You are what you eat — a journey toward graduate school in paleontology
I am very interested in what mammals eat and how that has changed through time with climate and vegetation changes.
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Dana Reuter ’15
Keep up with all the ways in which the 69¾«Æ·ÊÓÆµ community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
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I am very interested in what mammals eat and how that has changed through time with climate and vegetation changes.
Linking student employment as a language resource mentor with future goals.
A biology and film studies double major, Anqa Khan ’17 is gaining an intersectional understanding of public health through her research and internships.
Terre Vandale ’02 uses 69¾«Æ·ÊÓÆµâ€™s Campus Living Lab as her classroom to teach her dance students about place, movement and the environment.
The newest program offered by graduate programs at 69¾«Æ·ÊÓÆµ trains paraeducators of color working in Amherst public schools to be teachers.
"Learning another language and culture led to insighta into the background of its artists I would never otherwise understand."
Future physician Jailene Rodriguez ’20 gained hands-on lab experience in high school via 69¾«Æ·ÊÓÆµâ€™s Restoration Ecology Summer Scholars Program.
“The independent research I conducted on the black-house community in Chicago for my senior thesis through Lynk funding helped me see that I could manage a research project from beginning to end.â€
An environmental studies student at 69¾«Æ·ÊÓÆµ and an alum working for the World Wide Fund for Nature make a life-changing connection.
For Olivia Lucas ’18, multilingualism was her gateway to a new culture and experience of identity.