Research Aftermath

It has been about three weeks since the beginning of this project and about one week left of research and editing to do. Overall, the most difficult part to master was working with the APA writing format. I have never had a teacher require that specific citation and learning it was a process. Although it did take some time, I benefited from the process. I am a stronger writer for it and will now be ready for future experiences writing with the APA style.

The part I struggled with most was finding enough past information on Krista Donaldson. It took lots of research and work to not only find any sources, but reliable ones. Most information out there is about Donaldson’s current creation of her new prosthetic limb. I found this very helpful when writing about the cultures and what tools, materials, and methods were used during the same time in Canada and America.

I highly recommend more research to my fellow classmates. I find it way more interesting and reliable when pulling from many sources instead of just a few. It took work to find enough sources to support my claim but overall, I was able to accomplish this. I did not expect to learn so much about another county’s culture when doing this project. I went into it more focused on Krista Donaldson and her invention when I actually found that I learned more about Canada and my own country.

I still have lots of editing and adding to do, but so far I have a very good start to the rest of my paper. I think peer reviewing will be extremely helpful, especially being in an online class. I look forward to reading my classmates’ projects and hope to learn even more about women, their inventions, and cultures.

Thanks,

M. Simich

Up To Date Librarian Experience

It has been about one week since I chose to write my cultural research paper on Krista Donaldson. I’ve been researching more about her life and the responsibilities of successfully starting and running a non-profit prosthetic limbs company. The most useful sources I found before connecting with librarians were JSTOR and EBSCO. Both databases gave clear and specific information pertaining to my topic. My high school provided these databases so I had prior experience and was comfortable using them already.

When I first chose this topic, I knew nothing about the medical field or prosthetic limbs in particular. I took it upon myself to widen my search from Krista Donaldson to the medial industry. I found a few problems with the way I was wording my search engine questions. I took my concerns to Answerland.org, where many volunteers responded with helpful tools to improve my research.

One thing I struggled with was contacting actual librarians. All of my questions were answered by library volunteers, which ended up being just as helpful. Before this assignment, I had never known about this online website that had library experts waiting to answer questions. A few of the questions I included were,

“What is the best way to narrow down the sources provided from a search engine question?”

“What are the best databases for specific information rather than general?”

“What is the best way to save the information I get from a database?”

Being able to chat with library volunteers was overall very helpful. The majority of the time I was able to get a response with links to various scholarly websites that helped with my search about Krista Donaldson and her invention at D-Rev.

Thanks,

M. Simich

Cultural Research Project Topic

Krista Donaldson’s D-Rev

Krista Donaldson, a 40-year-old social-good engineer from Nova Scotia, invented ReMotion, the newest generation of prosthetic limbs. Donaldson attended Stanford where she earned her Ph.D. in medical engineering design and Vanderbilt University where she received a B.E. in mechanical engineering . She is currently the CEO of D-Rev, a non-profit product development organization designed to improve the health and foster the lives of those living on less than $4 a day. D-Rev strives on affordability, safety, and convenience.

Donaldson has many other accomplishments. She guided the reconstruction of Iraq’s electricity sector through The United States American Association for the Advancement of Science. This earned Donaldson an engineering position with the company KickStart, in Kenya, for the following four years. Donaldson grew up with an entrepreneurial state of mind. Her success stems from her parents teaching her to live a selfless life. She devoted herself to those in need.  She taught at Kenyatta University in Nairobi, Kenya and South Africa’s University of Cape Town where she shared her focus on engineering a better and healthier world.

I first read about Krista Donaldson on “The inventors, trailblazers and performers of TEDWomen 2013, “Invented Here.”” I found her life goals inspiring and learned more about her through her company’s website d-rev.org and LinkedIn.

Donaldson is currently living in San Francisco, California where she runs D-Rev. She is active on LinkedIn and TEDtalks.com. I will be looking for all opportunities to get into contact with her to learn more about her mission as a non-profit CEO. However, it might be difficult to get time for an interview with her busy schedule as a CEO. I am following her on LinkedIn and hopefully she connects back with me as the term continues.