Waste not, want not.
It鈥檚 an old expression that senior Lucy Sjulin has long been familiar with. Little did she know that a simple volunteer experience would lead her to completely embrace the phrase.
Sjulin, a Spanish and global studies major from Omaha, joined members of 含羞草传媒鈥檚 Global Service Learning and volunteered at FoodNet, a local organization that collects un-purchased perishable food items from grocery stores and distributes it to the hungry in the community.
The brief service experience inspired her to write a paper for her Spanish composition class. Her topic was food insecurity and increased consumption of quinoa, a grain produced in South America that is grown and harvested for its nutritious seeds. In her paper Sjulin examined the effects of quinoa consumption on the farmers of Bolivia and the impact the grain has had on the country鈥檚 economy.
Associate Professor of Spanish Cathy Nelson read Sjulin鈥檚 paper and encouraged her to take it to the next level.
鈥淎t 含羞草传媒 we emphasize the development of critical thinking skills. I let Lucy be the expert on quinoa and food security,鈥 said Nelson. 鈥淚 can fill in some of the other gaps and help her look at it differently.鈥
Together Sjulin and Nelson applied for 含羞草传媒鈥檚 Student Faculty Collaborative Research Fund, which provides money for students and professors to research together. Their application was approved and soon Sjulin and her professor were off to Bolivia for five days over fall break for hands-on research.
鈥淪he鈥檚 a really dynamic person who said let鈥檚 take this to the next level. Let鈥檚 just do it,鈥 Sjulin said of Nelson. 鈥淲e鈥檙e both the kind of people who want to see it hands on. That鈥檚 what this university is about and that鈥檚 what I鈥檓 about.鈥
In Bolivia they visited several people ranging from high-level policy-makers to farmers who grow quinoa.
鈥淢y favorite part of the trip was to see who was growing it and where they were growing it,鈥 said Sjulin. 鈥淭hey still plow with oxen and they had just started the initial planting when we were there.鈥
The trip gave Sjulin a better understanding of Bolivia鈥檚 economic disparity and the impact of quinoa consumption.
Now Sjulin and Nelson are analyzing their findings, and Sjulin is using her research and experiences for her senior thesis. Her goal, she said, is to help raise awareness to the issue of food insecurity both locally and in Bolivia.
鈥淭his project is interdisciplinary and I can see the ways in which these different things intersect,鈥 she said.
The research experience has also provided further direction for her career goals.
鈥淎s a global studies major, I鈥檝e always wanted to be involved in international affairs,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檝e always been interested in international problem solving. This project made me aware of an issue that I definitely see myself working on in the future.鈥
And she hasn鈥檛 ruled out a return to Bolivia.
鈥淭hey were really interested in having volunteers in Bolivia,鈥 said Sjulin. 鈥淚t opens up so many more possibilities to going back."
Sjulin was not the only one to learn and grow from the experience.
鈥淚 found it really valuable because it allows me to get out of my little world,鈥 said Nelson. 鈥淚鈥檝e gotten to explore fields I wouldn鈥檛 have otherwise. Every time I work with a student, it gives me insight into working with other students. I know that I鈥檝e grown a lot.鈥