- University News Archive - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /news-archive/tag/nicole-ursin/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Mon, 06 May 2019 22:12:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Donaghey Scholars to present final projects May 7-9 /news-archive/2019/05/06/donaghey-scholars-projects/ Mon, 06 May 2019 22:12:02 +0000 /news/?p=74231 ... Donaghey Scholars to present final projects May 7-9]]> 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock鈥檚 Donaghey Scholars spring graduates will present their final project presentations May 7-9. The 45-minute presentations will take place in Dickinson Hall Room 209 and will showcase the projects the honors students have worked on the past year.聽The final projects are an integral part of the Donaghey Scholars curriculum. 鈥淭hey must be a substantial piece of individual work, and as such are a crucial component to Scholars life after college. They aren鈥檛 just learning about how to do things; they are doing them, and that makes them competitive to employers and graduate schools,鈥 said Simon Hawkins, director of the Donaghey Scholars program. 鈥The range is always staggering, from chemistry research to novel drafts to political analyses to important work for community groups. It is particularly pleasing to see so many projects have a community focus.鈥 Historically, about a third of the projects have been centered on the community. Many projects are research-oriented, such as examining the water quality in Fourche Creek or studying the soil in different enclosures at the Little Rock Zoo, while other students have gathered data specifically for community organizations, such as the Historic Arkansas Museum. Still others provide direct services for community groups, designing web pages for schools and developing fundraising programs for nonprofits. Over the years, several 聽entrepreneurial students have turned their final projects into thriving businesses, Hawkins said. The presentation schedule is as follows: Tuesday, May 7 10-10:45 聽Luke Tyhurst – Rykos: Interactive Problem Solving for the Modern World 11-11:45 聽Julie O’Hara – The Effects of Elite Discourses on Secessionist Movements 12-12:45 聽Ingrid Helgestad – The Evolution of a Novel Medical Device: Solving the Problem of Unplanned Extubations in ICUs 1-1:45 p.m. 聽Jessica Morris – Evaluating Variations in Soil Composition Among Enclosures at the Little Rock Zoo 2-2:45 p.m. 聽Nicole Ursin – Understanding Museum Demographics: Historic Arkansas Museum Wednesday, May 8 12-12:45 聽Willow Moyer – Gibbs Elementary Website Project and Web Portfolio 1-1:45 聽Alex Palmer – Medical Marijuana and Federalism 3-3:45 聽Grishma KC – Characterization of a Novel Multi-Copper Cyanobacterial Laccase 4-4:45 聽Taemora Williams – Grassroots Fundraising: A Sustainable Development Plan for Partners in Knowledge Thursday, May 9 9-9:45 a.m. 聽Mirah Dievernich – Cell Phone Use in the Neonatal 聽Intensive Care Unit 10-10:45 a.m. Abigail Resendiz – Vascugenix Business Plan: Bringing a Medical Device to Market 11-11:45 a.m. Maxwell Campbell – Potential Impacts of Endocrine Disrupting Compounds on the Fourche Creek Ecosystem 12-12:45 p.m. 聽Arooba Ilyas – Purification of Water Using Different Adsorbents 3-3:45 p.m. 聽Tyler Maxwell – De Novo Biosynthesis of Resveratrol in Metabolically-Engineered Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803  ]]> Ursin named 2019 Edward L. Whitbeck Memorial Award Winner /news-archive/2019/04/25/ursin-2019-edward-whitbeck-winner/ Thu, 25 Apr 2019 18:04:07 +0000 /news/?p=74121 ... Ursin named 2019 Edward L. Whitbeck Memorial Award Winner]]> A Donaghey Scholar who is passionate about preserving and sharing history through her work at museums has been chosen as this year鈥檚 recipient of the Edward L. Whitbeck Memorial Award at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.聽 Nicole Ursin, 21, of Batesville, has earned a 4.0 GPA while double majoring in anthropology and history with a minor in nonprofit leadership studies, all while working at nine different museums and historical organizations throughout her college career. The Whitbeck Memorial Award is the single greatest distinction the university annually bestows on a graduating student through a competitive application process that comes with a $2,000 prize. Ursin will receive the award during a luncheon beginning at 11:30 a.m. Friday, May 10, at the Clinton Presidential Center Great Hall in Little Rock. In the fall, Ursin will begin a dual master鈥檚 degree program in applied anthropology and historic preservation at the University of Maryland. Once her education is complete, she would like to continue her historic preservation and education work at a museum and consult for communities that want to 聽increase tourism based on historical sites. When she started college in 2015, Ursin looked to 糖心Vlog传媒 Little for an affordable, in-state education the provided her access to museums and culture in the heart of the capital city. She was also accepted into the prestigious Donaghey Scholars program, which provides tuition, fees, an on-campus housing subsidy, and a yearly stipend for up to four years, as well as financial assistance toward a Study Abroad program and a computer. 