Honors College students presented their Fall 2022 GH 401 undergraduate thesis research using oral presentations and printed poster sessions in the Cunningham Memorial Library’s Events Area. The presentations took place between Monday, November 28 and Friday, December 2, 2022.
Pictured are Honors students from the Scott College of Business:
Erin Beyers, Business Management: Management Styles: Balancing Workplace Oversight
Sam Bowen, Finance & Financial Services: Ambulatory Surgery Centers (ASCs): Studying the Potential Impact on the Healthcare Industry
Lily Cain, Management Information Systems: Epilepsy in Young Adults: A Glance into the Medical and Psychosocial Aspects of Diagnosis
Audra Doedtman, Finance: Women & Wealth: The Impact of the Great Wealth Transfer
Sydney Eisenmenger, Business Administration: We Don't Talk about Politics: An Examination into the Effect of Social Media on the Political Environment
Megan Heck, Accounting and Finance: Market and Individual Analysis of the Retail Industry: Amazon vs. Walmart
Ryan Knezevich, Operations and Supply Chain Management: More Than Meets the Brain: Physical Implications of Living with Bipolar Disorder
Anna Kraushaar, Accounting: Pornography as Theory: Examining the Influences of Pornography in Our Communities
Carly Pyzynski, Insurance & Risk Management: Future of Airfreight Transportation
Lorna Roeder, Business Management; Operations and Supply Chain Management: Multilevel Marketing: Schemes, or the American Dream?
Connor Svihla, Accounting: Cyberpunk as an Evolution from Science Fiction and its Role in Social Critique
Brett Trammell, Business Management: Money and Rights: Trying to Understand the Shifting Landscape of College Sports
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Erin Beyers
Erin Beyers
Sam Bowen
Sam Bowen
Sam Bowen
Sam Bowen
Lily Cain
Lily Cain
Audra Doedtman
Audra Doedtman
Sydney Eisenmenger
Sydney Eisenmenger
Megan Heck
Megan Heck
Anna Kraushaar
Anna Kraushaar
Anna Kraushaar
Anna Kraushaar
Lorna Roeder
Lorna Roeder
Brett Trammell
Brett Trammell
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