Carley Beeman’s resume is impressive. Studying Honors chemistry with a focus on advanced biochemistry and a minor in biology, she has been a consistent figure on the Oregon State University Honor Roll. In January, she was announced the chemistry undergraduate of the quarter.
Her resume is also unlike the majority of college students at Oregon State. She belongs to a special category, consisting of only 2% of her peers.
Four to five times a week, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Beeman trades the clinking of laboratory equipment for a different rhythm—the swooshing sounds of a gymnast soaring through the air, defying gravity as if it's a mere suggestion. Beeman is a Pac-12, Division 1 gymnast who specializes in the uneven bars and the balance beam.
She is no stranger to the stereotypes student-athletes face.
“People think, ‘Oh you’re an athlete. That's why you’re here—that’s your focus. You couldn’t be here for school,” she said.
But, Beeman chose Oregon State for more than one reason. “It was a combination of things. They have a great gym team. And I really liked the people here that I talked to both for athletics as well as for academics, and there’s a strong academic focus on research,” she said.
That focus on research drew her to the College of Science, where her journey is just beginning.
“I want to show that you can become a successful scientist and go in that direction while pursuing time-intensive extracurricular activities, whatever those might be."