鈥淚 wanted to stay in Arkansas for the affordability of staying in state, but I also wanted to be in Little Rock where I would be at the center of where things are happening in heritage and culture,鈥 Ursin said. 鈥淚 wanted to work and intern at museums and historical organizations, and being a part of the Donaghey Scholars helped me get the liberal arts education that I wanted.鈥 During her study abroad experience, Ursin interned at the N谩rodn铆 (National) Museum in the Czech Republic. She preserved historic human remains from medieval times as well as worked in the N谩prstek Museum of Asian, African and Native American Cultures. 鈥淚 even got to piece together a human skull that was broken into fragments,鈥 she said. In Little Rock, Ursin has interned the National Archives and Records Administration, the Center for Arkansas History and Culture, and the Clinton Foundation. For the past two years, she has worked at the Historic Arkansas Museum, where she researched the factors that drive museum audience demographics and diversity. Throughout her internships, she has developed educational materials for the Clinton Presidential Center鈥檚 traveling exhibits and photographed and rehoused museum artifacts from President Bill Clinton鈥檚 administration. She also created an online exhibit about the life of, the vice principal for girls at Little Rock Central High School who was responsible for protecting the six female members of the Little Rock Nine. Ursin loves the opportunity to bring history to life for people to better understand the past. During her last two years with the Historic Arkansas Museum, she has learned some invaluable 19th-century skills like candle making and butter churning, to the delight of visiting children.
Nicole Ursin, the 2019 Whitbeck award winner, has worked at the Arkansas Historic Museum for two years. Photo by Benjamin Krain.

Nicole Ursin, the 2019 Whitbeck award winner, has worked at the Arkansas Historic Museum for two years. Photo by Benjamin Krain.

鈥淚 love my time at the Historic Arkansas Museum,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 have learned the most and been given the most opportunities to work in different parts of the museum. I am on the education staff, so I help coordinate programs and give historic tours. Recently, I coordinated the museum鈥檚 spring break week activities where we do a lot of living history demonstrations. We show people how to do historic cooking and laundry, candle making, butter churning, and a printing press. Kids usually love to make butter. People often don鈥檛 understand how much of a chore it would be to do these activities back in the 1840s.鈥 聽 Additionally, Ursin has volunteered at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock鈥檚 Sequoyah National Research Center, the Quapaw Quarter Association, and the Old Independence Regional Museum in Batesville. She has curated a permanent exhibit panel about school in early Arkansas, helped develop a database of Arkansas obituaries from newspaper records, and researched historic buildings in Arkansas to aid in historic preservation. On the anthropology side, Ursin put her skills to use by studying an immigrant community of Micronesians living in Corsicana, Texas. Along with her mentor, Dr. Juliana Flinn, professor of anthropology and gender studies, she has visited Corsicana on multiple occasions to meet with community leaders and longtime residents to learn about daily life in the community. 鈥淚 think one of the most interesting components of the research is how much the immigrants are working to preserve their culture while maintaining a deep connection by visiting the island, sending money back to relatives, and staying active in politics,鈥 Ursin said. 鈥淭hey are really trying hard to preserve their culture and share their culture in Texas.鈥 The 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Faculty Senate Honors and Awards Committee selects the Whitbeck scholar based on t citizenship, scholarship, and leadership. Frank L. and Beverly Whitbeck established the award in memory of their son, Edward Lynn Whitbeck, who was a senior at Little Rock University, the predecessor of 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock, at the time of his death in 1965. Each scholar receives a personalized plaque and a monetary award and will lead the graduating students during the academic processional at spring graduation on May 11.]]>
