<p>I definitley agree with the last paragraph of the article exerpt posted. At our university all tenured faculty and even some emeritus faculty are available for independent study research for credit. And almost all colleagues I know enjoy the mentoring relationship which inevidibly developes. Sometimes the biggest surprise comes when we give them their own building/lab keys. Its a very tangible signal that their faculty mentor sees them as more than just another undergrad.</p>
<p>And of course there are the surprises. I walked into our big bay hydraulic lab one morning and there was this crude wooden platform holding a 12 foot sonotube above and with a small garbage can below positioned so he could load it from a perimeter catwalk. I immediately knew that it was my undergrad IS student who was doing landfill leachate research and didn’t have the budget to purchase a large scale manometer. A week later it was rigged with 6 piezometers which the lab did have and the contraption worked like a charm.</p>
<p>My daughter at Florida State has had some marvelous opportunities as an undergrad to do research, including individually funded research and having her work published. I’ve never seen undergrads with this kind of opportunity before…I am amazed.</p>