SPRING 2005 RESEARCH SEMINAR
Note new time effective January 14.

Fridays - 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. in 356A Fitzpatrick Hall
All students, staff, and visitors are welcome to attend.

Date Speaker(s) Status Advisor(s)
January 7 Paul Nebosky Ph.D. Y4 Schmid
January 14 Weimin Yue Ph.D. Y4 Roeder
January 21 Joe Van Nausdle Ph.D. Y2 Roeder
January 28 Brent Mitchell Ph.D. Y2 Niebur
February 4 Gabe Converse Ph.D. Y2 Roeder
February 11 Yifie Dai Ph.D. Y2 Niebur
February 18 Yue Li Ph.D. Y3 Schmid
February 25 Chaodi Li Postdoc Niebur
March 4 Yan Zhou Ph.D. Y4 Mason
March 11 Spring Break    
March 18 Zingzhou Zhang Ph.D. Y3 Ovaert
March 25 Good Friday    
April 1 Alejandro Espinoza Ph.D. Y4 Renaud/Roeder
April 8 Kaifeng Liu Ph.D. Y3 Mason
April 15 Hunt, Landrigan, Rogel Ph.D. Y1 Mason/Renaud/Roeder
April 22 Du, Penninger, Shi Ph.D. Y1 Ovaert/Renaud/Niebur
April 29 Kane, Hess, Rehmer, Sienko Undergrads Roeder/Niebur/Renaud
May 6 Finals Week    

2005 Spring/Summer/Fall

2004 Spring/Summer/Fall

2003 Spring/Summer/Fall

Participants in the BIO Research Seminar include faculty, post-doctoral associates, graduate assistants and undergraduate interns whose research falls under the broad category of bioengineering, especially in biomaterials and/or biomechanics. The Seminar includes original research presentations by participants on a rotating basis.

EXPECTATIONS:
1) Single speakers are expected to present his/her recent research for 20-30 minutes, allowing ample time for discussion and questions. First year students and undergraduates are scheduled with two or more speakers per meeting, and these presentations should not last longer than 10-15 minutes each. Students should always provide ample background or literature review for their projects, especially first and second year students. All students should consult with their advisor(s) prior to presenting.

2) At the conclusion of each meeting, a name is drawn from a hat (like the lottery). The "winner" gives a very brief (approximately 5 minutes) summary of their research activities that week. The featured speaker is, of course, exempt from this lottery, but advisors are not. Students are given one entry into the hat for each year as a graduate student. E.g., a graduate student in their fourth year has four entries (and better odds of winning!) while a first year student (and advisors) has one entry.

GOALS:
To foster a dynamic, positively-reinforced atmosphere of research activity amongst participating graduate students by:
1) developing experience preparing and presenting conference-quality presentations in a reoccuring time-frame.
2) taking a "step back" from day to day tasks to reflect on the "big-picture" of the project and take inventory of progress.
3) receiving feedback from a wider range of peers and advisors.
4) participating in scholarly discussions.
5) developing critical thinking skills.
6) stimulating further intellectual discussion, questions and fortuitous ideas outside the meeting.
7) providing a community of sorts for those engaged in related research projects.

 
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