Signature Experience Award recipient studies life, growth, and challenges in Texas immigrant community /news-archive/2019/04/11/ursin/ Thu, 11 Apr 2019 20:13:08 +0000 /news/?p=73994 ... Signature Experience Award recipient studies life, growth, and challenges in Texas immigrant community]]> Since last fall,聽Nicole Ursin, a senior anthropology major at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, has been conducting original research on the immigrants. She is able to do the research聽as one of more than 100 undergraduates who received a $1,000 grant to conduct research as part of 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock鈥檚 Signature Experience Award Program. Since beginning her research, Ursin has visited Corsicana on multiple occasions to meet with community leaders and other longtime residents to learn about daily life in the community and why it has continued to grow. 鈥淢ost choose to stay because Corsicana is a small, quiet town that doesn鈥檛 have all the rush and stress of a big city. The Federated States of Micronesia also has an agreement with the United States where its citizens are allowed to live and work in the U.S. indefinitely,鈥 she said. Ursin is also looking into the unique challenges they face in their community, as well as how issues from their home islands over 11,000 miles away continue to affect them. 鈥淢icronesia was just hit by a major tropical storm a few weeks ago, which devastated much of the islands鈥 crops by flooding them with seawater,鈥 Ursin said. “Since then, it鈥檚 been more difficult for Corsicana residents to access imported staple foods like taro and breadfruit. The Corsicana community has been working to raise funds to send rice back to their home islands.鈥 Ursin credits her faculty mentor with introducing her to the Corsicana community and providing her with access to community leaders. 鈥淭he man who currently leads the community is one of Dr. Juliana Flinn鈥檚 former students, and we鈥檝e both been welcomed into it because of that,鈥 Ursin said. Throughout this process, Ursin herself has also gained valuable practical experience in anthropology. 鈥淚n the early stages of this project, I learned from Dr. Flinn the basics of proper anthropological field work. I鈥檝e done anthropological work in museums before but actual field work was completely unknown to me, and I鈥檓 very thankful that Dr. Flinn was there with me to show me exactly what to do,鈥 Ursin said. After finishing her research, Ursin hopes the lessons she has learned from doing the research and the experiences in the field will land her a career in anthropology. 鈥淢y interest overall isn鈥檛 just in Micronesia but in transnationalism and community development overall,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his research is helping me further understanding how a community develops in one specific area, why people stay, and how a city can help these communities that grow within them thrive.鈥 Overall, Ursin is thankful for the experience she gained from the Signature Experience Award program and encourages other students to look into the program. 鈥淚f you have a solid project in mind and a good mentor, you should definitely do it,鈥 Ursin said. 鈥淥n my own I couldn鈥檛 have gone to Texas and met all these people or know what to do when I met them. It鈥檚 an experience I鈥檒l remember for a long time.鈥 Ursin will be a member of a research panel discussion where she will discuss her research at the Undergraduate Research and Creative Works Expo on Thursday, April 18.]]> Signature Experience Award to fund student鈥檚 travel to conference in Philadelphia /news-archive/2018/03/27/signature-experience-award-fund-students-travel-conference-philadelphia/ Tue, 27 Mar 2018 15:59:49 +0000 /news/?p=69904 ... Signature Experience Award to fund student鈥檚 travel to conference in Philadelphia]]> Thanks to her Signature Experience Award, Nicole Ursin, a junior double majoring in history and anthropology, will present her research at the Society for Applied Anthropology Conference in Philadelphia, April 3-7. During the fall 2017 semester, Ursin was one of 79 University of Arkansas at Little Rock students to be awarded $1,000 from Chancellor Andrew Rogerson鈥檚 undergraduate research grant program to offset costs for a one-semester project or experience in research or creative works. 鈥淭he Signature Experience Awards are allowing students to achieve more with their academic research,鈥 Ursin said. 鈥淚 would not have been able to afford this trip to Philadelphia without it.鈥 With a financial burden lifted, Ursin was able to focus on her conference presentation and the progression of her project, 鈥淯nderstanding Museum Demographics: Historic Arkansas Museum.鈥 鈥淚鈥檝e interned and worked in museums for the past three years,鈥 Ursin said. 鈥淢y goal was to do a project that showed the complexities of museums and addressed one of the problems that museums are facing.鈥 Through her research, Ursin found that most museums design exhibits and programs to 聽attract diverse audiences, but in reality, typically draw crowds of little demographic diversity. To understand why this happens, Ursin began investigating the demographics of museum visitors in Little Rock. 