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Spirit of Faculty Collaboration Endures

Despite pandemic distance, innovative interdisciplinary ideas take root

While in-person contact was limited during the pandemic, Assistant Professor of Biostatistics and Informatics Tim Reddy found ways to collaborate with colleagues. Photo by Stephen Schramm.
While in-person contact was limited during the pandemic, Assistant Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Tim Reddy found ways to collaborate with colleagues. Photo by Stephen Schramm.

The roots of Duke鈥檚 go back to the second floor of the Fitzpatrick Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences.

That鈥檚 where Associate Professor of Tim Reddy, Associate Professor in the Greg Crawford, and Professor of Charles Gersbach have workspaces near each other. With all three harboring intense curiosity 鈥 albeit different approaches 鈥 about unlocking the human genetic code鈥檚 potential, their hallway conversations led to fruitful collaborations. 

And in September 2020, when the National Institutes of Health awarded a $14 million grant to seven Duke faculty members 鈥 including Reddy, Crawford and Gersbach 鈥 to create the Center for Combinatorial Gene Regulation, pandemic realities forced collaborations to flourish virtually.

While work continues in their labs, the faculty members built the center鈥檚 organizational structure and charted new research paths while working mostly remotely.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 closed ourselves off,鈥 Reddy said. 鈥淚f anything, we鈥檝e been collaborating more and more since we got the center funded.鈥

Coronavirus forced many faculty to work remotely, and distance cut down on opportunities for in-person encounters that often spark interdisciplinary collaboration. But during the pandemic, multiple faculty grant programs that support the university鈥檚 academic strategic plan, stayed busy. 

In addition to the Center for Combinatorial Gene Regulation, other examples of Duke鈥檚 pandemic-era collaborations can be found in program, which provided funding for 14 new collaborations aimed at confronting racism and building a more inclusive community.

Assistant Professor of the Practice in Sustainability at the Nicholas School of Environment Charlotte Clark.A team of faculty from the , the , the , and the secured one of the grants for the course,

Inspired by a similar course at North Carolina State University and fueled by connections made in Duke鈥檚 faculty fellowship program, the course helps doctoral students find and engage with the work of scholars in their field from underrepresented communities. By the end of the semester-long course, the students have expanded and diversified scholarly network and incorporated new voices into their work.

Assistant Professor of the Practice in Sustainability at the Nicholas School of Environment Charlotte Clark, who taught the first version of the course in the spring, said the team of faculty members who developed the course never met in person but communicated through email, Zoom and shared documents. The energy reminded her that Duke鈥檚 collaborative spirit won鈥檛 disappear anytime soon.

鈥淚鈥檝e always felt a lot of enthusiasm, curiosity and generosity of spirit with people wanting to start something new,鈥 Clark said. 

Learn more about Duke鈥檚 interdisciplinary collaborations: