Showing posts with label Undergraduate of the Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Undergraduate of the Month. Show all posts

Monday, November 30, 2015

December Undergraduate of the Month: Shannon Corrigan

Full Name: Shannon Corrigan

Background: 

1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
I am working on an undergraduate degree in Geography with a track in development and sustainability.

2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
Through my program track I have mainly focused on international development and foreign aid  in my studies.

3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
During my college career I have kept up with numerous volunteer organizations to continue giving back to my community and also participated in three internships to round out my learning. Volunteering has always been something I enjoyed and this year I have the opportunity to sit on the executive board for Colleges Against Cancer and help plan our campuses’ Relay for Life event this spring. While volunteering helped me get to know the UMD community and the surrounding area my internships have rounded out my studies and aided in understanding the path I can take with my degree. I had an internship with NOAA, where I worked to update maps to their new software system, Bentley V8i. Next, I took a brand ambassador marketing internship with Bobby’s Burger Palace to better understand the media and public image of a business. Currently, I am participating in an internship through a Department of Defense grant with the Center for International Development and Conflict Management.

4) Where you are from?
I am from Frederick, MD  

Internship:

1) Where you are interning?
I am interning at the University of Maryland with the Center for International Development and Conflict Management and remotely with AidData at the College of William & Mary.

2) What are your internship responsibilities?
I started the internship in June and my responsibilities have progressed to take on more of a leadership role. During the summer we had two research assistants from AidData come up from William & Mary to oversee our work. The research assistants were split into different teams to work on georeferencing aid projects in different sets of countries. My team worked on Libya, Sudan, South Sudan, Liberia, and Chad. Due to my georeferencing quality I became an arbitrator for our group, which meant that when the two research assistants coded it (double blind code) they assigned a different precision code to the aid project. As the summer progressed we began to learn the history, politics, geography, and administrative divisions of the countries to provide the best precision codes. Once the semester started the senior research assistants had to head back and another arbitrator and I worked to fill their roles with our teams. The datasets for the countries we have worked on are in their final stages.

3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
From the data coded in the internship I have been working on analytical blog posts for Nepal and most of the countries on the Northern Africa boundary and a country profile of Burundi. The grant project is about aid resilience in conflict, so we have utilized conflict datasets from SCAD, ACLED, and UCDPGED and worked with the aid datasets we coded to look at them individually and then compare temporally. 

4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
To best understand the relationship between the aid projects and conflict events in the country we create maps from the datasets to display the data together. Most of the students in the program are not geography students, so I have worked with them and pulled in volunteers from Geography Club to aid in the map making. The geography students and I have also worked to explain the geography of the country to aid in the analysis of the events and projects disbursement.

5) What are your career goals after your graduate?

After I graduate I hope to pursue my master’s degree and then work for USAID, the U.S. State Department, or the United Nations. 

Thursday, October 1, 2015

October Undergraduate of the Month: Christopher Vaillancourt

Christopher Vaillancourt
1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
I am currently working on a major in GIS and Computer Cartography, with a minor in General Business and Philosophy.
2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
I'm extremely interested in LiDAR and 3-D modeling.
3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
I'm currently a GIS intern at the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) where I've been since this past summer. I'm also a brother and executive board member of Alpha Phi Omega, a co-ed service fraternity, where I have helped coordinate and lead a variety of service projects that take place both on campus and in the D.C. metropolitan area.
4) Where you are from (optional)?
White Hall, Maryland
Internship:
1) Where you are interning?
The National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), where I have been since this past summer.
2) What are your internship responsibilities?
As a GIS intern at START, I'm responsible for aiding in the research and analysis of terrorist and extremist activities that take place all over the world. At START I'm a part of a larger GIS team who, as a whole, works on a variety of projects that incorporate research and data gathered by other teams at START.
3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
Currently I am working on a project that's investigating terrorist movements through migration routes throughout the world. I'm also working on a personal project that's investigating the effects of drought on extremist activities in Africa.
4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
My current GIS internship has enabled me to apply the skills that I've learned in the classroom to real world problems. Although my classes have provided me with fundamental skills, it has been my internship that has facilitated the most growth in my analytical skills.
5) What are your career goals after your graduate?
Following my graduation I hope to move west and to work in consulting.

Monday, August 31, 2015

September Undergraduate of the Month:Bronwen Schriml

Full Name: Bronwen Schriml

1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
Majors: Geographical Sciences and Government & Politics

2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
Geographical Sciences – Human Geography and International Development, Government & Politics – International Relations

3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
My previous internships include the Mayor of Chicago Federal Affairs Office, Frederick County Circuit Court Head Administrative Judge G. Edward Dwyer Jr., and Maryland General Assembly Page Program. I have been volunteering with Special Olympics since the age of six, specifically volunteering at the annual Polar Bear Plunge and Summer Games.

