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What students, faculty, and recent graduates say about Chemistry at Principia.
"It got to be about
one o'clock in the morning, but the professor was there helping me. . . . we
were working together."
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"Everything we do relates to chemistry"
"Chemistry is a big part of our lives," says a senior environmental
chemistry major. "Everything we do relates to chemistry, and many things that
we use are chemical; so, I figured that if I wanted to be environmentally
conscious, I had to know about chemistry." One recent graduate, a chemistry
and world perspectives double major, says, "Chemistry is involved in
everything, and so is politics; they've got to overlap somewhere. The overall
effect of my combining those two majors is that I feel confident I can handle
whatever my grad school professors ask of me, whether it is working in the
lab . . . or analyzing and writing up my results to eventually have published
in a journal." A professor points out, "Chemistry is a neat place to
be, because there is a lot going on. Acid rain, global warming, ozone layer
depletion, nuclear energy, nuclear-waste disposal, hazardous waste; the list
goes on and on."
Small classes yield opportunity
"I've been really inspired by the creativity expressed by the faculty in the
classroom setting, because chemistry was so dry in high school. Chemistry is a
lot more fun in college," says a senior chemistry major, who didn't like
chemistry at all in high school. She will attend UC-Berkeley on full fellowship
to study environmental engineering. "Due to the small class sizes at
Principia you're encouraged to speak up, ask questions. There's a lot more
interaction with the professors and opportunities to talk," says a recent
graduate. "I was a graduate assistant at [a state university], and I taught
groups of 250 people. My organic chemistry class at Prin had six people. I got
used to interacting with professors one-on-one, and it got me used to expressing
my ideas clearly when discussing things back and forth. I think that was really
valuable, and it's certainly been a real keystone for my career and my success
in grad school." A professor adds that the experience with student
presentations will help not only in graduate school but also in the chemical
industry as chemists share their findings with co-workers.
New science center
Principia's new science center, open for classes in fall 1997, has four chemistry
labs. A professor explains, "We have a general lab, particularly for our
non-majors and intro-level courses; an organic lab, with 11 hoods for experiments;
an instrumental lab, which has modern instrumentation including a new ultraviolet
visible spectrophotometer; and a senior/research lab for longer-term student
projects. And we will continue to use the campus as a laboratory. . . ."
A senior points out, "We do a lot of work on campus outside of the lab
setting. We learn how to test water and soil, for instance, to see how the
systems are affected by chemicals."
Environmental chemistry track
"Most of the major environmental issues that we are concerned with involve
chemistry. An example might be global warming," says a professor.
"Environmental chemistry is using chemistry to understand some of those big
issues." A junior environmental chemistry major says, "I'm interested
in looking at chemicals in the environment and learning how to deal with those
chemicals and finding solutions to pollution." Another professor says that
environmental chemistry is "a track of the chemistry major, rather than a
completely different thing. . . . Also, we've taken some of the physical
chemistry out of environmental chemistry and put in some biology, environmental
science, and earth science courses." A senior says, "The environmental
chemistry major has given me a deeper perspective of how chemicals can be used
for the good of humanity, not just for polluting our environment. We always hear
about pesticides degrading the environment or CFCs destroying the ozone layer.
But in the Chemistry Department at Principia we seem to focus more on what good
we can do with chemicals."
Dedication, discipline, and support
"It takes a lot of dedication, just like other sciences. It takes
memorization . . . and a willingness to dive into the subject and really
understand it," says a senior environmental chemistry major. "Our
chemistry students are working four or five hours a night, and that's challenging
to them, being so disciplined while many of their friends might have less
homework," says another professor. "It's a rigorous major." A
junior adds, "It's not an easy major, but being at a small college, there's
a lot of interaction between students and professors. . . . The major has taught
me, among other things, persistence. I really saw that in a project I was doing
involving infrared spectroscopy. It took me five or six times to get the sample
just right. It got to be about one o'clock in the morning, but the professor was
there helping me . . . we were working together."
Diversity of applications
A recent graduate now studying at Lamar University says, "The research I'm
doing now in photonics will be very important to the construction of the next
generation of computers. While I'm officially in the chemistry program, my
research really includes physics, mathematics, and electronics as well."
Another recent chemistry graduate is studying agronomy at the University of
Maryland. As far as jobs after graduation go, "There are tons of them,"
says a professor. "Traditional jobs working for an oil or chemical company,
like Amoco or Kodak, running samples, developing techniques; you could do
wildlife sampling, water-quality sampling; you could do air sampling for the
EPA. There are lots of environmental companies springing up right now; or you
could work for a small consulting company or a government agency."
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