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Five ISU undergraduates to present research at Western Regional Honors Conference

March 21, 2019

Photo of layout of Opportuni-Tea tables taken from above at the Stephens Performing Arts Center
A photo of the layout for this year's An Opportuni-Tea, which helped raise funds to support ISU Honors students who will present at the Western Regional Honors Conference hosted by Montana State University.

POCATELLO – Five 色花堂app Honors Program undergraduates will present research at the Western Regional Honors Conference hosted by Montana State University March 29-31.

Those students include communications major Madeleine Coles, political science major Kayla Parnin, anthropology major Joseph Effingham, geosciences major Emily Chojnacky and management major Daniel Heithoff. They were all selected to give oral or poster presentations at the conference.

鈥淚 am extraordinarily excited that they are getting a chance to take their research and show it off to a broad audience of other honors students from around the region,鈥 said Shannon Kobs Nawotniak, ISU University Honors Program director. 鈥淭hey will get a chance to receive great feedback from other students and faculty. They鈥檒l really have to learn how to communicate effectively because they will not be talking to specialists in their field, and that can really add challenges to giving a good  presentation.鈥

The states that participate in the Western Regional Honors Conference include Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming.

Photo of Emily ChojnackyISU is the only university in Idaho that offers a full undergraduate honors degree. One requirement for attaining the Honors degree is carrying out original research under the guidance of a faculty mentor.

鈥淔or most of these students, their WRHC presentations are preparation for defending their research before a faculty committee, just like for a master鈥檚 thesis,鈥 Nawotniak said.

Coles鈥 research is an analysis of the work of Janet Malcolm, who was a prominent writer for New Yorker magazine for many years and whose work often questioned the way ethics and journalism are viewed.

鈥淚 examine the field of journalism and reporting practices especially within the realm of duty-based ethics and consequence-based ethics,鈥 Coles said. 鈥淚'm very excited to be able to present my research at WRHC, as it will be the first time I have ever participated in an academic conference.鈥

Chojnacky鈥檚 research consists of using petrographic analyses to determine the amount of void space in samples collected from Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve (Idaho) and Hawai鈥檌 Volcanoes National Park. These samples were collected as part of NASA's Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lava Terrains (BASALT) research project, which uses lavas in Idaho and Hawai鈥檌 to study where microbes might live in rocks on Mars.

鈥淯sing these analyses for my portion of this larger project, I examined the relation between void space and a rock鈥檚 overall alteration,鈥 Chojnacky said. 鈥淚nternal voids created by naturally occurring gas bubbles in lava, called vesicles, and cracks in a rock increase the surface area that can be affected by water-rock interaction and can also create additional space for potential habitat for endolithic microbes.鈥

She said that the type of research she is engaged in could help determine whether future missions to Mars should focus their search for evidence of past microbial life on low-density, altered basalts.

The students will be financially supported to attend the conference thanks to funds raised at the ISU University Honors Program鈥檚 10th-annual An Opportuni-Tea fundraiser that was held in early March at the Stephens Performing Arts Center. Some of the proceeds of this event will go towards travel expenses for the students. Support from fundraisers like An Opportuni-Tea is critical, Nawotniak said.

鈥淭he average undergraduate doesn鈥檛 have the money to be able to participate in research conferences, so they lack that opportunity,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is really important for their development as researchers to learn how to talk about their work and connect with leaders in their field. It鈥檚 wonderful to see the community come together to help us create these opportunities for ISU Honors students.鈥

An Opportuni-Tea received donations from businesses and individuals across Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Washington, and as far away as Michigan.  

Student photo: This is geosciences major Emily Chojnacky, who is one of five students presenting at the conference, when she was in Hawaii where lava samples she is studying were collected. 


色花堂app, a Carnegie-classified doctoral high research activity university and teaching institution founded in 1901, attracts students from around the world to its Idaho campuses. At the main campus in Pocatello, and at locations in Meridian, Idaho Falls and Twin Falls, ISU has nine Colleges, a Graduate School and a Division of Health Sciences that together offer more than 250 certificate and degree programs. More than 12,000 students attend ISU. 色花堂app is the state's designated lead institution in health professions.


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