4) Where you are from (optional)?
Born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada but raised in Frederick, MD, USA.

Internship:

1) Where you are interning?
Embassy of Canada, Permanent Mission of Canada to the Organization of American States.

2) What are your internship responsibilities?
My main task while working at the Mission this past summer was to attend and report on meetings. As an intern I attended OAS committee meetings, permanent council sessions, and think tank events that pertain to Latin America, the Caribbean, South America, and Canada. For the meetings and think tank events I wrote reports to be circulated within our mission and Ottawa related offices. My Inter-American Congress on Tourism report was circulated to Industry Canada. Often I would collaborate with officers in my office and other interns in the Embassy if the topic had wide interest. Other tasks I performed included composing week in previews for upcoming events, hosting diplomats and representatives from the OAS, and creating a networking event for the other interns at the Embassy.

3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
I assisted my office’s development officers prepare for the annual Pan-American Health Organization conference and research previous resolutions to prepare for the meeting. Major issues I have covered this summer include the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Trade Promotion Authority, the Dominican Republic - Haiti border migration dispute, the possible violation of human rights occurring in the Dominican Republic, and the Guatemalan corruption scandal. I was also fortunate to be a part of the Canadian Delegation (as pictured above) to this year’s General Assembly which was held at OAS headquarters in Washington D.C. I was tasked with attending major sessions and taking notes to send to the officers and our Representative, Minister of State Lynne Yelich, throughout the conference.

4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
My internship experience was relevant to my Studies in Geographical Sciences because of the subjects I covered in the reports I wrote and were discussed in meetings I was able to attend at the OAS and various think tank events. My focus within my major of Geographical Sciences is sustainability and development, the more human geography focused specialty of the major. Additionally, two of the pillars of the OAS are development and human rights. I was able to research and analyze old reports, meeting sessions, and attend a multitude of think tank events on the development of Latin America, the Caribbean, South America, and the specific countries of Colombia and Brazil. I was able to directly apply the terminology, theories, and concepts I have learned thus far to the subject I was working on.

5) What are your career goals after you graduate?
After I graduate, I plan to attend graduate school for a masters or PhD in Human Geography. My career goals are to work in the field of international development and diplomacy, either through the Canadian Foreign Service or U.S. State Department.  

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

August Undergraduate of the Month: Ricardo Aguilar

Ricardo Aguilar
Full Name: Ricardo Aguilar
1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
I am currently working towards a bachelor’s degree in Geographical Sciences with a concentration in Geographic Information Systems.
2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
I want to gain knowledge and the critical thinking skill needed to contribute to research on the underlying factors of climate change in order to allow society to make better environmental decisions.
3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
During the spring of 2015, I worked as a teaching assistant for Dr. Naijun Zhou. I was one of the TAs for Introduction to Geographical Information System.
4) Where you are from (optional)?
I was born in El Salvador, and currently living in Silver Spring, MD
Internship:
1) Where you are interning?
I am currently an intern at the lab run by Dr. Matthew Hansen and his team.
2) What are your internship responsibilities?
My task on the lab is to visually analyze samples to see if there was a change in land use or land cover.
3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
I am currently helping with image interpretation for a project which aims to map forest loss caused by fires. And in the past weeks I helped with image interpretation for a project aimed to map bare ground globally. In addition, I contributed with an accuracy assessment of the deforestation maps generated by the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research (Amazon Deforestation Monitoring Project or PRODES map) and the University of Maryland Global Forest Watch (GFW map).
4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
Working on research with this data is something that has inspire me to continue my studies within the fields of remote sensing. The internship has allowed me to put the knowledge that I gained in the classroom and as a teaching assistant to use in a research environment.
5) What are your career goals after your graduate?
After I graduate I want to complete a doctorate program in remote sensing. My long term career goal as a geographical scientist is to obtain a job at an organization that would allow me to conduct my own research about the environment while using my skills as a geographer.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

July Undergraduate Student of the Month: Chima Okpa

Full Name: Chima Okpa
Background: 
1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
I am currently completing a degree in Geographic Information Systems with a focus in international and sustainable development.
2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
My interests include utilizing GIS to map locations for sustainable development programs in developing regions. I am also interested in how individuals from rural communities in developing countries respond to the introduction of progressive structures in their environment.
3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
I interned with WindAid Institute, an NGO that works in the renewable energy sector, designing, building, and installing wind turbines in Peru.
4) Where you are from?
Lanham, MD

