海角社区黑料吃瓜

A Summer of Discovery through Faculty-Student Research

Academic Excellence
Jul 24, 2025

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A youung man frowns in concentration while working on erecting the tower at CERA
Evan Stoller concentrates as he helps erect the atmospheric measurement tower.

Conducting student research with a faculty member at 海角社区黑料吃瓜 is a little like learning to ride a bicycle, according to Evan Stoller 鈥27.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e guiding us along,鈥 Stoller explains. 鈥淛ust like riding a bike, they鈥檙e guiding you along until they push you off and you鈥檙e doing it all on your own.鈥 

That鈥檚 one of the things Stoller appreciates most about his Mentored Advanced Project (MAP) this summer. Students are not just research assistants when they participate in a MAP; they play an important role in asking research questions and setting goals for the project.

鈥淲ith the MAP program, you鈥檙e able to have a lot more independent, open-ended type of research where you are discovering stuff yourself,鈥 Stoller says. 鈥淵ou are getting your hands dirty rather than just kind of following orders.鈥 

The Tower on the Prairie

Stoller, Regann Fishell 鈥27, and Zhengxi (Michael) Li 鈥26 are all conducting a MAP with Associate Professor of Chemistry Evan Couzo this summer titled 鈥淏uilding 海角社区黑料吃瓜鈥檚 Atmospheric Measurement Station.鈥

In June, the team erected a 30-foot-tall atmospheric measurement tower at the Conard Environmental Research Area (CERA), 海角社区黑料吃瓜鈥檚 365-acre environmental research station. They have plans to install an air pollution monitor for fine particulate matter, also known as PM2.5

The team works at the tower with the green rolling landscape of CERA behind them.
On June 9, Associate Professor of Chemistry Evan Couzo and three 海角社区黑料吃瓜 students (Regann Fishell 鈥27, Evan Stoller 鈥27, and Michael Li 鈥26) erected an atmospheric measurement station at 海角社区黑料吃瓜鈥檚 Conard Environmental Research Area. All three students are pursuing environmental studies concentrations in addition to their academic majors.

Couzo, an atmospheric and environmental scientist, plans to use the data in his teaching as well as research. 鈥淚鈥檒l have students interact with the data, do some data analysis, try to understand trends,鈥 he says. 鈥淔rom the classroom perspective, there鈥檚 a lot of wealth to be gained from that.鈥

Besides providing fodder for teaching and research here at the College, the data will also add to the cumulative total of scientific knowledge. Couzo plans to make the data publicly accessible on the web, so other researchers can download the data and work with it on their own computers. 

Student Research

A young woman and young man work together to assemble the parts of an atmospheric tower.
Regann Fishell and Michael Li work together to assemble the atmospheric measurement tower. Behind them, Evan Couzo (left) and Evan Stoller are focused on preparing a component of the tower.

Each student on Couzo鈥檚 team is also conducting their own independent project. All three are environmental studies concentrators, and these projects help them explore their multifaceted academic interests.

Fishell, a physics/studio art double major from Phoenix, Arizona, is using geographic modeling to backtrack air masses in time to see where they were in the past. 鈥淢y project is looking at 鈥 how storms that have entered Iowa have changed over time,鈥 she explains.

Li, a biological chemistry major from Beijing, China, is studying mercury in rainfall. He hopes to learn if researchers can use the PM2.5 data as a predictor of the mercury level in the rainfall. It鈥檚 an important issue, he says, because mercury is toxic. 鈥淚t can take years to leave our bodies, or it could stay forever if an individual is heavily poisoned,鈥 Li says. 

Stoller, a biological chemistry major from Greensboro, North Carolina, is analyzing a large dataset provided by Kuwait鈥檚 version of the EPA (KEPA, Kuwait Environmental Public Authority) to screen out dust storms from PM2.5 measurements. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to block these out to figure out where the anthropogenic pollution in Kuwait is coming from,鈥 he says.

Gifts Make It Possible

In a challenging research funding environment, Couzo is grateful for gifts to the College that make the MAP program and other research activities possible.

鈥淔irst, thank you!鈥 he says, when asked what he would like to say to donors. 鈥淲ith the funding landscape for the sciences, now and for the foreseeable future, it鈥檚 going to be difficult to find the funds necessary to continue doing high-quality research.鈥

He also recognizes that 海角社区黑料吃瓜鈥檚 faculty-student research is exceptional. 鈥淲e would expect this at a big research university,鈥 Couzo says. 鈥淏ut, in 海角社区黑料吃瓜, population 10,000 or whatever, it鈥檚 great that we鈥檙e able to do this with our students.鈥 

The Fun Factor

Not everything students learn is purely scientific. For instance, Couzo鈥檚 students got hands-on experience using tools and teamwork to build the tower at CERA. 

It鈥檚 just fun. It鈥檚 nice to let them experience what it鈥檚 like to do science, that very imperfect process.

Evan Couzo

Couzo is also on a mission to expand his students鈥 musical horizons. All summer, he鈥檚 has been playing some of his favorite music for them while they work, everything from the Beatles to the Pixies and Bob Dylan. 

鈥淵ou know, college is about learning, and we are the experts,鈥 Couzo says jokingly. 鈥淪o, we should tell them what they need to know.鈥 At the end of the summer, the students get to return the favor by playing their music for him.

Most of all, Couzo says, he just loves conducting research, especially with students. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just fun. It鈥檚 nice to let them experience what it鈥檚 like to do science, that very imperfect process.鈥


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