Ouachita team selected to present research to members of U.S. Congress
March 04, 2016 - Julia Williams
A Ouachita Baptist University research team was chosen to present at the Council of
Undergraduate Research’s 2016 Posters on the Hill event in Washington, D.C.
Heidi Hughes and John Givler, with collaboration from Dr. Ruth Plymale, assistant
professor of biology, were one of only 60 groups of undergraduate researchers chosen
to present their findings to members of Congress. They will present their research
on problems with antibiotic-resistant pathogens and identification of antibiotic-producing
bacteria on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. April 19-20.
“Congratulations to Dr. Ruth Plymale and students Heidi Hughes and John Givler on
acceptance to the Council on Undergraduate Research Posters on the Hill for 2016,”
said Dr. Tim Knight, dean of Ouachita’s Patterson School of Natural Sciences. “Research
projects for Posters on the Hill undergo a rigorous review process and are selected
as the best from around the country.”
The group will represent Ouachita on Capitol Hill as they present their research,
displayed on posters, to members of Congress in an effort to promote continued funding
of undergraduate research. They also will seek out U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton and other
representatives of Arkansas to visit with personally. All three of the group said
they are greatly looking forward to the trip and are very grateful for the opportunity.
According to its website, the Council of Undergraduate Research is a national non-profit
organization whose mission is “to support and promote high-quality undergraduate
student-faculty collaborative research and scholarship.” It represents more than 900
colleges and universities and several different disciplinary avenues in which to
conduct research.
Heidi Hughes, a senior biology major from Hot Springs, Ark., began her research last
summer as part of the Small World Initiative, a program that encourages a cooperative
effort across the U.S. and eight other countries to address the diminishing supply
of effective antibiotics.
Hughes said she “looked for bacteria found in the soil that would produce a new type
of antibiotics that might work in a different way than the antibiotics that are commonly
used so that they could kill off resistant pathogens.” Her portion of the research
included finding a bacterium that produced the antibiotic and then “making new methods
to extract that antibiotic in the most efficient way possible,” she said. Hughes said
she plans to continue her research and implement it into her senior thesis.
John Givler, a senior biology major from Monroe, La., also completed his research
last summer. According to Givler, his research primarily entailed isolating antibiotic-producing
bacteria in the soil to discover if they inhibited the growth of other microbes in
the soil around it. Givler said he is interested in pursuing a master’s degree in
microbiology dealing with similar research.
Dr. Ruth Plymale collaborated throughout the summer with both Hughes and Givler in
a supervisory role. She encouraged the two students to apply to the Posters on the
Hill program together, considering the comparable nature of their separate research.
“I secretly always thought that we would be picked,” Plymale said. “John and Heidi
are great, and I wasn’t even a little bit shocked.”
For more information, contact the Patterson School of Natural Sciences at (870) 245-5238.
By Julia Williams, staff writer for The Signal
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