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ORISE program develops scientific expertise Students gain field experience, host installations get needed program help By Rob Schuette for the Triad Online, Fort McCoy, Wisconsin Young professionals just starting out in their chosen fields are gaining
field experience by participating in scientific projects at Fort McCoy. In
return, the installation is accomplishing projects that otherwise might not be
completed. About 10 recent college graduates are supporting Fort McCoy programs
in the Directorate of Training and Mobilization through ORISE. |
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Andy Sewell, an ORISE participant under the mentorship of Fort McCoy Archaeologist Dell Greek, is conducting a project to document historical homesteads at Fort McCoy. ORISE pays Sewell a stipend, while he gains the field experience he needs to be able to compete for a professional position. Greek said the ORISE program is "win-win" for both the participants and the installation. "Without his help, and with the budget constraints, it would be impossible for us to do the project," Greek said. "Andy took over a four-year-old project and is bringing it to completion in 12 months." Sewell, who has a master’s degree in industrial archaeology from Michigan Technological University, said the archaeology field is very competitive. |
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"The ORISE program was a good way to get my foot in the door," Sewell said. "At least now I have experience in federal resources and one leg up in the military hiring process." Sewell said ORISE participants also attend a type of "boot camp," titled Army 101, at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., before beginning their positions. That gives them some background about the Army and also why it needs a lot of land to conduct its training, he said. Greek said the ORISE program also helps to create a pool of qualified applicants who are knowledgeable about the Army’s needs and prepares them for possible future employment with the Army. ORISE students can be in the program for up to three years. |
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"The experience I’m getting here is great," Kuhn said. "I’m developing a database for a number of areas, including a forest management inventory. It’s a fun project, and it’s an up-and-coming field." John Noble, Fort McCoy Fisheries biologist, said |
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| the fishery management
program depended heavily on six ORISE participants during the past summer.
Interns participated in a wide variety of field studies, such as conducting
water-quality monitoring, stream biomonitoring, and lake oxygen-level studies;
performing fish population estimates; evaluating fish contaminants; and doing
erosion control and habitat improvement projects.
"ORISE gives us people with good work ethics and a willingness to learn," Noble said. "It provides us with a more cost-beneficial way of doing business, while giving young professionals knowledge and experience in natural resources programs. We give them hands-on experience and help them build toward their careers in a very competitive field." In turn, Noble said he has more time to devote to project planning and completing other projects. Fort McCoy uses the same techniques that many of the external organizations use, so it allows participants to use their experience to get positions with other natural resources organizations, Noble said. |
Shawn Giblin measures water depth at Ft. McCoy's Stillwell Pond. |
Shawn Giblin, an ORISE participant in the fisheries management program, said he has gained much experience in fieldwork and computers during his two-and-one-half years at Fort McCoy. Giblin has a bachelor’s degree in aquatic biology from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. "I’ve really liked some of the stream improvement projects we’ve done here," Giblin said. "The before-and-after data have shown some substantial improvements in fish population numbers." Giblin said he has had many opportunities in the fisheries management program, such as developing lake depth maps and conducting oxygen studies, water quality studies, and lake netting of fish to determine fish population estimates.
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