Dom Principe
This is a collaborative project between myself, Markirah Shaw, Froy Amarrillas, and Laura Marsales, that focuses on how Rowan deals with the nutritional health of its students.  The layout of how the information is portrayed will differ on the seperate pages of myself and my group members, however all information provided is the same.

Interview #1 Chris Hollaner

As a group we looked at the idea of nutritional health in college students.  We decided to interview two Rowan University students about how they viewed their nutritional health.  The first student that was interviewed was a commuter named Chris Holleran who believed that while he was not an overly nutritional eater, he was nutritionally healthier than most students at Rowan University.  In this discourse between Chris and interviewer Laura, Chris reveals his thoughts on nutritional health, and how Rowan University deals with the nutritional health needs of its students

edited Interview

Afterword
After holding the interview with Chris, my cowriters and I changed our original research question from "how students view their nutritional health vs what their nutritional health actually is" to how well Rowan provides nutritional health options. We did not hesitate to change the question because we learned that more often than not, while doing research, different paths emerge that might be even more interesting than the original idea. Our new research question is more focused and so helped us collect more information for the final collaborative research paper.

Interview #2 Lindsey Gilcrest

As a group we looked at the idea of nutritional health in college students.  We decided to interview two Rowan University students about how they viewed their nutritional health.  The second student that was interviewed was a Junior who lived on campus, Lindsey Gilcrest who believed that while she was not an overly nutritious eater, she was nutritionally healthier than most students at Rowan. In this discourse between Lindsey and interviewer Laura, Lindsey reveals her thoughts on nutritional health, and how Rowan deals with the nutritional health needs of its students.

Edited Interview

Afterword
Lindsey believes that Rowan is attempting to provide healthier food options but isn't doing a very good job. After this interview, it is becoming a pattern that students do not lead nutritionally healthy lives because Rowan University is not doing its best to help students change their poor eating habits. The food options that are offered on campus are not as healthy as they appear to be and some university rules that aren't directly related to food in fact have a negative effect on students' eating habits. My cowriters and I might look into possible ways that Rowan could improve their food options.