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Jazzelle Elias profile photo

Women in STEM feature: Jazzelle Elias

Where are you from? I was born in Southern California near Los Angeles and lived there until I was ten. I then moved to a small logging town called Sedro-Woolley in Western Washington where I stayed until I moved to Missoula, Montana, to begin my undergraduate degree. So half of my foundational years were spent in a very urban setting, and the other half in a vastly different environment. Talk about whiplash!

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Morgan Hasenmyer profile photo

Women in STEM feature: Morgan Hasenmyer

Where are you from?Mansfield, TXWhat do you like to do for fun?Play volleyball, hike, read and sewCan you describe your research?

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students using Temptop sensors

Future teachers explore citizen science at MSU

Pre-service teachers (future science teachers) from EDM 403 and EDM 415 (Science Methods) at MSU helped pilot-test Temtop air quality instruments as part of their classes’ unit on citizen science. The instruments will become part of the SMART FIRES Instrument Lending Library being developed for Montana teachers.

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Anh Nguyen profile photo

Women in STEM feature: Dr. Anh Nguyen

Where are you from?I’m originally from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.What do you like to do for fun?I love cooking Vietnamese foods and playing badminton when I’m indoors. Outdoors, I enjoy exploring new hiking trails, checking out new places, lakes, and camping spots, and visiting national parks.

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Headshot of Mary Farina

Women in STEM Feature: Mary Farina

Where are you from?I am from Rhode Island, originally up there, and I lived in Massachusetts for about 10 years before moving to Montana. What do you like to do for fun?I like to get outside and hike. I am learning guitar and Spanish. Working in the sciences, I think it's very helpful to keep your brain healthy and try to find a balance. That actually can help you do your scientific analysis work. What do you research?

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Headshot of Ali Monroe

Women in STEM Feature: Ali Monroe

Ali Monroe is a research associate at the University of Montana at the Center for Population Health Research. She studied economics and uses economic and mathematical models to study social questions such as behavioral responses to wildfire smoke, how preterm birth relates to mental health, and which Montanan communities are most vulnerable to wildfire smoke. This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.Where are you from?Originally, I'm from a town called Edmonds, Washington, which is a little bit north of Seattle.

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Headshot of Lucy Owen

Women in STEM Feature: Lucy Owen

Where did you grow up?I grew up in Kentucky. I was born in a very rural part of Kentucky, and that's where I spent the first several years of my life before I moved to the big city of Lexington, Kentucky.How did you get into STEM and research?

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Middle Schoolers looking for insects on a beating sheet

Citizen Science Activities at Chief Joseph Middle School Outdoor Days

On Thursday, September 27th, employees of the Montana State University Science Math Resource Center attended Chief Joseph Middle School Outdoor Days at Gallatin County Regional Park. They set up an activity station and information table for six classes of sixth grade students. The students participated in three hands-on, citizen science activities.

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Gathering at Lubrecht Experimental Forest

SMART FIRES team investigates citizen science opportunities during Lubrecht Experimental Forest visit

On a beautiful fall day in September, a team of Montana NSF EPSCoR researchers, students and outreach professionals from several Montana colleges and universities gathered at the University of Montana’s Lubrecht Experimental Forest near Greenough, Mont.

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Land Cover GLOBE Observer

Citizen Science demo during All-Hands Meeting 2024

All participants in the EPSCoR All-Hands Meeting on Sept. 16-17, 2024 are invited to participate in citizen science investigation using a free app supported by NASA that allows volunteers to learn more about our shared environment by taking observations of the land, clouds, trees and mosquito habitat.We will use the app, called GLOBE Observer, during our trip to the Lubrecht Experimental Forest on Tuesday, Sept. 17.

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