February 26, 2018
Support graduate students in 3 Minute Thesis finale
Eight masters and doctoral graduate students will recite their research in the final Three Minute Thesis Competition at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 27, in the K-State Alumni Center Banquet Room. Light hors d'oeuvres and a cash bar will be available for attendees.
Thirty-seven students participated in the third annual heats competition on Feb. 13.
Theses and dissertations can be more than 80,000 words and take hours to present, but graduate students in this competition have just three minutes and one slide to convey their often highly-technical research to a lay audience.
Three Minute Thesis encourages graduate students to hone their science communication skills by learning to present a compelling oration on their thesis topic and its significance.
The eight graduate students who will compete in the final competition include:
- Tennecia Dacass, doctoral student in economics, "Intergenerational Effects of Mass Incarceration."
- Dave Hoffman, doctoral student in counseling and student development, "Purple Stride: Prospective Engineering Students and First-Year Retention."
- Thiwanka Fernando, doctoral student in mathematics, "Going from 'a' to 'b.'"
- Gabriela Magossi, master's student in food science, "From Dust to Dinner: Salmonella in Feed Mills."
- Vinicius Perin, master's student in agronomy, "Nitrogen Fertilizer: When to Apply Urea?"
- Sam Sharpe, doctoral student in biology, "Thinking Like a Thirsty Plant."
- Catherine Steele, doctoral student in psychology, "Diet-Induced Impulsivity."
- Rachel Wilkins, master's student in entomology, "Feeding the World by Implementing Robust Management Programs for Insect Pests after Crop Harvest."
The Three Minute Thesis Competition, known as 3MT, began in 2008 at the University of Queensland, Australia, and has since spread to at least 600 universities in 63 countries around the world. The challenge of 3MT is to encourage graduate students to hone their science communication skills by learning to present a compelling oration on their thesis topic and its significance.
The top two presenters will be awarded a scholarship, with the first-place winner receiving a $500 scholarship and serving as K-State's representative at the Midwestern Association of Graduate Schools' 3MT Competition April 4-6 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Second place will be awarded a $250 scholarship. The audience will participate by voting for the people's choice winner, who receives a $125 scholarship.
Any questions about K-State's Three Minute Thesis Competition can be directed to Megan Miller, the Graduate School's student services coordinator, at mmmiller@k-state.edu.