Internship:
1) Where you are interning?
Currently I am working as a remote sensing research intern supervised by Dr. Matthew Hansen of the UMD Geographical Sciences department.
2) What are your internship responsibilities?
My responsibilities include image interpretation and classification of forest cover and forest loss in the Brazilian Amazonas, multivariate statistical analysis, and performing a quality assessment of the Geographical Sciences department’s product and Brazilian product PRODES.
3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
I am working on a project that analyzes the accuracy of Brazilian forest cover data and the effectiveness of Brazilian policy in reducing deforestation.
4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
This internship has allowed me to take the knowledge, methods, and technical skills I have acquired in the classroom and apply them in a practical way.
5) What are your career goals after you graduate?
After graduating I intend to take a gap year to gain work experience before pursuing graduate degrees in Geography and International Development.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

June Undergraduate Student of the Month: Nicholas John

Full Name: Nicholas Anthony John
Background: 
1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
I am majoring in GIS and working on a minor in The Remote Sensing of Environmental Change, as well as a minor in Sustainability Studies.
2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
Within my GIS program I am interested in mapping populations among other data sets, and I am very interested in using programming, mobile and web technology to enhance GIS work. Within my remote sensing studies I am interested in using satellite derived data with mobile and web technology. In my sustainability studies I am interested in the sustainability issues and how my actions pertain to them.
3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
Previously I have interned with the campus arboretum to survey native and invasive plant species on campus property. Additionally, I worked as a Student System Administrator with the University of Maryland Institute of Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS) for a few years.

Internship:
1) Where you are interning?
I am currently interning at NOAA with the Office of Coast Survey’s Marine Chart Division. Additionally, I am interning at a Latino arts and culture nonprofit called Hola Cultura.
2) What are your internship responsibilities?
At NOAA I am responsible for creating digital polygon Areas of Interest(AOI) for documents within a DREG database to aid in better visualization of work areas. Additionally, at Hola Cultura I am responsible for gathering historical population data for Washington DC and then creating maps based on the respective data.
3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
The Marine Chart Division of the NOAA Office of Coast Survey is making an effort to improve visualization of spatial areas that are worked on. The goal is to create visualizations that will serve as a reference and thus improve work productivity. Hola Cultura is working on a special summer project that focuses on investigating where Washington DC’s Latino community has lived over the past few decades and how affordable housing has impacted settlement patterns.
4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
My NOAA internship experience is relevant to my studies in Geographical Sciences because it allows me to see how the information and skills that I have learned in my classes are used in the real world. My internship experience at NOAA is not only validating what I have learned in my studies, but it is introducing me to new tools and workflows that will improve my knowledge in the Geographical Sciences and enhance my productivity. My internship experience at Hola Cultura also allows me to use the skills that I have learned in my studies. Furthermore, my internship experience at Hola Cultura allows me to learn and utilize web GIS skills which are important to me, and will be useful in my future studies in Geographical Sciences.
5) What are your career goals after your graduate?
If God is willing, after I graduate I would like to work in the Federal Government, at NOAA, and in a GIS capacity. Additionally, I would like to attend graduate school and further my knowledge of Geographical Sciences; I especially would like to greatly improve my statistical and programming skills in general and as they pertain to mobile and web development.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

May Undergraduate Student of the Month: Daniel Riveros

Name: Daniel Riveras 
Major: GIS
Minor: Astronomy
What are your interests within the program(s)? 
I’m primarily interested in programming related to GIS.  There are many interesting applications and it offers great flexibility to explore different aspects from front end to back end. I also enjoy cartographic design.
What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
I have not previously had GIS or geography related experiences.

Internship:
1) Where you are interning?
I’m currently interning at NOAA with the Office of Coastal Survey.
2) What are your internship responsibilities? 
I am responsible for digitizing Area of Interests for documents within DREG database and performing quality control.
3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
OCS is making a transition to spatially visualize data within the database used to carry out tasks and provide general reference, thus allowing for better workflows.
4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
The experience has showed me real world examples of how visualization of data can improve work.  I have also been able to utilize skills learned in class that are related to my interests in cartography.
5) What are your career goals after your graduate?
After I graduate I hope to use the combination of my skills in programming and GIS to help develop interesting projects.

