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crumb trail: Home >> Whistle Online >> Archives >> October 19, 2009
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Team brings The Tower to publication

Undergraduate research journal showcases, inspires and promotes

Sarah Mallory
Communications & Marketing

The Tower, Tech’s undergraduate research journal, on Oct. 1 celebrated the publication of its first print edition.

Held in the library’s first floor west commons, the event brought together many of the students, faculty and staff who worked to make the initiative a reality.

The Tower, Tech's Undergraduate Research JournalIn the spring of 2007, then-student Mark Youngblood approached Karen Harwell, director of Undergraduate Research and faculty advisor to The Tower, with the idea to develop an undergraduate research journal. At the same time, the Library and Information Center was formulating similar plans. Harwell united the two groups, forming one of many collaborations that have helped advance the project.

“[Faculty, staff and students] wanted a centralized mechanism to show the depth and quality of undergraduate research, and to create opportunities for students to participate in the peer review journal process—an experience that undergraduates don’t usually get,” Harwell said.

The Tower, seeking to showcase undergraduate research, inspire academic inquiry and promote the Institute’s commitment to undergraduate research, became an official student publication in fall 2007 and published its first edition online in fall 2008.

“Peer recognition is important,” said Mac Pitts, director of Student Publications and Media. “The Tower allows interested students to see their works highlighted. Examples of quality academic collaboration are rewarding for the students involved in research as well as the students involved in The Tower.”

The ambitious journey from creation to publication in one year required countless conversations with the campus community, both to educate and encourage participation in The Tower. “We contacted department heads, attended FASET, spoke with GT 1000 classes, worked with the Library and the Student Publications Board … there were so many people involved in making this happen,” said Harwell.

Though staffed by nearly 50 students, more than 40 Georgia Tech faculty and staff also volunteer their time to the advisement and review of the journal. Former Tower editor Dianne Palladino (PSYCH ’08) noted that the establishment of an undergraduate research journal “was attempted in the past, but this time it succeeded because of teamwork across the Institute.”

The notion of teamwork as a building block for The Tower takes many forms. Student editors strive to equally represent research across all of Georgia Tech’s colleges. The latest edition includes papers on subjects from renewable plastic to an examination of eugenics and Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

Faculty advisors also assist in the evaluation of papers. Literature, Communication and Culture Professor Rebecca Burnett, “laid the groundwork for the review process and submission guidelines,” Palladino said. Faculty reviewers and the Review Advisory Board, comprised of faculty and staff from each college, also help students learn how to evaluate a paper for methodologically sound data.

“The Tower was founded by a group of research-passionate undergraduate students with guidance from supportive faculty members,” said current Tower editor Chuyong Yi in her letter to readers. She urges undergraduate students to participate in the journal process because “it is a great learning opportunity for those who are involved in any shape or form.”

Copies of The Tower are free and can be picked at distribution racks in the Library and Student Center. Previous editions of The Tower are available online.


 

 

Approved by the Office of External Affairs on 09/24/97
Last Modified: October 19, 2009