Skip to main contentAccessibility Statement
NIC Logo
  • Apply
  • Request Info
  • MyNIC
  • More
    • Give
    • Directory
    • Canvas
    • Student Resources
    • Athletics
    • College Overview

LCHS senior takes on doctorate dissertation work for senior project

Return to newsroom

 

Lake City High School senior Kaylee Northrop, left, and North Idaho College chemistry professor Ryan Joseph examine test results March 21 in an NIC chemistry lab. 

High school seniors throughout North Idaho must complete a senior project in order to graduate, but most senior projects don’t have teenagers doing doctorate-level lab work.

Kaylee Northrop, a Lake City High School senior who is dual-enrolled at North Idaho College, is doing just that.

Northrop is spending some of the last months of her high school career in the lab with NIC chemistry professor Ryan Joseph working with a type of organic molecule called a glycopeptide, a relatively new class of molecule that can play a critical role in the real-world development of antibiotics.

The pair are experimenting with a new method to artificially produce the naturally occurring molecules. The project is a continuation of Joseph’s dissertation while earning his doctorate degree in chemistry at Washington State University.

“There are five or six different methods already that get at making these glycopeptides, but all of them have their benefits and drawbacks,” Joseph said. “New methods are always useful because they’ll have different benefits and drawbacks, so it gives alternatives and more power to scientists trying to make something in particular.”

Northrop approached Joseph about being her senior project mentor after her dad, who had taken Joseph’s chemistry course at NIC, noticed and encouraged her interest in chemistry classes. Northrop said high school concepts and experiments were clicking for her, but she wanted to know more so she asked Joseph if she could help with research projects or at least audit some of his college chemistry courses.

Joseph’s response was an enthusiastic one.

“I was probably more excited than she was,” he said. “When people ask you what you do and you say, ‘I teach chemistry,’ it’s usually a cringe moment, so to meet young people who are interested in chemistry – which, to me, is a beautiful and fascinating subject – is very exciting.

“A lot of people have this hidden talent that they don’t know about in the sciences or in the humanities, and coming to a place like North Idaho College allows them to discover that. It’s just been a fantastic thing to be able to work with a student like this in that context.”

For Northrop, the chance to work with Joseph has not only made for a unique senior project, but has also helped inform big decisions she faces about her future.

“With this project, I’m able to get a taste of the chemistry department or other sciences before I fully dedicate myself to it,” Northrop said. “In my senior project, I had a goal to see if I really enjoy chemistry before I need to decide a path going into college, and this has really showed me how much I do enjoy it. I know I would be struggling a lot more with graduating and needing to find a major if I didn’t have this opportunity.”

Joseph said the level of work and quality of learning Northrop is experiencing through her senior project is on par with what new tradespeople experience through an apprenticeship with a master of their craft.

“One of the really fantastic things about the trades is people can come from high school or from community college or from wherever they are in life, and they can get an apprenticeship and then they can go out and find a job almost immediately using those skills,” Joseph said. “It’s a similar thing here. A lot of the skills Kaylee is learning are directly transferrable at this level to a career in a lab, so if she wanted to, she could probably successfully apply for work at one of our labs in the area.”

And the project isn’t finished yet. Before Northrop has to present her senior project in May, she and Joseph plan to head to Pullman to work with WSU chemistry department’s Garner Research Group to analyze the results of their lab work with the hopes of publishing their findings in an academic journal.

All this goes to show that important work in science happens every day and closer to home than some might think, Joseph said.

“One of the issues that scientists face is we’re everywhere, but people often don’t know about us and where we are. That has something to do with access,” Joseph said. “A college like NIC is an opportunity to see that scientific development is actually happening in communities and that we’re not all off in an ivory tower or some distant lab on the east coast. It’s happening all around us – at the University of Idaho, at WSU in Pullman and at North Idaho College.”

For more information about NIC’s chemistry program, contact NIC’s Natural Sciences Division at (208) 769-3495 or visit www.nic.edu. 

 

Lake City High School senior Kaylee Northrop prepares samples for an experiment using a technique called thin layer chromatography March 21 in a North Idaho College chemistry lab.

Story by Megan Snodgrass mpsnodgrass@nic.edu

Photos by Elli Oba etoba@nic.edu 



Posted: Monday, April 4, 2022

Email ArticleEmail

Links

  • Events Page
  • Athletics Site
  • Emergency Notifications

Go to our Facebook Page Go to our Cecil Cardinal Facebook Page Go to our Twitter Page Go to our Instagram Page Go to our You Tube videos page Go to our Snapchat profile


Public Information Request Form

NIC Communications Contacts

Please direct all media inquiries to:

Megan Snodgrass
Communications Coordinator
(208) 665-2759 or megan.snodgrass@nic.edu

Laura Rumpler
Chief Communications and
Government Relations Officer
(208) 769-3404 or laura.rumpler@nic.edu


News Search



Archives

  • Newsroom
  • 2021 - 2022
  • 2020 - 2021
  • 2019 - 2020

Footer Quick Links

Contact Info

North Idaho College
1000 W. Garden Ave.
Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814 USA
(208) 769-3300
(877) 404-4536

Maps

  • Main Campus and Outreach Centers

Hours

  • M-Th 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
  • F 7:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.

Directory

  • Employee Search

Security

  • Campus Security
  • (208) 769-3310
  • Safe Campus Form

Leadership

  • President
  • Board of Trustees

Financial Aid

  • Home
  • Scholarships

Policy

  • Accessibility
  • Accreditation
  • FERPA
  • Nondiscrimination
  • Section 508
  • Title IX

Employment

  • Current Listings

Employees

  • Resources

© 2020 North Idaho College