Thursday, April 2, 2015

April Undergraduate Student of the Month: Walther Rodriguez

Full Name: Walther Rodriguez

Background: 
1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
Major: Geography: Environmental Systems and Natural Resources
Minor: Geographic information Systems (GIS)
2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
My interest within Environmental Systems and Natural resources is to find ways to be green yet still be efficient enough to meet our needs for more land, food and energy.  Also that we only have one planet and I am interested in keeping it going without losing a lot if the natural places like lakes to swim in and forest to adventure in.
3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
            National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
            Army National Guard  

Internship:
1) Where you are interning?
            NOAA Hydrographic Systems & Technology Programs
2) What are your internship responsibilities?
Updating ocean mapping data, dating from the past decade to now using python to compile hundreds of ocean mapping surveys. These surveys are conducted by dozens of military and civilian ships and I am converting the raw data into coherent data files that contain various information of the composition and depth of the ocean waters to help map out underwater hazards and the ocean floor.
3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
Oceanic cartography and trade routes, basically making all the raw data useable for anyone how needs it
4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
The internship grants me practical use of programs such as Python and its many variations such as Ipython and Velocipy. It shows me how many projects and jobs rely on seemingly simple data.
5) What are your career goals after your graduate?
Switch from Guard to Active Duty and make a career out of my service, yet still be able to fall back to civilian work if need be with this degree.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

March Undergraduate Student of the Month: Alycia Roberson

1)  What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
Majoring in Geographical Sciences with concentration in Development and Sustainability
Minoring in GIS
2)      What are your interests within your program(s)?
Sustainable Agriculture
Food insecurity
Sustainable development
Navigation, in particular how users interact with it
                     i.      I tend to yell at mine a lot… and wish it would adapt to my driving habits
3)      What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
  1. Mentor for GEMS to instill a passion for STEM related careers
  2. Member of the BSOS Student Sustainability Task Force (kind of an internship)
  3. Geography Club and GTU
  4. Foy Consulting and Engineering - Operated computer-aided drafting (CAD) software and 3D design software (Inventor and Solid works) to produce designs and drawings
4) Where are you from?
      Kansas (a.k.a. middle of nowhere!) 

Internship:
1)      Where you are interning?
Last semester was part of the BSOS Student Sustainability Task force and still currently this semester. (Amee, the instructor in charge, considers this to be an internship)
2)      What are your internship responsibilities?
For fall semester I researched solar panels and worked with the design team to create a solar power charging station for the BSOS community. After presenting our findings and design to the rest of the team we submitted a grant proposal to the UMD Sustainability Fund and are awaiting to hear back. If approved, construction will begin by October 2015!
3)      What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
Fall 2014: solar power charging station
Spring 2015: The team is currently working on ideas for next semesters grant proposal. In a few weeks we will be giving individual presentations on possible sustainable solutions.
Some examples are:
  1. Shower minders
  2. Reusable bags for dining hall
  3. Solar charged trash compactors
  4. And implementing Pavegen systems (http://www.pavegen.com/home)
4)      How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
I do not have any internships related to Geography but this Task Force has been a great opportunity to experience the process of grant writing, researching and working with a very diversified team in terms of majors and skills. However, we all have a common goal that is to promote sustainability on campus.
5)      What are your career goals after your graduate?
Good question…
  • Is staying a student forever a possibility?                    
  • Interested in working with countries and sustainable development
  • Peace corps
  • Still trying to figure out what all the possibilities are with Geography and GIS…

Monday, February 2, 2015

February Undergraduate of the Month


Modibo Haidara
I was born in West Africa, Mali to be specific. My family and I moved to the United States in 2001. I am pursuing a double degree in GIS and Community Health with a minor in Global Poverty. I’m interested in using a multidisciplinary approach to analyze public health problems.  I am specifically interested in remote sensing as a tool to characterize water borne disease transmission risk. During my time at the University, I have had some unique experiences. I volunteered at the Children’s National Medical Center and am serving as a peer educator at UMD’s Health Center for the SHARE (Sexual Health and Reproductive Education) program. I interned at the Millennium Challenge Corporation where I served on a project to increase the access of open data in Africa as an incentive for businesses to invest in the Africa.
During the summer of 2014, I benefitted from the mentorship of GEOG's Dr. Matt Hansen through a research internship (Summer Research Initiative). I would say that was the most formative experience I’ve had at UMD and I encourage students in our department to reach out to faculty members.
For the spring 2015 semester, I will be interning with Dr. Molly Brown who just joined the department. She has provided me with an internship opportunity to fulfill my last academic requirement for graduation. I will be analyzing the metric used by the FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization) to determine the prevalence of undernourishment, deconstruct the formula and reconstruct it using DHS (Demographic and Health Surveys) data. This is an excellent opportunity to work under the guidance of Dr. Brown whose expertise is my direct interest of study. Upon graduating, I plan on taking a year or two off to get work experience and prepare for graduate school. I am looking at schools of global health. 

