With budget cuts, the Office of Undergraduate Research has been forced to cut some of its support programs.
But undergraduate research has managed not only to remain afloat but flourish.
Pat Pukkila, the office’s associate dean, said student research has expanded in the last few years.
And starting today, the office will join the Roosevelt Institute in celebrating student projects as part of National Undergraduate Research Week.
Pukkila said 4,862 undergraduates — about one in four UNC students — received credit for a research exposure?course in 2010-11, up 39 percent from 2009-10.
In research exposure classes, graduate students coach undergraduates on original research projects.
And in 2009-10, 62 percent of students graduating from the College of Arts and Sciences received credit for at least one research intensive course — an increase of 5 percentage points from 2008-09.
Students in those courses devote more than half of their class time to original research.
Pukkila said research has been able to grow partly because grants and endowments help fund projects, providing a cushion. She said careful planning has also helped.