51±¬ÁÏÏÂÔØ

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SCUBA Club members getting certified in the pool.

SCUBA Club

Nu Rho Psi members ice skating together

Nu Rho Psi Neuroscience Honor Society

TriBeta members having a bonfire

TriBeta (Beta Beta Beta) Biological Sciences Honorary

ECOS members doing community cleanup

ECOS: Environmentally Concerned Organization of Students

Health Professions Club members at a Suture Clinic

Health Professions Club

Herps and Ichs Club members collecting samples with nets and buckets in a creek bed.

Herps and Ichs Club

Birding Club members on a bird-watching outing outside on a cold day.

Birding Club

Students in the Department of Biological Sciences participate in the following student organizations.

Get as involved as you can to learn what's available to you, meet new people, and gain memorable experiences.


View all 51±¬ÁÏÏÂÔØ student clubs and organizations on:


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Our Clubs & Organizations
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Faculty Advisor: Lindsey Walters

Mission:

To create more opportunities for people to expand their knowledge and love of birds, connect with other birders, and contribute to bird conservation in the community.


Black and gold graphic of a leaf holding the earth


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ECOS: Environmentally Concerned Organization of Students

Faculty Advisors:
Allison ParkerÌý |Ìý Yingying Xie

Ìý |Ìý Contact Us

Mission:

Create a healthy and more equitable planet for everyone by:

  • Raising awareness about local and global environmental issues
  • Learning more about environmental issues
  • Actively working on sustainability initiatives through projects, events, and educational campaigns on campus and in the community.

We are primarily Environmental Science majors, but we highly encourage students (and faculty) from other disciplines to get involved in forming collaborative partnerships throughout the University and the community. Environmental solutions require expertise from many disciplines and will be beneficial to student's overall University experience.

We try to work with the University faculty and the community to develop projects that will protect the environment while providing essential functions within the University and community. We believe that projects developed by students that will maintain a visual presence on the campus and in the community while performing a practical function will have a greater impact on the future of our collective environment by giving an alternative to traditional progress, and therefore serve a very important educational purpose.

If you are a faculty member, a student, or a citizen in the community please consider supporting and joining ECOS.

We always encourage feedback from the community, students and especially educational institutions about opinions, aspirations, and/or potential student projects that can be conducted by students at our University.

ECOS is open to all students and faculty!

Contact Us

The easiest way to contact ECOS is to send us and email at ecos@nku.edu. Feel free to send questions, or ask to be added to our email list. You can also meet us in person by attending one of our meetings, one of our frequent bake sales on the second floor of the SC building, or our annual Earth Day event.


Black and gold graphic of hand holding a heart

Health Professions Club

Faculty Advisor: Michael Guy

Mission:

Initiate leadership abilities, inquisitive minds, compassion for the health and well being of others, strength of character, and making a difference in the community on a successful path to a career as a health professional.


Black and gold graphic of fish and reptiles

Herps and Ichs Club

Faculty Advisor:ÌýRichard Durtsche

Mission:

To educate students in herpetology and ichthyology through field trips, presentations, and field experience.

Benefits:

  • Learning about current research being done and potentially helping with it.
  • Zoo and aquarium trips (with potentially discounted tickets) (50% off for Newport Aquarium)
  • Access to student discounts for the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles (SSAR), Herpetologists’ League (HL), American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists (ASIH), and the American Fisheries Society (AFS).

Black and gold graphic of a brain

Nu Rho Psi Neuroscience Honor Society

Faculty Advisor:ÌýChris Curran

Ìý |Ìý

Mission:

To encourage professional interest and excellence in scholarship, particularly in neuroscience; award recognition to students who have achieved such excellence in scholarship; and advance the discipline of neuroscience.
 

Benefits:

  • Full members have access to national research grants, travel awards, and national recognition.
  • Associate and full members can expand their resumes by engaging in activities to promote neuroscience research and mental health awareness.

Black and gold graphic of SCUBA diver

SCUBA Club

Faculty Advisor:ÌýCharles Acosta

Mission:

To promote education and awareness of SCUBA diving and aquatic recreation among the 51±¬ÁÏÏÂÔØ community.
 

Benefits:

Our club focuses on discussions among the 51±¬ÁÏÏÂÔØ community about all recreational underwater activities, including:

  • SCUBA, snorkeling, free-diving
  • Dive physiology
  • Ocean ecology and conservation
  • Path to Diver Certification

Black and gold graphic of a helix

TriBeta (Beta Beta Beta) Biological Sciences Honorary

Faculty Advisors:
Patty KappesserÌý |Ìý Rick Boyce

Ìý |Ìý

Mission:

Beta Beta Beta Biological Honor Society is a society for students, particularly for undergraduates. It seeks to encourage scholarly attainment in this field of learning by reserving its regular membership for those who achieve superior academic records and who indicate special aptitude for and major interest in the life sciences. It desires to cultivate intellectual interest in the natural sciences and to promote a better appreciation of the value of biological study and thus welcomes into associate membership all those students who are interested in biology. Beta Beta Beta also endeavors to extend the boundaries of man’s knowledge of nature by encouraging new discoveries through scientific investigation and to this end encourages undergraduate students to begin research work and report their findings in the journal of the society, BIOS. It emphasizes, therefore, a three-fold program: stimulation of scholarship, dissemination of scientific knowledge, and promotion of biological research.
 

Benefits:

  • Meet other students interested in life and biological sciences.
  • Organize and go to events centered around fun and interesting topics.
  • Promoting research and traveling to conferences to present your research projects.
  • Form study groups and friendships with like-minded individuals.