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| NOAA 01-R605d FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 8/1/01 |
Contact:
Keli Tarp |
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LOCAL
STUDENT PARTICIPATES IN Preble High School graduate Sara Bruening, a junior atmospheric science major at University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, was one of 10 students selected to participate in a summer research program at the Oklahoma Weather Center in Norman, Okla. that ends Aug. 4. The program pairs undergraduate students with government and university weather researchers for 10 weeks to conduct research on a variety of topics including severe weather, tornadoes, numerical weather prediction models and climatology. In addition, students prepare and present papers reporting the results of their research. Their experience is supplemented by tours, field trips, and lectures, all designed to provide students the opportunity to judge whether or not they want to pursue a future career in research. The students' mentors, who are leading researchers in the field of meteorology, are from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and University of Oklahoma (OU) organizations that make up the Oklahoma Weather Center, including NOAA's National Severe Storms Laboratory and Storm Prediction Center and OU's Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms. Bruening, who is the daughter of Richard and Jeanne Diedrich of Green Bay, is working with SPC meteorological programmer/analyst Mike Kay and NSSL research meteorologist Harold Brooks on a climatology of tornadoes. She is studying a new perspective of the climatology of tornadoes that may one day make seasonal forecasting of tornadoes possible. "The REU program has been a great opportunity to meet the people who are the top professionals in the field and meet other students who are as eager as I am," Bruening said. "People here have treated me with so much respect and are so interested in helping me out. The experience has challenged me, and helped me realize what I am capable of accomplishing." Students apply for participation in the Research Experiences for Undergraduate (REU) program, which is funded by the National Science Foundation and the Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms. The 10 participants were chosen from almost 100 applicants in the fields of meteorology, atmospheric science, physics, engineering, chemistry, mathematics, computer science, physical geography and other disciplines. The aim of the National Science Foundation is to promote and advance scientific and engineering progress in the United States. Projects supported by the national REU program provide opportunities annually for several thousand undergraduate students to participate in active mathematics, science and engineering research experiences. Information about
the following organizations can be found online:
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NOAA
Weather Partners
http://www.norman.noaa.gov
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