To pursue biomedical engineering in graduate school.
Amy's goal is to pursue biomedical engineering and she is working in the Herd Lab.
- Featuring
-
Amy Longstreth ’17
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
Narrow down the list by selecting multiple topics.
Amy's goal is to pursue biomedical engineering and she is working in the Herd Lab.
My education and internships paved the path to a better understanding of my research interests and professional aspirations.
My chemistry background was integral to the work done during that summer since an extensive knowledge of chemistry is needed to follow the major tenets of proper conservation procedure, which are: never do something which cannot be undone, and preserve as much of the original object as possible.
“At Mount Holyoke, I learned that wherever I am, if I have passion for what I’m doing, I have the power to foster the things I care about most.”
“My proudest accomplishment is that I will graduate with a degree in English. Four years ago, in my first English class, I understood almost nothing.”
I am very interested in what mammals eat and how that has changed through time with climate and vegetation changes.
The annual conference featured more than 200 student presentations about their internships and research projects.
Institute offerings through the College’s Professional and Graduate Education program engage a broad audience of adult learners.
Marbles champ Whitney Lapic ’18 came to Mount Holyoke and found mollusk fossils, international paleontology fieldwork and a passion for research.
A day of Tudor Tailor workshops hosted by the theatre arts department drew a crowd eager to study 16th-century clothing with a 21st-century eye.