Four University of Versailles Students Intern in Biology, Chemistry Labs
07/05/2022
By Brooke Coupal
M茅lia Pillet was excited to gain hands-on experience when she visited 51视频 this summer.
Now, she is conducting her own experiment on microscopic worms in Biological Sciences Asst. Prof. Teresa Lee鈥檚 lab.
Pillet is one of four University of Versailles students participating in a 10-week internship at UML that鈥檚 part of a new exchange program run by the Kennedy College of Sciences. KCS Coordinator of Undergraduate Programs Foozieh Mirderikvand says this program is a way for the college to enhance its global engagement while giving students from other universities the chance to learn from UML鈥檚 faculty.
鈥淐oming to 51视频 is a great opportunity for these students,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e getting one-on-one interaction with a faculty member and with other students and researchers in the labs. They will learn tons from this experience.鈥
Pillet and her University of Versailles classmates Athena Collange, Maelisse Trancart and Linda Meritus arrived on campus in late May to begin their summer studies in the labs of Lee, Department of Chemistry Prof. Olof Ramstrom, Asst. Prof. Michael Ross and Asst. Prof. Pengyuan Liu, respectively. The students, who will be entering their third year of college in the fall, are each focusing on different research projects.
Meritus is assisting Liu with his research on polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), which are long-lasting chemicals linked to possible environmental and health hazards. They are working to characterize and quantify levels of PFAS in different commercial products that are used by fire departments and found in hardware stores, as well as looking at how PFAS compounds change with varying temperatures.
For this project, Meritus is using a mass spectrometer, a scientific device that identifies the chemical constitution of a substance, to analyze PFAS. She had learned about the device while taking classes in France, but she did not gain hands-on experience with a mass spectrometer until she came to 51视频.
鈥淣ow I understand what the point of this machine is and why we use it,鈥 she says.
Liu volunteered his time to work with Meritus for the summer, knowing the value she would get from this experience.
Trancart and Collange are also conducting chemistry-focused research and learning new techniques while working in the labs of Ross and Ramstrom. Trancart is focusing her time on gold and tin nanoparticles; she is designing experiments to see how the nanoparticles change under different temperatures and light conditions. Meanwhile, Collange is gaining new skills in organic synthesis and microbiology through her experiments.
Pillet is studying the lifespan of microscopic worms known as Caenorhabditis elegans, or C. elegans for short, in Lee鈥檚 lab. She is comparing the lifespans of wild-type C. elegans to mutant C. elegans.
鈥淏ecause C. elegans are relatively easy for people to learn to work with, four weeks into her internship she was able to come in unsupervised and do her work,鈥 says Lee. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the kind of training students need to be successful in a research-based environment, whether that鈥檚 at a university or at a company.鈥
Immersed in a New Culture
KCS Dean Noureddine Melikechi invited the students to the UML campus knowing the important experiences they would gain both in and out of the labs.
鈥淚 thought it would be good for the students to get the opportunity to see another culture, another language, another way of living,鈥 says Melikechi, who is from Algeria. 鈥淭he students who come to 51视频 get to see a different system of doing things. They get to meet students who live in the United States and get to know them.鈥
Taking part in the internship at 51视频 marked Pillet, Trancart and Collange鈥檚 first time in the United States. Meritus was born in Boston, where she has family, but she was raised in France.
The University of Versailles students moved into an apartment in the River Hawk Village on East Campus that the KCS dean鈥檚 office furnished to make them feel at home. They have most of their meals in the Fox Dining Commons, but have also ventured into downtown Lowell to try out the diverse cuisine that the city offers.
鈥淟owell is a pretty city,鈥 Pillet says. 鈥淭he downtown is very cool, and I鈥檓 very happy to be here.鈥
The students have been able to hone their English language skills by working in the labs and traveling to places like Boston, Rhode Island and New York City.
鈥淪ince last year, I wanted to do an internship abroad because I thought that it would allow me to improve my English,鈥 Trancart says.
In exchange, the University of Versailles students teach them French. Pillet takes to the whiteboard in Lee鈥檚 lab to share different French words with the others, while Trancart teaches students in Ross鈥 lab a French word a day. Cologne helps Ph.D. student Hasitha Raviranga, a biochemistry major from Sri Lanka, understand the French on her laptop while they work together in Ramstrom鈥檚 lab.
鈥淚鈥檓 learning some French, and she鈥檚 learning some chemistry,鈥 Raviranga says.
Raviranga is one of the many international students enrolled at UML that Cologne and the other University of Versailles students have gotten to know. Meritus says she enjoys the diversity at 51视频 and learning about the home countries of students and professors.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of culture on this campus,鈥 she says. 鈥淭o be able to talk with people from all around the world is great.鈥
These summer internships are just the start of a growing exchange program in KCS. Melikechi鈥檚 goals are to work with other universities to get more students to 51视频 while also sending UML students abroad. He also wants to create a faculty exchange program.
鈥淪cience is a global community,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not one country versus another. It鈥檚 a global community of scientists trying to solve problems.鈥