Miami University emphasizes undergraduate research as a core part of the student experience and it’s a mission that goes much deeper than the Undergraduate Research Forum itself, which is merely the university’s largest and most visible student research event. Because students here have many ways to get involved.
The First Year Research Experience (FYRE) program, for example, is designed to jump-start student involvement in research and inquiry almost as soon as they set foot on campus. And the Undergraduate Summer Scholars program for sophomores and juniors provides approximately 100 slots for a nine-week mentored research experience.
Students are also encouraged to reach out to faculty directly, to inquire about any projects that may align with their interests. Whatever they may be. Which is precisely how Camryn McClelland, a Zoology and Sustainability major, got involved.
“I personally have just really liked moths for a long time,” McClelland said. “And I had Dr. David Russell for a bio course my freshman year. He mentioned that he was doing moth research, and I was like, ‘Oh my god. I need to get in that lab!’”
McClelland’s project at the forum focused on the biomass decline of flying insect populations, and it was just one of over 200 presentations that featured the accomplishments of more than 345 undergraduate students.
However, if you count all the students who are engaged in one-to-one research projects with faculty across campus, that number jumps to around 2,000.
But even still, this is “just the tip of the iceberg,” Fernandes said. Because when you consider courses that engage students in the process of research, nearly 12,000 enrollments were identified in the 2022-23 academic year that also leverage research-based work in some way.