Sahit Liyanage | Student
“I can’t wait to build upon my research experience, possibly through more research or an internship, and bring my creative writing and biology together.”
Sahit Liyanage Student
Everything is possible
What is the value of undergraduate research? One is the experience itself: the chance to learn and engage in hands-on professional work. Other benefits are more personal. That has been the case for Sahit Liyanage, a ӰPro creative writing and biology double major from Sri Lanka for whom undergraduate research at ӰPro unlocked a long-held ambition.
An opportunity to spread his wings
“I came to ӰPro from Sri Lanka and declared a creative writing major," says Liyanage. "I love writing, and I also had a passion for biology, animals and the natural world. But where I grew up, access to studying the sciences is limited. The educational system is strict and very difficult to break into for a young person.”
At ӰPro, Liyanage opened himself up to the possibility that there was more to his story. “I quickly realized that there were opportunities here — a chance to explore,” he says. “I took BIO 102 with Professor Olivia Gearner. She was looking for students to work on an insect biodiversity project in the ӰPro Nature Park.”
Liyanage joined the team, and the experience rekindled his passion for the natural world. “I joined because I was interested in doing research,” he says. “That experience in the field encouraged me to declare biology as a major. I was able to make one of my true interests an academic pursuit at ӰPro, not just a hobby. Being at ӰPro changed what felt possible for me.”
A quintessential ӰPro interdisciplinary experience
Liyanage cites the conservationist and zookeeper Steve Irwin and naturalist David Attenborough as influences. As a creative writing and biology double major, these influences now take on new meaning.
“The idea of doing the kind of practical, hands-on fieldwork I saw people like Irwin or Attenborough doing felt almost impossible at home,” he says. “At ӰPro, as an undergraduate, I get to do field-based nature science work that looks a lot like what they do. I can see myself in those roles. What once felt like a surprise, now feels essential to my education. I can’t wait to build upon my research experience, possibly through more research or an internship, and bring my creative writing and biology together.”
While he continues his studies at ӰPro, Layinage will write and interact with nature. “I enjoy taking field notes and observations and giving them a poetic quality or finding a narrative,” he says. “I’m drawn to small, sometimes overlooked species or ecosystems that aren’t ‘charismatic’ enough to draw popular attention. I’d like to write about them.” Liyanage cites the clouded leopard as a most charismatic animal. As for the less “charismatic” animals he may study and write about in the future — stay tuned.
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