I got the opportunity to serve as a peer mentor for the 2018 Society of Toxicology annual meeting that was being held in San Antonio, Texas thanks to the travel grant offered by Charles River Laboratories. I was offered the position for the peer mentorship because I have a major in toxicology and I was an Undergraduate Diversity Program Awards recipient for the 2017 meeting in Baltimore. My role as a mentor was to offer guidance and to answer any particular questions regarding the profession, speaking from personal experiences in my collegiate career thus far. I also helped engage the students in discussion about particular prompts and encouraged them to participate in the presentations that were being held. Aside from the peer mentorship, I got the chance to experience the ToxExpo and to speak to prospective employers about future careers. Overall, I was very excited to have the chance to go to the conference again and meet up with some people that I befriended from the previous year. Also, I cannot thank Charles River Laboratories enough for giving me another chance to experience the SOT meeting.
Monday, April 30, 2018
Charles River supports Toxicology major's travel to national meeting
Last spring Toxicology and Environmental Science double major Luke Knight received a travel award from the Society of Toxicology to attend the Undergraduate Diversity program at the annual meeting in Baltimore, Maryland. Luke was invited to attend this year's meeting in San Antonio and serve as peer-mentor for that same program. Our local industry partner, Charles River Laboratories, supported Luke's travel and he sent in this report and some photos.
Labels:
environmental science,
student news,
toxicology
Monday, April 2, 2018
Ashland Science students heading to summer internships
We are starting to get news from our students about the exciting internships they will take part in this summer. These opportunities range from internships in animal rehabilitation at the Possumwood Acres Wildlife Sanctuary in North Carolina, to more local internships in toxicology at the Lubrizol Corporation, in entomology at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, and with the Gorman Nature Center.
A student will also be heading to Central Michigan University to take part in a National Science Foundation funded research internship in Great Lakes ecosystem ecology while two others will be staying right here in the Kettering Science Center working on research using the zebrafish to study lens cataracts and blindness.
Stay tuned for more student internships news, and reports back from students at the end of the summer.
A student will also be heading to Central Michigan University to take part in a National Science Foundation funded research internship in Great Lakes ecosystem ecology while two others will be staying right here in the Kettering Science Center working on research using the zebrafish to study lens cataracts and blindness.
Stay tuned for more student internships news, and reports back from students at the end of the summer.
Labels:
directed research,
environmental science,
student news,
Summer research internships,
toxicology,
wildlife
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