鈥淭o reach diverse audiences, museums must first understand the factors driving the demographics they presently represent,鈥 she said. During the summer of 2017, Ursin begin collecting data from visitors and employees at Historic Arkansas Museum. She later analyzed her findings, interviewed museum professionals, and researched the racial issues concerning museums. Finally, she sought to develop a definition of diversity that would be applicable to Arkansas museums. 鈥淭his project has strengthened my interest in museum anthropology and has made me more interested in how museums can diversify their exhibits and audiences,鈥 Ursin said. Ursin鈥檚 project is a direct reflection of a suggestion proposed by the American Association of Museums in 2010 that promoted fieldwork that would contribute to tourism and heritage studies in America. 聽聽 Ursin is currently in the final stages of her project, composing a detailed write-up of her work for local museum professionals, which she will present at the conference, as well as drafting an article for publication in anthropology or museum study journals. After graduating from 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock in 2019, Ursin plans to pursue a master鈥檚 degree in museum anthropology, and afterward, work for a museum. ]]> 7 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students receive research fellowships /news-archive/2018/01/22/surf-fellowships/ Mon, 22 Jan 2018 20:40:11 +0000 /news/?p=69047 ... 7 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students receive research fellowships]]> Seven 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students have received聽a prestigious Student Undergraduate Research Fellowships from the Arkansas Department of Higher Education to conduct research. The Student Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) program provides up to $2,750 to undergraduate students and their mentors to conduct in-depth research projects in their specific fields of study with the assistance of faculty mentors. To be eligible, all fellowship recipients have a minimum grade-point average of 3.25, at least 30 hours of credit toward a degree, and support of a faculty mentor. Funds also are provided for students to travel to conferences to present their accomplishments. Students from all academic disciplines were encouraged to apply. 鈥淩esearch is the foundation of every great discovery, and the only way to prepare students for advanced research at the graduate level is to prepare them as undergraduates,鈥 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Chancellor Andrew Rogerson said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so important for our students to learn best practices under the guidance of faculty mentors so they are prepared for more rigorous research as graduate students and as professionals.鈥 The 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock fellows include the following:
  • Saiyeeda F. Hossain of Pine Bluff, a double major in sociology and psychology, received 聽$2,750 to research 鈥淧ersonality and Depressive Disorder of College Students: A Focus on Undergraduate Students at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock.鈥 Saiyeeda鈥檚 faculty mentor is Dr. Neveen Shafeek Amin in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology.
  • Dylan Wright of Little Rock, a Spanish and political science double major, received $2,000 to study LGBTQ rights and research 鈥淐ritical Film Perspectives in the Argentine Queer Community.鈥 His faculty sponsor is Dr. Erin Finzer in the Department of World Languages.
  • Jesse Horton of Marshall, a criminal justice major, received $2,125 to research the 鈥淚mpact of County-level Economic Disadvantage on Juvenile Case Dispositions in Arkansas.鈥 His faculty sponsor is Dr. Molly Smith in Criminal Justice.
  • Nicole Ursin of Batesville, a Donaghey Scholar who is majoring in history and anthropology, received $2,125 for her research project, 鈥淯nderstanding Museum Demographics: Historic Arkansas Museum.鈥 Her sponsor is Dr. Juliana Flinn in the Anthropology Department.
  • Trye Price of Benton, a criminal justice major, received $2,125 to research 鈥淚nfluence of Location and Client Characteristics on Perceived Violence Among Victims of Human Trafficking.鈥 His faculty sponsor is Dr. Molly Smith in Criminal Justice.
  • Olivia Pate of Jonesboro, a geology and math major, received $2,750 to research her project 鈥淩efining the Sol-Gel Synthesis of Intermediate Composition, Nano-Scale Olivine.鈥 Her faculty sponsor is Dr. Michael T. DeAngelis in the Department of Earth Sciences.
  • Patrick Elliott of Little Rock, an electrical and systems engineering major, received $2,750 to research 鈥淓ffective Real-Time Energy Management in a Southern US Power Grid.鈥 His faculty sponsor is 聽Dr. Kamran Iqbal in the Department of Systems Engineering.
The students will complete their research in the spring 2018 semester, and six of the students who also received Signature Experience Awards will exhibit their work at the Student Research and Creative Works Showcase on April 12 in the Jack Stephens Center.        ]]>