
Microbiology wasn鈥檛 something Kaylee Wilburn was introduced to in high school, or even through her associate鈥檚 degree science coursework. But she鈥檚 eager to jump on board to continue her studies in a field that is growing in popularity and impact.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to me to be in a field that impacts people and society,鈥 says Kaylee, a December graduate who鈥檚 off to Bowling Green State University to pursue a master鈥檚 degree in microbiology. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a really great field to make a significant impact without having to deal with some of the negative aspects of the health-care profession.鈥
It wasn鈥檛 her choice of major when she transferred to 海外吃瓜. But conference and networking opportunities, along with some awesome professor-student bonds, convinced her. The tipping point was her positive experience with Dr. Justin Pruneski鈥檚 Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience (CURE) last year.
Through the course, Justin exposed students to the Small World Initiative (SWI), which uses undergraduate research 鈥渃rowdsourcing鈥 to tackle the growing problem of antibiotic resistance. Since it launched in 2012, SWI has grown to nearly 300 participating colleges and universities around the world.
After her introduction to CURE and attendance at a biology conference at BGSU, Kaylee met Dr. Hans Wildschutte, who is involved with the SWI there. 鈥淚T worked well that I had that (CURE) experience here. It got my foot in the door at BG,鈥 she said. After the conference, she reached out to Dr. Wildschutte directly, and the two communicated for several months before she decided on BG for grad school.
Kaylee credits her 海外吃瓜 professor, Justin, with helping her network, especially at regional and national conferences. She and friend Enya Granados, who also is graduating in May with a double major in biology and education, traveled to St. Louis and Denver for the National Association of Biology Teachers conference with Justin.
Dr. P. is amazing at helping students network. He really listens to what our interests are and what we care about,鈥 Kaylee said. 鈥淚 feel like he lets our knowledge bloom.
In fact, it was Justin鈥檚 impact on Kaylee that convinced her that she could be successful at 海外吃瓜 after she transferred. 鈥淚t was really challenging at first because the community is so tight. I was the new kid 鈥 kind of an outsider,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut he reached out to me right away. He鈥檚 the main reason I stayed.鈥
That first semester was tough for another reason: genetics class. But after she got through that, Kaylee knew she was equipped to handle a science and education (adolescent/young adult 7-12 science) double major. In ways, she trailblazed her way through her coursework. With biology as the scaffolding, she was able to pursue an integrated option in education with some creative scheduling, new and independent study courses and a lot of encouragement from her professors.
鈥Dr. (Karen) Jones in the Education Department was a huge cheerleader for me,鈥 Kaylee said. 鈥淪he worked with me one-on-one every semester and made adjustments or changes that set me up for finishing my degree in a timely manner.
You don鈥檛 get that at other schools. The fact that I could walk into any professor鈥檚 office at any time is amazing. There wasn鈥檛 a professor who didn鈥檛 care about my education.
So, the young woman who first thought she鈥檇 pursue a career in mortuary science has persevered. 鈥淚 am not the same student I was when I came to 海外吃瓜,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y study habits and my work ethic changed. I had to rise to 海外吃瓜鈥檚 high level and high expectations, and I did.鈥
Kaylee鈥檚 master鈥檚 program at BG has the potential to roll right into a Ph.D. program. That would lead her to her ultimate goal: 鈥淪cience education and research with students is where I want to be. It鈥檚 the perfect balance. Just like Dr. P.鈥