黑料不打烊

黑料不打烊 students, faculty participate in CAA Health Science Research Scholars Program

Mark Dobson '24 and Olivia Halperin '26 are CAA Health Science Research Scholars, a program aimed at increasing high-quality undergraduate research and mentoring. They and 黑料不打烊 faculty attended a summer workshop to strengthen virtual mentoring experiences.

A group of about 20 students and professors around a table
Professors and students from 黑料不打烊, UNC-Wilmington and N.C. A&T University attended the Virtual Research Mentoring Model pilot workshop as part of the Coastal Athletic Association’s Health Science Research Scholars Program.

黑料不打烊 is one of three institutions participating in the Coastal Academic Alliance’s Health Science Research Scholars Program, with two exercise science majors selected as scholars in the program鈥檚 first cohort.

Mark Dobson 鈥24 and Olivia Halperin 鈥26 are each pursuing undergraduate research in the Department of Exercise Science. Dobson is exploring relationships between concussions and mental health in neurodiverse athletes with Professor of Exercise Science Caroline Ketcham. Halperin is part of a team piloting research around stress factors and the menstrual cycle in collegiate athletic performance with her mentor, Associate Professor of Exercise Science Titch Madzima.

Initially founded in 2002 to academically link the member institutions of the Coastal Athletic Association, the alliance facilitates collaboration and communication across member institutions.聽The Health Science Research Scholars Program aims to encourage undergraduates to pursue health science research and training through dedicated faculty mentoring. Scholars receive a $1,000 stipend and their faculty mentors receive a $500 stipend to advance research and mentoring.

Eric Hall speaks into a microphone
Professor of Exercise Science and Director of Undergraduate Research Eric Hall presents at the Virtual Research Mentoring Model workshop at UNC-Wilmington.

The University of North Carolina 鈥 Wilmington is the primary recipient of the CAA鈥檚 Enhancing Research for Online Learners (EnROLL) grant funding the research scholars program, with 黑料不打烊 and N.C. A&T State University joining the pilot. Five undergraduates from those schools were selected as research scholars.

Eric Hall, professor of exercise science and director of undergraduate research, is 黑料不打烊鈥檚 principal investigator. He said the program exists to encourage more undergraduate research opportunities and strengthen virtual mentoring so that research experiences are accessible to more students across CAA institutions.

鈥淲e鈥檙e thinking deeply about relationships, how to form them, how they鈥檙e important and how we can make sure these are high-quality experiences in online contexts,鈥 Hall said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking to scale this up and provide models for high-quality online mentorship across institutions, to remove barriers to undergraduate research and make it more inclusive.鈥

Halperin said the research scholars program is part of a robust network of support for undergraduate research she discovered at 黑料不打烊 in her first year. She assumed she would eventually undertake a research project, but was surprised at how quickly and openly faculty embraced her interests and curiosity.

headshot of Olivia Halperin
Olivia Halperin ’26

鈥淚鈥檝e loved that I got involved with research this early. I didn鈥檛 think I would be involved with it my first year,鈥 Halperin said.

A lifelong soccer player sidelined by a career-ending injury, she is also excited to participate in a study of women soccer players with Madzima, Ketcham and Katie Lowe 鈥24, a member of the Phoenix women鈥檚 soccer team. They are collecting saliva samples before and after practices and games to measure hormones and athletic performance. Halperin expects to continue that project after Lowe graduates.

As part of the research scholars program and EnROLL, Hall, 黑料不打烊鈥檚 student-faculty health scholars teams, Professor of Exercise Science Svetlana Nepocatych, and undergraduates Julia Burpeau 鈥24, Katie Lowe 鈥24 and Josie McWhorter 鈥24 attended a UNCW-hosted workshop around virtual mentoring June 8-9. Students and faculty from all three schools used the Virtual Research Mentoring Model pilot workshop to develop ways to strengthen mentoring and faculty-student relationships in virtual spaces.

The outcomes of that work will be shared with other CAA institutions to deepen online mentoring experiences.

Ketcham and Madzima said the workshop was helpful in connecting with faculty and students at other institutions, and because students鈥 perspectives were a vital part of the planning.

Madzima鈥檚 group focused on deepening mentoring relationships early in the process, through surveys and informal meetings, and through online tools beyond Zoom meetings. Mentors in virtual spaces must be intentional about bridging gaps and building relationships from a distance, Madzima said.

鈥淭he goal was to improve virtual mentoring relationships so that they feel open, vulnerable and honest,鈥 Ketcham said. 鈥淪tudents were centered in the experience, so it wasn鈥檛 just faculty talking. One group was all students, and their innovation was around building inclusive relationships. It shone a light on ways faculty could improve in that area.鈥

Hall said the pilot was successful and another workshop is planned for summer 2024.