The Arkansas Archeological Survey supports graduate students working on internship, thesis, and dissertation projects both at the Coordinating Office and at our research stations. Support is provided for assistantships paid out of our base funding and through grants or other special project funds. We also work closely with the Anthropology Department and the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Arkansas to host students who receive support through the Hester A. Davis Internship in Public Archeology and the Charles R. McGimsey III Endowment for Cultural Resource Management. Our graduate students work on a wide variety of research, preservation, and educational initiatives and thus provide valuable support for our efforts to fulfill our mission within the University of Arkansas system.

SOPHIE VOGLE

Sophie is a graduate student of archeology focusing on collections management and museum studies during her Master of Arts program under the guidance of Dr. Jessica Kowalski. She completed her undergraduate degree at Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas where she graduated with honors with a degree in anthropology. Sophie moved to Fayetteville to pursue further education at the University of Arkansas. She works at the University Museum, focusing her studies on understanding the proper curation of archeological artifacts.

A young woman standing in front of a prehistoric monument.