useful when I contact professors I'd like to work with later on—and when I apply for funding."
5. “I presented my research at a conference at Santa Clara University and
at UCSB’s Colloquium on
Undergraduate Research."
6. “I received academic credit for my thesis, plus funds from URCA (Undergraduate
Research and
Creative Activities office) so I could reduce my part-time work hours [in the University Center]."
7. “The whole project gave me a really large sense of accomplishment!”
|