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November 3,
2004:
Thesis
Research on a Global Scale
By Katherine Reilly ’05
For the Class of 2005, the new school year brought conversations
about staying on pace to complete the senior thesis. Students who
had begun chapters intimidated those who only had found advisers.
Classmates with vague notions of a topic were reassured by friends
resolutely avoiding the issue. As students unpacked suitcases and
hung posters in their last rooms at Princeton, they began to develop
the bonds of the University’s thesis tradition.
By September, the thesis journey had already taken some students
around the world, on Princeton’s dime. Woodrow Wilson School
major Katy Glenn ’05 received $6,500 from the school to spend
the summer in Argentina, visiting human-rights groups, combing through
libraries, and conducting interviews to explore genocide committed
against political minorities during the country’s “Dirty
War.” For the Georgia native, living among the people she
would write about was invaluable. “My unofficial research
started when I realized that Buenos Aires taxi drivers really like
to talk, and sometimes have interesting insights on the dictatorship,”
she said. “I ended up explaining my research every time I
took a taxi, and then listening to the driver’s opinion as
we made our way through traffic.”
Civil and environmental engineering student Kyle Meng ’05
used his $5,000 University grant to study levels of carbon dioxide
emissions in China. “This trip was an essential part of my
thesis from the very beginning,” Meng said of his field work.
Because of changes in Chinese industry, and stonewalling on the
part of the government, “there really isn’t a central
source for this kind of data in China.” The research Meng
conducted will be put to use when he explores whether China could
implement an environmentally safe system to capture emissions and
store them underground.
Meredythe Ryan ’05 also went abroad in the hopes her thesis
might offer suggestions for progress. The Woodrow Wilson School
major plans to recommend how the Kosovar justice system can transition
from United Nations supervision to independence. Living in Pristina
on the $4,000 she received from the Wilson School and the Dean of
the College, Ryan observed the trials of war criminals and organized-crime
magnates. She also talked to the people helping to make the transition
happen. “It was so bizarre to me that they are not citizens
of anywhere,” she said. “They have no passports, no
rights … But most people are open and honest and willing to
talk about the problems of their society and what needs to happen
to make it better.”
Though some Princeton seniors spent their summers globetrotting,
others conducted thesis research within the confines of FitzRandolph
Gate. Since its formation in the early 1980’s, the molecular
biology department has asked rising seniors to remain on campus
for the summer, beginning work in labs. Affectionately dubbed “MOL
camp” by students, the program is designed to expose seniors
to a laboratory environment and allow them to collect meaningful
results. Senior Jon Rosen got a head start exploring pancreas development
in zebra fish, the topic of his thesis. “Given how slowly
the data can come, I can’t imagine being able to write a thesis
without those extra months,” he said. Rosen’s advisor,
Rebecca Burdine, stressed the importance of the summer experience
for her students, saying, “It gives them the ability to really
do research on an intense daily basis.”
Summer in Princeton wasn’t all laboratory time for the molecular
biology students. Alison Gammie, a lecturer in the department, helped
to organize a faculty forum for professors to present their research,
as well as weekly student discussion groups and an end-of-summer
project presentation. Students took it upon themselves to set up
social events, including dinners and ice-cream outings at the Halo
Pub. Senior Ann Raldow studied virus advancement over the summer
but found what happened outside of her lab just as exciting. “I
made a lot of new friends this summer – friends from my department
– which was really nice,” she said.
Whether they began their work in Princeton’s labs or on research
expeditions to far away places, seniors almost certainly will end
up in the same places as thesis deadlines approach. The University’s
basement computer clusters, Firestone study carrels, and Frist dining
tables will be populated by weary seniors come springtime. For now,
the Class of 2005 can share stories of summer work and race to complete
preparations, aware that the hard part of this senior thesis tradition
is yet to come.
Katherine Reilly, a Woodrow Wilson School major from Short
Hills, N.J., can be reached at kcreilly@princeton.edu.
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