| What
defines a senior thesis? As the following examples demonstrate,
it’s not
the format or content. It’s the rigor with which a question
or idea is pursued.
For Sunshine Eversull, a Comparative History of Ideas (CHID) major
and single parent, the senior thesis was an opportunity to explore
a topic of personal significance: the implications, academically
and socially, of attending college as a single parent.
Eversull was just getting
started on her thesis research when guest lecturer Vivian Adair
spoke at the UW. “Dr. Adair created a project that gets lower-income
single parents into higher education,” says Eversull. “She
has a particular interest in how society treats people on welfare.
I went on to read all her books and study the theoretical trail
she was following.”
Eversull also studied
the work of French theorist Michel Foucault and other theorists
suggested by her thesis adviser, Professor Phillip Thurtle.
As Spring Quarter began, she planned to write an 80-page theory-based
thesis. “But I realized I wanted to take what I had learned
and use it to help people,” says Eversull. One lesson learned
was how single parents benefit from networking with each other,
so Eversull developed a workshop—“The Super Parent Workshop”—for
single parents enrolled in college. She also created a related website
with an interactive discussion board.
“I’m still
writing a thesis, but now it will be shorter,” says Eversull.
“It will develop my theoretical ideas but will also reflect
on developing the workshop.”
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Peter
Brun. Photo by Alex Brun. |
DXARTS major Peter Brun
decided on a thesis project that reflects his interest in image
manipulation. His project is a 4’ x 4’ artwork with
100 motorized sections. Attached to each motor are a dozen flaps,
in varying shades of grey. A computer controls the motors, causing
each to rotate to a specific grey flap (much like the flipping numbers
on an alarm clock). The result is an ever-changing image in shades
of grey.
“I wanted to create
something that has an experiential element to it,” says Brun.
“There’s an element of expectation for the viewer as
you watch it flip. You’ll
be witnessing an image forming and constantly changing.”
The project has involved
endless challenges. Brun had to invent rotors that would spin the
flaps, and control boards and software to move the motors. “I
had to teach myself a ton of new things,” he says. “I
learned how to use milling machines to mill metal, I manufactured
my own printed circuit board, and I had to do software design. All
the DXARTS students have had to go outside their own boundaries
and try new things.”
Brun’s senior
thesis, and those of his DXARTS cohort, were on display at Consolidated
Works Gallery in June — a fitting tribute to the students’
year-long effort.
Related
Stories:
Required
Thesis? Keep it Flexible
Back to
Surviving the Senior Thesis
[Summer 2006 - Table of Contents]
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