Student Profile
John
Gamble
Erie, Pa.
Major: Mathematics & Physics
Class: 2008
John Gamble has always been curious about the way things work, so it
was no surprise that he chose to major in physics when he enrolled at
The College of Wooster. What was surprising, however, was his decision
to also major in mathematics.
“I was always pretty strong in the sciences in high school, but
I was not that good in math until I took calculus as a senior,” says
Gamble, a graduate of Harbor Creek High School. “That course flipped
on a switch for me.”
Another switch was flipped during Gamble’s sophomore year at Wooster.
After taking basic courses in math and physics in his first year, Gamble
took Modern Physics with Professor John Lindner as a sophomore, and that,
he admits, was an eye opener. “It was the first class I took that
I didn’t already have some idea about what the answers would be,” he
says. “The course covered Einstein’s special theory of relativity
and quantum mechanics, neither of which are very intuitive. I liked the
excitement of pursuing the unknown. That’s what science is all about.
It made me feel that I was doing something worthwhile.”
In the years that followed, Gamble continued his quest for answers, both
in the classroom and through outside research opportunities. After his
first year at Wooster, for example, he participated in a Research Experience
for Undergraduates (REU), a 10-week summer session sponsored by the National
Science Foundation in which selected students work with faculty on research
projects in such areas as astrophysics, condensed matter, and nonlinear
dynamics. After his sophomore year, he traveled to the West Coast for
an REU at the University of California, San Diego. This past summer, he
conducted research at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.
Gamble’s passion for learning has brought him a variety of honors,
including induction into Phi Beta Kappa, the nation’s oldest and
largest academic honor society, following his junior year. What made the
selection even more meaningful was that his grandmother, a former Phi
Beta Kappa student in economics at Allegheny College, was able to attend
the ceremony.
After graduation, Gamble plans to pursue a Ph.D. in physics, but before
that, he is looking forward to undertaking his Senior Independent Study
(I.S.) project, Wooster’s nationally renowned program in which students
select a topic of their choice and conduct research with one-on-one guidance
from a faculty member that results in a thesis-like paper.
“I’ve already picked my topic for I.S.,” says Gamble,
whose father, John, is a 1967 Wooster graduate and a professor of political
science at Penn State Behrend. “I will be studying theoretical implications
of a recent experiment in photosynthesis. I know it sounds like a biology
project, but it was discovered that chlorophyll undergoing photosynthesis
stays in quantum superposition much longer than previously expected, and
I am interested in studying the fundamental quantum mechanics involved.”
Gamble also plans to continue his association with “The Gallows,” a
sketch comedy and substance awareness group, which gives him a creative
outlet. “I started out going to the (Gallows) shows as a first-year
student, and I thought they were hilarious, so I applied to become one
of the writers,” he says. “Now I write and perform skits every
other week. Not only do we try to entertain, but we also attempt to promote
substance-free awareness.”
Gallows performances draw anywhere from 50-100 students and continue
to grow in popularity. “It has been a big part of my Wooster experience,” says
Gamble.
Overall, Gamble’s time at Wooster has been “better than he
expected,” he said. “The physics department is a tight-knit
community. It is a great environment because it helps you to develop your
own ideas.” |