HHMI News
  Top Stories  
dashed line
  Research News  
dashed line
  Science Education News  
dashed line
  Institute News  
dashed line
  NewsSrch  
dashed line
  Noticias  
dashed line

News Alert
Sign Up

Turning College Chemistry into an Adventure

Alanna Schepartz thinks it's almost a miracle that anyone ever goes into chemistry. The Milton Harris '29 Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry at Yale University, Schepartz says the way college chemistry is typically taught drives undergraduates away from the field she loves.

"Most undergraduates are seniors by the time they encounter the thrill of conducting or even reading about current, pioneering research," she explains. "They are turned off by slogging through three years of discoveries that are decades or centuries old. By that time, many are committed to other careers and lost forever to scientific enterprise. Worst of all, most students graduate with little appreciation of the role science plays in society."

Schepartz is also concerned about how few women go into academic research chemistry. Women earn fewer than 30 percent of the Ph.D. degrees in chemistry from the top 50 chemistry departments in the United States, and they make up only 11 percent of the faculty of those chemistry departments, she points out.

As an HHMI Professor, Schepartz is designing a pair of sophomore courses that she hopes will address these problems. Chemical biology, which uses the tools of chemistry to understand biological systems, and an accompanying chemical biology laboratory will expose Yale undergraduates early in their college careers to one of the fastest-growing interdisciplinary fields in modern chemistry and biology.

Recent journal articles and case studies will take the place of textbooks, and real research will drive the lab. Graduate students, many of them women, will mentor the undergraduates.

"Providing undergraduate women with early, positive experiences in science and graduate women with early, positive mentoring experiences could encourage more of them to pursue a career directing research," Schepartz suggests. Those who don't go into science will also benefit by experiencing how science is actually done. "Businesspeople, politicians, writers and health care professionals who understand current science practices and culture can help create a more informed public," she explains.

In her own lab, Schepartz studies protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions to determine how cells use proteins to regulate genes and what happens when viruses usurp that regulatory network. She hopes to use what she learns to design miniature proteins that mimic or even improve on the functions of natural proteins.

Schepartz's research has been recognized with a National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator Award and two American Chemical Society awards, the Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award and the Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry. Her dedication to teaching has earned her a Camille and Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award and a Dylan Hixon '88 Award for Teaching Excellence in the Natural Sciences.

/ /
   

MORE HEADLINES

bullet icon

RESEARCH NEWS

11.05.09 | 

Scientists Launch Effort to Sequence the DNA of 10,000 Vertebrates

10.29.09 | 

Studies Begin to Shape New Image of DNA

10.25.09 | 

Histone Molecules Drive Organ Failure During Sepsis
bullet icon

SCIENCE EDUCATION NEWS

09.29.09 | 

Movie Aims to Inspire With Tales of Successful Minority Scientists

09.08.09 | 

New Health Science Major in Minnesota Redefines Interdisciplinary

08.31.09 | 

Institute Takes Fear Out of Teaching Elementary School Science
bullet icon

INSTITUTE NEWS

10.12.09 | 

HHMI Scientists Elected to Institute of Medicine

09.28.09 | 

Jeffrey Friedman to Receive Keio Medical Science Prize

09.17.09 | 

Elaine Fuchs to Receive National Medal of Science
Noticias del HHMI Search News Archive

Download Story PDF

Requires Adobe Acrobat

HHMI PROFESSOR

Alanna  Schepartz
Alanna Schepartz
abstract:
Chemical Biology for Sophomores
 

Related Links

AT HHMI

bullet icon

Download high resolution image

dashed line
 Back to Topto the top
© 2009 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A philanthropy serving society through biomedical research and science education.
4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789 | (301) 215-8500 | email: webmaster@hhmi.org