Art Shapiro's Butterfly SiteLife before Shapiro lab included a lot of moving around for me. I grew up on the front range of the Rockies in Colorado and have loved science (especially plants and bugs) since i can remember. I majored in Conservation Biology at Prescott College in Arizona, and aside from a brief research internship at the Harvard Forest in Massachusetts, I’ve been in California ever since. I spent a year living in the redwoods outside of Occidental, a tiny town in Sonoma County, where I worked as an environmental educator for innercity youth. From Sonoma I moved to Hollywood, which was obviously a big change after living in a forest with no TV, cell phone service, or paved roads for 18 months. I made the best of it though: I planted a vegetable garden, sold my car, and worked in East LA for an NSF-funded program aimed at helping minority students pursue advanced degrees in environmental science.
I am very excited to be working in the Shapiro lab. In my time at UC Davis I have become involved in science education and mentorship in several ways. I have served as a research mentor for STEM students participating the the Ronald E. McNair Scholars Program on campus. During a summer research position in Uganda in 2007 I volunteered for the Books Open the World Foundation to promote literacy and education among women and girls of rural Uganda (follow links for pictures and a newsletter article describing my work abroad). I have TA-ed several biology and ecology courses, including Biodiversity and the Tree of Life, Ecology and Evolution, and Plant Communities of California. I believe that social change is possible through education, service, and a love of science!