Monday, January 5, 2015

January Undergraduate of the Month 2015

January Undergraduate Student of the Month

Laura Garvie

Background:
1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD?
Majors: Geographical Sciences – Development and Sustainability track
Minors: French, Global Poverty
2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
I learned French as a child in Immersion schools and today, am President of Le Cercle des Etudiants Frocophones et Francophiles (the French club on campus). I love writing and translation work but really found my passion in the school of geographical sciences where I discovered the relations between people and the natural world and my desire to study human and environmental process. Geog332 was a great class for me this past semester because it focused on my interests in contemporary slavery, income inequality and managing scarce resources.
3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
Translator for USAID/Senegal
Lab assistant for the Department of Geographical Sciences
Volunteer for the American Field Service. (I studied abroad in France for one year in high school with this program and have been volunteering for them ever since).
Tour Guide at an art museum in Gray, France
Hostess at Mosaic Cuisine & Café (a French restaurant in Rockville)
4) Where you are from?
Rockville, Maryland

Internship: (Spring 2015)
1) Where you are interning?
Department of State, Foreign Service Institute (FSI) – this is where State Department’s Foreign Service employees are prepared for overseas assignments. 
2) What are your internship responsibilities?
I expect to help Americans in distress abroad and in transition. I will surely do some routine administrative work but will look for the chance to try something new and leave my mark on the office.
3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
            I don’t know yet what projects I will be working specifically with but I will be in the Transition Center, one unit within the five schools of FSI. They train, counsel and other assist Department of State employees to prepare them for life abroad. They specifically assist personnel returning from high-threat assignments through the High Stress Assignment Out-brief Program. 
4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
My internship is relevant to Geographical Sciences because U.S Government employees will be dealing with changes that come along with differences in physical and human geography when they move abroad.
5) What are your career goals after your graduate?
I am hoping to earn my Masters of Science through the combined BS/MS program and then volunteer with the Peace Corps. I would like to get a job with the Government and one day open my own hostel abroad. More than anything, my goal is to be happy and feel good about wherever my life goes. 

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

December Undergraduate of the Month 2014


Full Name: Elvis Herrera

Please provide a short summary of yourself by answering the questions below.
Background: Please provide a short summary of yourself including the following information: 

1) What major(s), minors, and/or certificates you are working on at UMD? 
I am senior majoring in GIS.

2) What are your interests within your program(s)?
I am interested in the programming side of GIS. Computer programming allows to use your creativity and problem solving skill and it has been an important tool to obtain in GIS.
I also have an interest in remote sensing due to the fact that there is so much data you can collect by using electromagnetic radiation on images as well as seeing how land has changed over time.

3) What previous jobs, internships, and volunteer experience have you had?
This past summer, I have participated the UMD BSOS Summer Research Initiative program in which give undergrads, who are planning to pursue a Masters/Ph.D., the opportunity to work on a project and be mentored by UMD researchers of their major.

4) Where you are from (optional)? 


Internship:

1) Where you are interning?
UMD department of Geographical Science working under Dr. Matthew Hansen’s team

2) What are your internship responsibilities? 
Doing supervised classification training for the project describe below.
I am also classifying forest cover loss on RapidEye sample images and comparing them to landsat images. What we are looking for is to see what RapidEye images are visible in terms of forest cover loss that Landsat does not identify. After this process, we will perform a quality assessment for both products.

3) What project(s) are you working on or contributing to?
The IPCC have created guidelines for countries to follow to monitor carbon stocks and emissions of greenhouse gases associated with Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry activities. Dr. Matthew Hansen’s team were ask by, the Ministry of Agriculture of Peru, to classify their country based on the IPCC categorize land areas into 6 classes: forest land, cropland, grassland, wetlands, settlement, and other land such as bare soil, rock, and ice. We classified these land areas using pre-processed Landsat 7 satellite image mosaics at 30 meter pixel resolution from 2010 to 2013, including data from the newly launched Landsat 8 sensor. The method used in this project employed a decision tree classification algorithm and a comparison to the results of the Hansen et al. (2013) global forest cover change map for quality assessment.

4) How is the internship experience relevant to your studies in Geographical Sciences?
I am using remote sensing in my current job.

5) What are your career goals after your graduate?

After graduation, I plan on attending graduate school. My goal is to continue learning and contributing in the field of GIS and remote sensing.