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By the time a student reaches his or her senior year at COA, he or she has experienced a new way of learning, and has been exposed to a wide variety of subject areas. At its core, a COA education draws on the recognition and examination of the connections between various disciplines. With this in mind, our students focus their interests by looking through many different lenses. The Senior Project stands as the culmination of this interdisciplinary experience.
Final projects are as individual as the students who create them. To see more projects, visit the Thorndike Library where one copy of each senior project is archived. Below is only a sampling of the projects done over the past few years.
During the summer of 2008, at the George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History, birds fly into the sunlight; nuzzle each other in a nest, protect one another, and sit framed in the glory of the setting sun. Jamus Drury has captured these creatures in his exhibit, "The Aesthetics of Science: A photographic journey to Tern Island, in the remote Hawaiian Islands National Monument. Intimate portraits of albatross, frigatebirds, red-footed boobies, white terns are accompanied by excerpts from the other part of his senior project, a book-length manuscript called Taking Wing: A creative exploration in science.
What comprises a COA final project? For Tawanda Chabikwa, a full-length dance concert, an exhibit of paintings - and a full novel. Gesture was the title of his dance performance, Baobabs in Heaven is the novel, reflecting contemporary life in Zimbabwe. The performance was also a fundraiser for the Zimbabwean nonprofit, Ndini Wake, he established in 2005, providing tuition to Zimbabwean AIDS orphans.
What is the sound of one humpback whale feeding? That is a question scientists are just beginning to be able to ask, thanks to acoustic recording equipment Allied Whale has been able to drop at the bottom of the ocean floor in the Gulf of Maine - and the work of Kaitlin Palmer, who analyzed the melodic bellowing and grunting for her senior project, "Humpback Whale Vocalizations in Gulf of Maine Summer Feeding Grounds."
Katrina Zarate's study of vision, memory and blindness, "En-Visioning Art, Theory and Literature," became a multi-media instillation of distorted imagery that filled the college's Ethel H. Blum Gallery to overflowing with original paintings, prose-poems, and the mechanisms of distortion, transporting the viewer into the dark mysteries of dysfunctional vision and and bringing us through eye damage to new levels of sight and insight.
Selected projects from 2007 include:
Food, Love, and Shelter, an ethnography of family. Brittany Berndtson
Resource Management in a Small Maine Town : monitoring, conserving, and managing clam flats in Bar Harbor. Kipp Quinby
Shadows on Familiar Ground : A Photographic Exploration of Local Perspectives. Rowen Gorman
Business Plan for Permaculture Design Position and Example of Permaculture Site Design. Max Boudreau
Small-scale Aquaponic Systems : A Manual. Marianna Bradley
A Solar Study. Jonathan Busko
Barbwire Lullaby : Baobabs in Heaven, a novel. Rodney Tawanda Chabikwa
Dumi's Website and Online Radio Station. Dumisani Dlamini
The Road to Recovery : Patient, Practitioner, Prosthesis. Charles Fischer
The Virtues of "Vice City" : And Other Electronic Spaces.Isaac Fer
A Place To Call Our Own : Creating A Student Housing Cooperative. Grace Grinager
Identifying Bacteria in the Epidermal Coensarc of Montastraea Cavernosa Using Genetic Markers. Genelle Harrison
Climate Change in the International Legal System : Exploring Solutions in Addressing Climate Change Post 2012. Juan Hoffmaister
An International Regime for Liability and Redress Under the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety. Sarah Lawson-Stopps
Selected projects from 2006 include:
Music Composition and Production, creating a CD of original compositions. Matthew Protas
Process and Writing of a Children's Book. Erin Jordan Allen
Koru : A Study of Maori Jade and Bone Carving. Beth Gallant
The Full Circle of the Seed : a seed saving guide. Jane Herndon
A Comprehensive Plan on Sustainable Shore Zone Development. Rachel Gilmartin
In Drosophilo : using drosophila melanogaster as a tool to better understand mouse oogenesis and early development. Anne Czechanski
Women of Strength. Anjana Rajbhandary
Postconventional Morality and its Relationship to Personality Type, Sex and Educational Level in Undergradutes.Nikhit Jermiah D'Sa
Cycle of Violence, Break the Silence : an oral herstory: women overcoming internal and external obstacles in domestic violence.Emily Blazek
The Effects of Disturbance on Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) and Great Black-backed Gulls (Larus marinus).April M. Boucher
Tying In Together : A Qualitative Study of Climber-Founded Social-Development NGOs.Jamien St. Pierre
Supply-Leading Finance : designing a policy framework for the Kosovo government securities market.Artan A. Loxha
An Illuminated History : vision, art and science of the camera obscura.Xander Karkruff
Determining Photophysical Characteristics of Perylene and Bodipy FlC12-sphingomyelin Using Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy.Bhupendra Singh Nagpure
Selected projects from 2005 include:
For her senior project, artist and naturalist Sarah Drummond '05 sought to convey the full richness of a summer of bird life on COA's island research station, Great Duck Island. From a summer's worth of observation, scientific research and sketches, she mounted a multimedia exhibit within College of the Atlantic's George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History, "Parallel Worlds: Four Seabirds of Great Duck Island."
Eamonn Hutton '05 reconstructed Turrets Sea Side Garden, a 4,000-square-foot garden that, he recalls, "was so high with weeds the view to the ocean was blocked," when he first saw it. After working for more than a year, making landscaping and soil enhancement plans for the hundred-year-old garden, by August, 2005, the garden blossomed with pink roses and purple astilbe, becoming a place for the public to gather.
Aaron Lewis '05 recorded the ambient Sounds of Mount Desert Island - a pond in Acadia National Park, the chatter of tourists in downtown Bar Harbor, the crash of a thunderstorm on his own porch, the banging of plates in the kitchen of the park's famous restaurant, the Jordan Pond House. An edited four-cd collection became an aural exhibit at the college's George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History which Aaron later edited further to create a CD, The Sounds of Mount Desert Island, a commercially available cd.
Adam Nordell '05 is committed to two things: oral history and giving back to the people whose stories he has recorded. He conducted his senior project in Guatemala, where he recorded the stories of a group of former Guatemalan refugees who had been resettled from the highlands to the Peten rainforest after the Guatemalan civil war. While there, he also vowed to improve the health of women and children by bringing better stoves to the community, a task he accomplished before the year was out.
Selected projects from 2004 include:
Dustin Eirdosh '04 created a sustainable agriculture project at the local high school which he called Community Seeds.The project involved working with students to grow food that they might consume in the school cafeteria. The first year after Dustin graduated, he continued the project under a community grant. The second year, the school decided to fund a position for him to continue his work. He is now writing a school curriculum based on his project.

Sam Wustner '04 mounted an art exhibit of oil paintings in the college's Blum Gallery. In his show, In and Out of FocusSam displayed the result of three months spent focused on painting the human figure, drawing and painting fellow students.
Jennifer Warnow '04 created a lesson plan, Beyond Kinematics: The Beginnings of an Interdisciplinary Physics Curriculum with the intention of bringing the joy back to studying physics, using questions of history and sports to reveal basic concepts.
Senior Projects from 2002 include:
Michelle Dumont '02 wrote a curriculum for an advanced high school social studies elective, Get Up, Stand Up.This curriculum is designed to use human rights as a vehicle to study international law, geography, history, politics, economics and culture.
Anselm Bradford '02 created a multimedia kiosk examining the use of plants in the nation of Vanuatu, an island in the south Pacific, and their value for industrial, food, and artistic purposes. His project, Vanuatu and the Role of Plantsis also an interactive website.
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