May 2, 2025
Reception & Presentations 2pm to 5pm
Cal Poly Humboldt Library
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Fast Fashion
Laquita
Agwiak
Wildlife
Undergraduate Student
Marco
Blancas
Wildlife
Undergraduate Student
Justin
Packham
Undergraduate Student
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
Our creative project from our Wildlife 309 class: Case Studies in Environmental Ethics, focuses on the ethics of the fashion industry. With our outfits made from trash or found objects along with our posters, we are bringing waste to the forefront to expose the fashion industries façade. Even though the fashion industry is highly valuable and earns high revenues, it comes at a devastating cost to the environment as this industry is one of the top 7 polluters globally.
Youth Voices Matter
Lori
Hayes
Social Work
Graduate Student
College of Professional Studies
In partnership with the Yurok Tribe, this project seeks the opinions of Yurok extended foster care and aged-out foster youth about their experiences, their needs, and their opinions on how services can be improved and ideas for future programing for Tribal foster youth. This project will produce a report that highlights common themes found in the interviews, insightful input and ideas for improvement provided by the participants. As the ICWA Department and the Tribal Court continue to design programing for youth and refine existing programs, the hope is that this final report will provide useful information that will help them in program design and improvements over time.
Humboldt's Homeless
Erica Lovell
Political Science
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
Understanding how limited funding for public health services impacts the homeless population of Humboldt County, California. This includes the demographic of the homeless population, the types of local public health services, and the current and future problems of the homeless in regards to access to public health services. Finally, considers local and national policy options to address the issue.
Getting Fit with Athletes
Daniel Cox
Child Development
Undergraduate Student
Danielle Pfeifer
Child Development
Undergraduate Student
Elizabeth Taylor
Child Development
Undergraduate Student
Rochelle Craig
Child Development
Undergraduate Student
College of Professional Studies
The four of us volunteered for the HSUfit program. In this program we meet every Friday for three hours and try to work and be with the kids any way we can. We run adapted physical education activities with children with special needs. At the end of the day we record the progress the child made that week towards their goals. Through this project we essentially are describing what we do, why it's important, and how it's impacting these kids.
Effects of Environmental Pressures and Physical Characteristics of Tide Pools on Marine Invertebrate Community Ecology
Jessica
Hoone
Wildlife
Undergraduate Student
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
Intertidal invertebrates are an integral part of tide pool ecosystems, so what is the intertidal invertebrate’s ideal habitat? Which tide pools foster the greatest abundance and species diversity? This study was conducted to determine whether five major players in the northern California invertebrate community fair better in the rocky tide pools of a sheltered bay or the sandy tide pools of a beach exposed to the full force of the waves.
Self-Determination Theory in Individuals with Disabilities
Tylor
Davis
School of Applied Health
Graduate Student
College of Professional Studies
This research aims to explore the efficacy of using Social Determination Theory (SDT) principles with an exercise program for individuals with disabilities. The SDT theoretical framework highlights the importance of social environments to support individuals' basic psychological needs such as autonomy, relatedness, and competence as it relates to exercise motivation. In the study, the researcher measured the exercise performance of an adult with a disability during a 6-week program hosted right here at Cal Poly Humboldt! The independent variables measured included walking, modified push-ups, and curl-ups. Special thanks to everyone who contributed to this programs success.
Healthy Youth, Healthy Communities
Felicia J Stansbury
Social Work
Graduate Student
College of Professional Studies
Our goal is to demonstrate the importance of connection between the natural environment, community, individuals, and wellness. We are creating a curriculum to provide a non-traditional prevention/intervention program of outdoor, wilderness activities for youth in the Southern Humboldt region. It is important to note, Ecological Systems Theory is the foundational framework for this project. The ecosystemic perspective is a way of thinking and organizing knowledge that emphasizes the interrelatedness and interdependency between individuals and social systems (Waller 2001). The purpose of our work; promoting healthy activities for youth in order to foster a healthier community.
Prison Ecology Project
Tony Silvaggio
Sociology
Faculty
Brant Hartsell
Sociology
Undergraduate Student
Stian Roussell
Sociology
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
The prison ecology project (PEP) maps the intersection of mass incarceration and environmental degradation by investigating the environmental impacts and human health problems created by the prison industrial complex. It is the first to study the myriad of environmental issues associated with prisons such as: water pollution from prison sewage and industrial waste; threats to listed species through the construction of prisons in remote, environmentally-sensitive rural areas; and, environmental justice concerns regarding prisoners, staff and surrounding communities concerning clean drinking water, exposure to coal ash dust and toxic waste.
Novel Tests of Gravity Below Fifty Microns
Frankie Trombetta
Physics
Undergraduate Student
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
The Gravity Lab at Humboldt State is concerned with measuring the force of gravity at unprecedented distance scales. Theories new and old make predictions about how gravity should behave, but accurate measurements of gravitational forces between objects close together have remained challenging. The crux of the experiment lies in sufficiently silencing the non-gravitational forces acting at the measuring site, and accomplishing this requires applying at least a little knowledge from most undergraduate physics classes. The implications of progress in this lab make it exciting to a general audience while remaining beneficial from an undergraduate learning perspective.
Case Study Focusing on ASD, Improving Accuracy in Sports with SDT and Video Modeling
Cassandra
Mcmillen
Other
Graduate Student
David
Adams
Other
Faculty
College of Professional Studies
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of a teacher selected video model on the performance of the golf putt. The researcher believes a systematic approach of instruction will improve skill development for both participants. For this single subject study a changing criterion design was used. Overall, a changing criterion study provides a structured and adaptive approach to skill development, fostering progressive improvement, motivation, and the transfer of learning, all of which contribute to increased accuracy and technique on the skill of putting. Results indicate that there was a gradual upward trend in both participants' successfully attempted putts.