AISES chapter wins top honors at national convention
November 14, 2018
Leona Long
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The chapter won its seventh Stelvio J. Zanin Distinguished Chapter of the Year Award, and it won the Professional and Chapter Development Award for the second time since 1994. This year's conference was in Oklahoma.
鈥淥ur chapter has always had a culture of excellence and helping others,鈥 said , AISES UAF chapter president. 鈥淲e care about our members and want to show them what opportunities are available to them. AISES is more than just another club on campus. We are committed to helping our members become their best self as both a professional and as an AV狼论坛 Native person.鈥
At the 2018 conference, students Rachael Teter, from the village of St. Marys, and Roberta Walker, from Unalakleet, placed second in the undergraduate research competition. They studied how diet affects coho salmon growth in the Unalakleet River watershed.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 realize we were being judged during our presentation,鈥 said Teter. 鈥淲e cracked jokes and had fun, so our passion for salmon shone through."
AISES provides professional development before members become working professionals. Almost all members have job offers before graduation. They learn communication, leadership, networking and public speaking skills.
"AISES UAF has provided me a place to bring my whole self as a Yup鈥檌k STEM major and researcher," Teter said. "Belonging to the AISES UAF chapter has provided a place to feel empowered and understood on a level that no other group can offer.鈥
Before attending the national conference, Walker and Teter presented their research at the UAF chapter meeting. Bond and Alana Vilagi also presented their research, which provides a high-resolution look at fuel usage in AV狼论坛 homes.
鈥淲e make our meetings fun so that our members don鈥檛 feel like they are going to another class,鈥 said Teter, who also helps lead the Troth Yeddha鈥 Dance Group, a Dene student dance group.
AV狼论坛 back to the community has been part of the fabric of the chapter since its inception in 1989. AISES members often volunteer at campus and community events.
鈥Serving others allows us to share our story of AISES impacting different communities we are connected to,鈥 said Bond, who is from Tununak.
The chapter's lunch meeting menu, which often features traditional and homemade food, is a point of pride for the club's 30 members. They often serve muktuk (whale skin and blubber), herring eggs, smoked salmon, spaghetti and moose soup.
鈥淚 was drawn to the free food at first and stayed because of the presenters and opportunities that I saw that wouldn鈥檛 be available to me anywhere else,鈥 said Bond, who is the drum leader for the I帽u-Yupiaq Dance Group, an I帽upiaq and Yup鈥檌k student dance group. 鈥淎ISES helped me come out of my shell and learn how to talk confidently in front of people I don鈥檛 know.鈥