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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Students at The University of Alabama have published
their first edition of a scientific journal designed to highlight
undergraduate student research at UA.
The first edition of the “Journal of Science & Health
at The University of Alabama,” or JOSHUA, includes articles
related to cloning, gene patenting, Parkinson’s disease research
and other topics.
Sarah Adair, one of five UA students recently named to USA Today’s
All-USA College Academic Team, and Nabeel Ahmed Memon, a recent
winner of UA’s Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award, served as the
publication’s co-editors. The journal was student-written
and edited.
“This is a forum for our students to publish their research
and to express their opinions on scientific issues,” said
Dr. Guy Caldwell, assistant professor of biological sciences and
faculty advisor to Kappa Beta, the UA chapter of Tri-Beta that started
the journal. Tri-Beta is the national honor society for biological
sciences. “We’re a growing research university, and
solid efforts are underway involving talented undergraduate researchers,”
Caldwell said. Producing this publication gives students experience
writing scientific papers, a key measurement of the success of scientists
and educators.
While the content of the first edition is biological, Caldwell
said the goal is to involve undergraduate researchers in various
science and health disciplines across campus. Plans are to produce
the publication annually.
Additional support for the publication came from UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences, the department of biological sciences, the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Undergraduate Biological Sciences
Education Program and the Student Government Association.
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