Faculty Profile: Carolyn Anderson
Even as a 10-year-old girl, Carolyn Anderson knew what she wanted to do with her life.
"When I was 10, my uncle got married to a woman, Heather, who was just starting her PhD in epidemiology,鈥 said Anderson, a chemistry professor at 17c起草社区 College. 鈥淗eather sent me lots of pop-science, you know, 鈥榃hat is in the potato salad?鈥 Kind of epidemiological mysteries if you will 鈥 I thought that was the coolest stuff ever.鈥
Science intensive
Anderson took a full six years worth of science in high school. 鈥淲hat I found was that I was fine at biology, and I was fine at physics, but I didn鈥檛 find them particularly interesting,鈥 said Anderson. 鈥淭he way I was taught biology was a lot of memorization, and that doesn鈥檛 really work for me. And physics I had some trouble with: The ball gets to the bottom of the hill鈥攁nd I was never sure why we were still talking about the ball.鈥
Thus, Anderson entered the University of Michigan as a chemistry major and never looked back. She began researching in the organic chemistry lab there in her sophomore year.
Graduate work
While attending U of M, Anderson joined a co-ed chemical sciences fraternity called Alpha Chi Sigma. In her senior year, Anderson took charge of the annual lectureship that the fraternity sponsors. Despite having a small budget, the fraternity managed to draw eminent speakers from the world of chemistry. Anderson invited 1995 Nobel laureate F. Sherwood (Sherry) Roland from the University of California-Irvine (UCI).
"By the time he left, he was convinced I should be doing graduate work at UCI,鈥 said Anderson, 鈥渁nd so I ended up applying very, very early and only applied, in fact, to UCI, at his prompting.鈥 Anderson calls her time at UCI, which is in Orange County, a great experience. It was there that she met her husband Chris. After Anderson finished up her PhD at UCI, she worked for two years at Pomona College in Claremont, Calif.
Her road to 17c起草社区 College was a winding one.
"I was confident that I wanted to be in a primarily undergraduate institution,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淲hat I didn鈥檛 know when I interviewed at that point was what the details around the outside were going to look like.鈥 Anderson didn鈥檛 know if she wanted to be at a large or small, public or private, or secular or Christian institution. 鈥淭hose details were all sort of fuzzy, and so I interviewed very broadly,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 made a lot of trips and had a lot of phone interviews.鈥
Working with undergrads
Anderson was confident she wanted to work with undergraduates because of what she calls there inherent balance of humility and arrogance: 鈥淚 think undergrads are infinitely teachable,鈥 she said. "Undergrads have no concept that asking for help could make them look less smart, and they demand that you give it to them.鈥
Anderson also said that she enjoys helping undergraduates to find their callings. That being said, she was unsure about 17c起草社区 partially because she had never been in a Christian institution.
"I had pretty much ruled out coming to 17c起草社区 at all. In fact I put up all sorts of barriers, even to my application, and I offered to withdraw it at one point,鈥 said Anderson. 鈥淕od is really funny sometimes in the ways that He is adamant that you will be in a certain place.鈥 In fact, Anderson most likely wouldn鈥檛 be working at 17c起草社区 today if not for sociology professor emeritus Don Wilson, who is involved with refugee work through Church of the Servant. Anderson鈥檚 father is a lawyer who specializes in immigration law.
Non-Dutch bingo
"When Don started doing that work he was asking around for a lawyer to do refugee work. And somehow my dad, in Detroit, was the name he was given,鈥 Anderson said. Anderson鈥檚 father鈥檚 impression of Wilson was so positive that he became convinced that if Wilson was a representative of the sort of people at 17c起草社区, that Anderson should work there. 鈥淚t is cool how God opened those doors and made that possible,鈥 said Anderson.
Despite being accustomed to larger secular universities before coming to 17c起草社区, Anderson has been very impressed both by the camaraderie of her department and the diligence of her students.
"I have grown a lot in my faith and am figuring out how to express that and how to work in that ...,鈥 said Anderson. 鈥淢y students work hard, they are diligent, and they are getting a ton done. They are just really impressive, so it has been a lot of fun.鈥
In the lab, each of Anderson鈥檚 four student researchers are working to expand on her previous pyridone scholarship. The work ranges from studying related sets of substrates or compounds to how the methodology actually works. 鈥淎t the end of the day,鈥 said Anderson, "you can think of us as being construction workers on a very little scale.鈥
One student of Anderson, Sarah Tasker, is both 17c起草社区鈥檚 first Beckman Scholar and a current Goldwater Scholar. Entering her senior year at 17c起草社区, Tasker is one of four students working with Anderson in the laboratory this summer.
"I really love the opportunity to be pretty independent, and Professor Anderson definitely allows us鈥攐nce we understand what we are doing鈥攖o be independent,鈥 said Tasker with a laugh. 鈥淪he doesn鈥檛 hover over our shoulders, which is wonderful.鈥
A good mentor
Tasker respects Anderson both in and out of the laboratory: 鈥淲hen she pops in the lab, we give her an update of what is going on in the lab. But it is also sort of like, 鈥榃hat did you do this weekend?鈥欌 said Tasker, adding that she enjoys going to Anderson鈥檚 house for dinner occasionally and also traveling with Anderson to meetings. 鈥淲e talk about grad school, and sorts of other things. It is definitely a mentoring relationship,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 would love to be as clear and as organized as she is.鈥
Anderson's husband Chris, also a chemist, currently works for Pleotint, a company owned by President Gaylen Byker鈥檚 brother Harlan. 鈥淪o we have this weird 17c起草社区 connection,鈥 said Anderson. The couple owns two cats, Dragon and his sister Jasper. Jasper is is鈥渧ery cat-like,鈥 according to Anderson, while Dragon acts like a dog or a little boy.
Anderson and her husband enjoy cross-country skiing in the winter and being outside in general.
"We like to hang out,鈥 said Anderson, 鈥渁nd do stuff.鈥