Department of Chemistry & Physics
Unrivaled access to outstanding lab facilities and a warm, close-knit community of students and faculty are hallmarks of chemistry at DeSales.
The majors in Chemistry and Biochemistry-Molecular Biology offer a uniquely DeSales experience. Our small class sizes, modern laboratories, and supportive community create an atmosphere for learning enriched by our Salesian values. Your teachers, advisors
and research mentors know you and are dedicated to your success.
Our faculty represent a broad range of individual specialties and are well-respected for their research and professional activities. You will have the opportunity to take part in research, publish and present your work, and participate in a dynamic community
of scientific inquiry.
You’ll have hands-on access to facilities unrivaled at many other liberal arts universities. Throughout their education, students gain extensive experience with instrumentation. Thanks to our generous endowments, grants, and benefactors, our instrument suite includes a recently purchased Fluorimeter, HPLC, and Bomb Calorimeter, and UV-VIS and IR spectrometers in addition to an AA, NMR, ICP-AES, GC, and GC-MS. Our freshman chemistry lab and physics labs are equipped with Pasco sensors and software that enable digital data collection and analysis.
Biology Student Completes Research Internship at Harvard
Veronika Tews is starting her senior year with some major research credentials under her belt. The biology major spent the summer taking part in a research internship at Harvard University.
She learned of the internship at last year’s Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) conference. But the opportunity to work in Cambridge didn’t come easily.
“It was a lot of reading papers and proving that I knew enough to be there,” she says.
Once in the lab, Tews worked with a graduate student for 40 hours a week, studying the gut development of three different species of tadpoles—including a carnivorous species.
“These carnivorous tadpoles essentially have adult stomachs,” she says. “We were looking at the genes that allow this species of tadpole to have adult stomachs from hatching.”
Tews anesthetized tadpoles at different stages of development and placed them in wax, allowing her to see the formation of the stomach. She also performed staining, which allowed her to look at cartilage formation and different cell types. In addition to her research, Tews learned about the different ways that labs are run.
“It was different than my lab here at DeSales, where we have seven people. It was nice to see that when you’re working independently, you’re working independently. Everything you do is on you.”
Tews, who plans to go onto graduate school after graduation, previously took part in DeSales’ Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) in the Natural Sciences, a program that pays students to conduct research. She credits her classes and lab experience with preparing her for her time at Harvard.
“I spend between 10 and 12 hours a week in the lab here, on top of classes and working. I make it my priority over almost everything else in my life.”
Biology Student Completes Research Internship at Harvard
Veronika Tews is starting her senior year with some major research credentials under her belt. The biology major spent the summer taking part in a research internship at Harvard University.
She learned of the internship at last year’s Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) conference. But the opportunity to work in Cambridge didn’t come easily.
“It was a lot of reading papers and proving that I knew enough to be there,” she says.
Once in the lab, Tews worked with a graduate student for 40 hours a week, studying the gut development of three different species of tadpoles—including a carnivorous species.
“These carnivorous tadpoles essentially have adult stomachs,” she says. “We were looking at the genes that allow this species of tadpole to have adult stomachs from hatching.”
Tews anesthetized tadpoles at different stages of development and placed them in wax, allowing her to see the formation of the stomach. She also performed staining, which allowed her to look at cartilage formation and different cell types. In addition to her research, Tews learned about the different ways that labs are run.
“It was different than my lab here at DeSales, where we have seven people. It was nice to see that when you’re working independently, you’re working independently. Everything you do is on you.”
Tews, who plans to go onto graduate school after graduation, previously took part in DeSales’ Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) in the Natural Sciences, a program that pays students to conduct research. She credits her classes and lab experience with preparing her for her time at Harvard.
“I spend between 10 and 12 hours a week in the lab here, on top of classes and working. I make it my priority over almost everything else in my life.”