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Rochester Prep High School students gain research experience at RIT

Carlos Ortiz/RIT">

A student speaks into a reporter's microphone

Carlos Ortiz/RIT

Malik Jett, a senior at Rochester Prep High School, talks to a reporter from 13-WHAM during the RIT-RPHS Capstone Experience showcase. Jett conducted research in RIT’s microbiology lab.

Malik Jett wants to study neuroscience and eventually go to medical school. The Rochester Prep High School senior recently gained hands-on skills in RIT’s microbiology lab that will prepare him for his college journey.

Jett was part of a team of Rochester Prep students who spent the last four months studying bacteria for potential antibiotic properties. He shared his findings at the RIT and Rochester Prep Capstone Experience held on Feb. 4 in the Wegmans Theater in MAGIC.

Jett is one of 24 Rochester Prep seniors who participated in the annual research program that pairs student teams with faculty mentors. Students visited the RIT campus weekly from September through January to work on their projects. While Jett’s team focused on bacteria, other students learned to build a small self-driving car with Dimah Dera, assistant professor in the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science; manufacture harbor seal whisker sensors with Qian Xue, associate professor of mechanical engineering; and test the strengthening effect of shampoo on hair follicles with Amy Engelbrecht-Wiggans, assistant professor of mechanical engineering.

Jett and his team worked with André Hudson, RIT dean of the College of Science, and Danae Rodriguez, postdoctoral researcher. Although speaking to a large audience was, at first, “nerve-wracking,” Jett was confident in his scientific experience.

“I actually conducted research, and I have something to show,” Jett said.

Public speaking is the added bonus for students participating in the capstone experience, said Donna Burnette, executive director of RIT’s K-12 University Center, which administers the RIT-Rochester Prep Partnership.

“There’s a maturity that comes with being able to reflect upon your experience to figure out what you gained from it and what you learned, whether it be a positive or a negative,” Burnette said. “To be able to talk about their reflections puts them a step ahead when they go to college.”

The partnership allows students to stretch their skills while they preview the college experience. RIT’s K-12 University Center staff works closely with Rochester Prep administration to identify students for the capstone program. During the spring of their junior year, the students sample different academic experiences at RIT before they start their capstone project the following fall.

This academic year marks a milestone for the partnership and its 10th year anniversary of educating students. The partnership with RIT formed in 2013 under the leadership of RIT Board of Trustee member Ron Zarrella to prepare high school students for college, and the school opened in 2014.

“Not only do Rochester Prep High School students get the opportunity to be on the RIT campus, but they also get opportunities to evolve and discover new versions of themselves,” said Edward Eckert, principal of Rochester Prep High School.

This year’s seventh annual capstone experience is an example of the progress made over the last decade, Burnette said.

“Every year we make tweaks based on the experience and feedback from the students and faculty,” Burnette said. “We’re really growing into something that’s been institutionalized, something that we look forward to, and that we’re happy to be here to celebrate.”

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