UNM Today: Nanoscience
and Microsystems Degree
February,
2007
UNM Grad Students Bend New Degree to
Their Individual Interests
(pictured from left-to-right: row 1: Darin Leonhardt , Arezou Khoshakhlagh , row 2: Martin Donovan , Andrew De La Riva , Diana Habel-Rodriguez , Erika Cooley)
Martin
Donovan wants to solve real life problems.
That is why he is studying pharmaceutics with Assistant Professor of Pharmaceutics,
Hugh Smyth, M.D. Donovan’s doctoral work is a search to find a way to deliver
drugs into the specific regions of the lungs where they can be most effective. That
requires chemistry and engineering solutions, so for the next several months he
will spend time in various labs throughout the university searching for a technique
to break cancer and cystic fibrosis drugs into specially- sized particles that when inhaled, will
naturally travel to the part of the lung that needs them.
Erika
Cooley works at Sandia National Laboratories while she is finishing a doctorate
in Chemical and Nuclear Engineering. At
Sandia she works with sensitive surface acoustic wave sensors to detect
pathogens. But this spring she is working at the UNM Cancer Research Center with Professor and Chief, Division
of Maternal-Fetal Medicine Kimberly Leslie, M.D. who is developing a
non-invasive endometrial cancer test, as she searches for her doctoral project.
These
students, along with six others are taking classes in the new UNM graduate
degree program in nanoscience and microsystems. They are on fellowship
receiving stipends from the National Science Foundation’s Integrated Graduate
Education Research Traineeship (IGERT) program. The new degree program is
something different for the university. Most graduate programs fit the student
to the degree. This degree forms itself
around the interest of the students.
NSMS
program director Abhaya Datye says, “The newly approved NSMS degree program represents
a paradigm shift in graduate education by eroding the boundaries among
traditional departments. Faculty from
participating departments will co-teach in a new curriculum, since nanoscience depends
critically on the contributions from the materials, chemical, physical,
biological and engineering sciences. The
microsystems portion of the program will provide the engineering component.”
More than
60 UNM faculty members work with individual students as they try to solve
complex multidisciplinary problems. Some
students come to the program knowing the kind of problem they want to
solve. Others are inspired by working in
lab groups with individual faculty members.
Datye says there is room in this program for students with many
different interests.
**More info on the degree can be found here**