Background Image
Previous Page  25 / 36 Next Page
Basic version Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 25 / 36 Next Page
Page Background

GCU MAGAZ I NE • 25

What is exciting about these topics — and about

17 more like them— isn’t that students and

faculty at Grand Canyon University are posing

such questions. It’s how they will attempt to

arrive at the answers that is of major significance.

In the dawning of a new era, GCU’s College

of Science, Engineering and Technology (CSET)

this fall will establish, for the first time, scientific

research on campus.

“One of the things I was brought here to do

was to revisit the idea of whether we could build a

research capability for the faculty and students,”

said CSET Assistant Dean Jon Valla, who came to

GCU in June 2015 after working at Midwestern

University in Glendale, Ariz., and Barrow

Neurological Institute in Phoenix.

The resounding answer, Valla learned, was

yes. Once it was proposed, science faculty and

students began flocking to the fledgling program.

The reasons are clear. Promoting a research

capability in the sciences gives GCU students

an edge in applying for medical and graduate

programs. They can also dig deeply into subjects

they care about and strive for outcomes that

make a difference in the world.

“This also improves the scientific reputation as

well as the overall reputation of the University,”

Valla said.

About 20 projects proposed by science faculty

and students have been approved to start this

semester. Valla said dozens of students have

applied for the extracurricular projects.

“The students are so hungry,” he said.

The research is in addition to work performed

at GCU’s Center for Innovation in Research and

Teaching (CIRT), which publishes the Journal of

Instructional Research (JIR) online.

The research opportunities, however, do

not detract from GCU’s superior reputation

as a “teaching university” in which faculty

responsibilities are first and foremost to

instruct students.

“We will continue to be a teaching university

first, but now we will be a teaching university

with a research capability,” Valla said.

Here are some examples of what is being

explored:

Environmental sustainability:

Dr. Randhir

Prakash Deo, a CSET professor, has conducted

extensive research on the impact of contaminants

in the environment, and several projects he plans

to explore will utilize his expertise.

A project he is leading will research the

effects of certain pharmaceuticals after they pass

through humans into the environment.

“Wastewater is not able to degrade these

stubborn chemicals,” Deo said.

In addition to monitoring, calculating a risk

assessment and creating a remediation plan,

Deo intends for students to take the scientific

process a step further and propose action

strategies for change.

“This is unique,” he said. “There could be laws

written, stricter regulation and a charge created

to clean the environment.”

Phytoremediation:

Deo is teaming

with CSET professor Dr. Neal Adam on a

phytoremediation project to research the use

of plants to cut down on pollution and assess

environmental health.

“Some grasses are good at removing

heavy metals from the soil,” Adam said. “A

first step in our program would be to see if

we can produce similar results in this area.

Then, more importantly for our project,

would be to test to see if plants actually take

up pharmaceutical compounds. Can plants

remove pharmaceutical contaminants from

the soil/water solution?”

Firefighter wellness:

Goodyear (Ariz.) Fire

Captain Branden Husky and Donna Gerakos, a

CSET assistant professor, already are hard at work

investigating a curriculum to improve the health

and decrease the injury rates of firefighters.

A 21-year firefighting veteran, Husky has

witnessed first-hand the kinds of problems that

put firefighters out of commission.

Back injuries are number one, Husky said,

followed by knee and shoulder injuries, heart

disease and crashes to and from scenes.

“The top four we can do something about,”

said Husky, who is enrolled in GCU’s exercise

science degree with a sports performance

emphasis.

“Until now, I never thought of firefighters as

athletes,” Gerakos said.

Gerakos has been meeting with Husky

throughout the summer to develop the

strengthening and conditioning program.

They have a goal: to teach the first class in

September at the Arizona State Fire School.

*****

The first research projects are focused

on biology and chemistry, Valla said, but

engineering, IT and computer science soon

will follow.

“The hope is that other colleges will follow

the same model,” Valla said.

He stressed that the Christian ethic will be

alive and well in research.

“The application of the Christian ethic

to the practice of research is critically

important,” he said.

How helpful are certain plants in cleaning toxins from soil?

Will 3D printing technology eventually create anatomical replacements?

Can a fitness curriculum help firefighters prevent injuries?

Goodyear (Ariz.) Fire Captain Branden Husky (left)

and Donna Gerakos, a CSET assistant professor