What is a Senior Research Project?

At BASIS Tucson, seniors have the chance to propose an independent research project that takes place off campus during the last trimester of the year. The seniors whose proposals are accepted write their own syllabi and then head off into the world, to a site where they conduct their research while interning with a professional in the field. Those of us stuck on campus follow their adventures on this blog. Now that the projects are over, we are all excited to attend their presentations. The schedule is as follows:

Wednesday, May 11, 6-8 PM
at the U of A Poetry Center (environmentalism projects)
Sierra Cordova, Nicole Rapatan, Zobella Vinik and Dany Joumaa (see titles of projects, below)

Saturday, May 14, 10-12 AM
at The Loft Cinema (arts projects)
Clarice Bales, Samone Isom, Josh Waterman and Angelynn Khoo (see titles of projects, below)

Monday, May 16, 6-8 PM
at BioSciences West, Rm. 310, U of A ( U of A projects)
Joseph Tang, Jayanth Ganesan, Andrew Graham and Gabriel Carranza (see titles of projects, below)

Tuesday, May 17, 6-8 PM
at U of A McGuire Center for Entrepreneurship, Blg. MCLND, rm. 207 (travel abroad projects)
Clover Powell, Greg Spell, Agustin Temporini and Margarita Sadova.

We'd love to see you there!



The BASIS Tucson Class of 2011 Senior Research Project bloggers (with the titles of their projects) are:



Clarice Bales: "Narrative and Film"



Sierra Cordova: "The Intent and Application of Environmental Policy"



Clover Powell: "The Artistic Interpretation of the Biological Sciences"



Greg Spell: "Micro-venturing in Guatemala"



Agustin Temporini: "A Study of the Role of the Press in 1960's/70's Argentina"



Gabriel Carranza: "Analysis and Research on Drugs associated with Torsades de Pointes"



Dany Joumaa: "Innovations in Display Technology: Synthesis of Organic Luminescent Materials Compounds"



Joseph Tang: "The Creation and Project of 3D Holograms"



Jayanth Ganesan: "Research of Game Thoeretic Models in relation to Non-Market Games"



Andrew Graham: "The Malaria-Resistant Mosquito"



Samone Isom: "Art and Artist: in peril of Devaluation?"



Angelynn Khoo: "Mousa, Mouseion, Museum: MOCA Tucson"



Nicole Rapatan: "Sustainable Architecture and Design in Modern Times"



Margarita Sadova: "Pulmonology at St. Joseph's Hospital"



Josh Waterman: "The Fiery Crossroads of Artistic Value and Financial Success in the Independent Film Industry"



Zobella Vinik: "Environmental Psychology with the Drachman Institute"







Enjoy the Blog!



















Wednesday, February 9, 2011

The Second Day

I forgot to mention that I was given keys yesterday, my first day! So, I pretty much have a second residence now, which is great. I read outside in the sun for about three hours today, much like yesterday. Reading books I was instructed to read. A chapbook, a collection of poetry.

Thank you letters! I foolishly thought I had left behind the addressing of envelopes and placing of stamps and return addresses and stuffing envelopes when I finished AMIGOS. Ha! That is what I did today, as well as talk to another one of my fellow interns. Of the three women I talked to, three of them are Seniors at the U of A with a major in English. I wonder why that could be.

Learning learning! About the business aspect, I suppose. "What is an invoice", I asked. The explanation boiled down to "a bill we give to bookstores." "What are royalties?" I asked. "The money an author gets when others use the products of their mind." Also, Kore Press' authors get a money prize up front, and also get copies of their book to sell themselves. This is regular in the publishing industry, apparently. So, when you buy a book for $12.00 at Borders, two of those dollars do not go to the author. Basically all of it goes to the publisher, since they now own the book."Tell me about return policies," I requested. "Our policy of 60 days is pretty lenient. But stores often return a lot of the books they order from us. Often. It's no big deal." "What are Chapbooks?" My informant suggested that we go to Wikipedia to find out, while simultaneously looking at one in my hand. Chapbooks are bound like pamphlets and contain literature. They were created by 19th century bibliophiles as sort of disposable books. Why anyone would want to dispose of books, I cannot fathom, but there you have it.

Hmm... maybe I should take some pictures and put them up here. We shall see.

~Samone

1 comment:

Mr. Kittredge said...

Did you get any sense of what kind of royalties authors generally get? Is it a flat percentage of sales? Does it matter if they are upstarts or established?