Skip to main
University-wide Navigation

In this podcast we’ll meet two UK undergraduates who share their stories of why they got involved in research and what they gained from the experience.  

The first student is Courtney McKelphin. She’s starting her senior year this fall, majoring in chemical engineering. McKelphin worked at the Center for Applied Energy Research, with faculty mentor Mark Crocker and staff mentor Edwardo Santillan-Jimenez. She built a continuous reactor and looked at ways to optimize diesel fuel production by analyzing reaction rates and kinetics.   

“Biggest takeaway: solving problems,” McKelphin says. “That’s the point of research. Figuring out how to not fall apart when things fall apart. Perseverance, persistence, solving through problems.”  

The second student is Ben Childress. He’s starting his junior year this fall majoring in economics and political science. Childress worked with Eugenia Toma at the Martin School of Public Policy and Administration. His research projected where charter schools would locate if they were established in Kentucky, and what impact that would have on education in the Commonwealth.  

“There’s this kind of scary barrier of ‘Oh, I have no idea how to do that,’” Childress says. “Sure, it takes work and practice and experience, but research is not necessarily rocket science. And with dedication, it’s something that I think is totally accessible to any student with an interest in it.”  

To learn how to get involved in undergraduate research, visit http://www.uky.edu/academy/UGResearch. 

Credits

Produced by Alicia P. Gregory, videography/direction by Chad Rumford and Ben Corwin (Research Communications).