| |
|
|
David Bengtson, Associate Professor
Fisheries, Animal, & Veterinary Science
David Bengtson earned both an MS in zoology (1974)
and a PhD in biological sciences (1982) from URI. Bengtson teaches
aquaculture courses and conducts research in summer flounder aquaculture.
|
This issue of Maritimes
may look a little different to the dedicated readership accustomed
to issues devoted to research themes. In this issue, we have highlighted
not the world-class research going on at the University of Rhode Island
(URI), but the world-class and worldwide activities being carried
out by URI graduates in the marine and environmental arena. The 16
invited contributors, URI graduates from the 1950s to the 1990s, describe
what they are doing, the various routes by which they traveled from
URI to their positions, and how their URI training prepared them for
careers in the real world. In many cases, they give direct and valuable
advice to today's students who, I hope, will be encouraged to put
this issue on their "must read" list. One of the underlying
themes in many of the articles is that success in the workplace depends
not just on solid technical skills, but on the ability to solve problems,
to communicate well, and to work effectively with other people-skills
we continually try to impart to our students.
As I read the articles submitted for
this issue, I am impressed by many things: the breadth of disciplines
in which our graduates work, their global distribution, their commitment
to making their own individual contributions to the betterment of
the world, and their fond memories of URI. If you ever doubted that
URI has an enormous impact in marine and environmental sciences around
the world, a quick read through this issue will rid you of those doubts.
The thing that has amazed me the most, quite frankly, is the ease
with which the contributors could be identified and the issue put
together (a special thanks here to Jackleen de La Harpe and Holly
Turton). There was no "Gee, who can we get to write about that
area?" Rather, the question was always "How in the world
are we going to choose among all the excellent candidates?" In
other words, many more individual stories can be told. If you like
the concept of this issue and want to be further impressed by more
of our graduates, please let Dean Margaret Leinen know. For now, I
hope you will enjoy the issue. If you're a fellow alum or faculty
member, you may get an answer to "I wonder whatever happened
to..." If you're a student, use this as a starting point for
your own imagination. If you're one of the many friends of URI's marine
and environmental programs, I hope this issue will remind you why
that friendship is important to you and to us. To all the contributors,
thank you for sharing your thoughts with us, and thank you especially
for representing URI so well around the world. |
|