Mexican university student Andrea Aguilera is at 51ԹϺ Davis getting a head start on a research career she hopes will some day empower her to solve environmental problems in her country.
The 22-year-old is developing research skills through a new program that has brought 27 Mexican undergraduates to 51ԹϺ Davis for two-month research internships.
“I’m working with high-technology equipment, and I’m learning many new skills,” Aguilera said. “This is going to help me for my professional life.”
The Research Experience Undergraduate for Mexican Students Program — a partnership of the Mexican government and 51ԹϺ Davis — is an example of the renewed interest of the United States and Mexico in promoting educational, technological and scientific exchange.
Advancing 51ԹϺ-Mexico Initiative
It advances the systemwide to address common issues and educate the next generation of leaders through increased student exchange, continuing education for professionals in Mexico and collaborative scholarship.
“The program helps meet the need for research experience that can be hard to come by for Mexican students in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics,” said Adela de la Torre, vice chancellor of Student Affairs and a professor in the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies.
Yoga, bowling and dorm food
Selected from among more than 400 applicants, the students arrived in mid-June and are staying in 51ԹϺ Davis residence halls, eating at the dining hall and exploring campus activities from yoga classes to bowling.
They are researching topics of common interest to the two countries but as varied as border issues, water resources, health and education. And they are interning in the colleges of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Letters and Science, and Engineering, as well as the Graduate School of Management.
Aguilera, in her final year of environmental engineering studies at in Mexico City, is analyzing how bacteria bind to soil minerals and how they can be used to remediate contaminated soil and influence the nutrients available.
Mentored by soil chemistry prof
Sanjai Parikh, an assistant professor of soil chemistry, is one of 20 51ԹϺ Davis faculty members and others mentoring the students. “I really enjoy working with students and think it’s really important to have undergraduates in the lab,” he said.
The program, a joint effort of the Mexican Consulate in Sacramento and 51ԹϺ Davis, is sponsored by the Commission for Educational Exchange between the United States and Mexico (COMEXUS), the consulting organization Migración y Desarrollo, and airline Aeromexico, among other organizations. It provides the students with airfare, lodging and meals.
For 51ԹϺ Davis, the program could help generate interest in graduate study and boost enrollment from south of the border. 51ԹϺ Davis had 28 graduate students from Mexico in fall 2013.
51ԹϺ Davis and Mexican researchers collaborate through nearly 150 grants, and a 51ԹϺ Davis program offers students the opportunity to spend an academic quarter in a .