Calvin College Awarded $1 Million Grant
The National Science Foundation has awarded Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich., a nearly $1 million grant to fund a new 4,450-square-foot lab on the ground floor of DeVries Hall. The new lab - the Integrated Scientific Research Experimental Laboratory (ISRx) - is the latest of the science division's efforts to work across disciplines.
Chemistry, biology, physics and computer science students will have a rare opportunity of researching side-by-side thanks to the grant.
Calvin is one of only 21 chemistry departments in the U.S. to receive the NSF grant, which hasn't been offered since the 1990s.
"Ten percent of the proposals that were submitted were funded," said chemistry professor Chad Tatko, "and they are never going to offer this again. I think it's a testament to Calvin as an institution."
The new lab will be built as an open area with separate benches for chemistry, biology, physics and computer science. The crew of the ISRx will share their space with some sophisticated equipment:
- a MALDI-TOF mass spectrometer,
- a 500-megahertz NMR spectrometer,
- an Apotome fluorescence microscope,
- a virtual-reality computer interface,
- a total internal reflected fluorescence microscope,
- a patch clamp single cell apparatus and associated microscope,
- two high- pressure liquid chromatographs, and a real-time PCR machine, along with assorted molecular biology and chemical synthesis equipment.
At the center of the ISRx are shared areas, where the scientists (and their student research assistants) can plug in their laptops and share their research with each other via 40-inch LCD panels. Around the lab's perimeter are areas for research that need to stay segregated.
"Science is about solving problems. Disciplines don't solve problems. Scientists solve problems," said Tatko. "To train our students to solve problems, we need to train them to be flexible thinkers."
The ISRx is a physical outgrowth of the Integrated Science Research Institute (ISRI), founded in 2008 through a $1.1 million grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) to foster collaboration in the sciences through research, faculty development, curriculum innovation and outreach.
Construction is underway on the new lab. For more information, contact Chad Tatko at 616-526-7584.