Lovell to Lead UMD’s Gemstone Honors Program

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Professor David Lovell, a faculty member in the civil and environmental engineering department with a joint appointment in the Institute for Systems Research (ISR), has been appointed director of Gemstone, a multidisciplinary research program at the University of Maryland (UMD).

In this pioneering program, students form teams of 10-15 members and endeavor to address some aspect of a major societal problem. The culmination of their work is a team thesis, which is then submitted for review by a panel representing academia, industry, and government. Students who complete the program successfully receive a Gemstone Citation along with their diploma.

“The program provides students with the opportunity to conduct rigorous research, with faculty and Gemstone staff providing mentorship,” explains Lovell. “Historically, research opportunities for undergraduate students have been somewhat limited. It’s been seen as something you do starting at the graduate level—and that’s one of the factors that makes this program unique.”

“Our experience with Gemstone shows that undergraduates are often very interested in learning how to conduct serious research—and they can be very capable researchers, as well.”

“The research skills that we foster in the program are transferable across many fields. Whether your focus is STEM, business, arts and humanities, or any other academic discipline on campus, you can benefit from having these skills."
 

Professor David Lovell

Lovell’s goals for his directorship include increasing minority and female representation within the program, and also expanding its reach to include more students with majors other than engineering. While Gemstone was founded by a past dean of the A. James Clark School of Engineering, William W. Destler, and originally based at the Clark School, the program is open to students in all disciplines.

“The research skills that we foster in the program are transferable across many fields. Whether your focus is STEM, business, arts and humanities, or any other academic discipline on campus, you can benefit from having these skills,” Lovell said.

Indeed, the collaborative and interdisciplinary character of current-day research makes multiple capabilities within a team highly desirable, he noted, and Gemstone projects involve a business and marketing component, as with many real-world endeavors.

Lovell, whose own research focuses on transportation facility design, vehicle technology, and air traffic management, joined the civil and environmental engineering faculty in 1997. Since then, he has served as a mentor to numerous post-doctoral fellows, graduate, and undergraduate students, including two Gemstone teams.

In recognition of his consistently outstanding undergraduate teaching, he has also served as a Keystone Professor in the Clark School for a decade. In addition, Professor Lovell served as the lead faculty advisor for the UMD chapter of Engineers Without Borders, and as a QUEST program mentor.

Published July 28, 2020