Video Series

Become a Researcher


What does it take to become a scientific researcher? The Diversity Program Consortium’s (DPC) Enhance Science project explores this question in a new video series called “Become A Researcher.” 


The series features five biomedical researchers who are at different stages of their careers, from starting graduate school to managing multiple grant-funded projects as accomplished senior faculty. Each of the five researchers are affiliated with the DPC, a network of institutions funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to implement training and mentoring interventions, and to enhance individuals' success in biomedical research careers.

What does it take to become a scientific researcher? The Diversity Program Consortium’s (DPC) Enhance Science project explores this question in a new video series called “Become A Researcher.” 


The series features five biomedical researchers who are at different stages of their careers, from starting graduate school to managing multiple grant-funded projects as accomplished senior faculty. Each of the five researchers are affiliated with the DPC, a network of institutions funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to implement training and mentoring interventions, and to enhance individuals' success in biomedical research careers.


Meet the featured researchers

Juan Castillo

Juan Castillo, PhD

Juan Castillo is an alumnus of the San Francisco State University’s NIH-funded research program, SF BUILD. He has a bachelor’s in chemistry from SFSU and a PhD in analytical chemistry from the University of California, Davis. Castillo currently works as a research scientist for Gilead Sciences. 


Castillo talks about how growing up in the “Canal” neighborhood in San Rafael, California, helped shape his journey toward becoming a researcher and inspired him to give back to the community.


His work focuses on small molecule therapeutics to help people with life-threatening diseases.


He also likes to participate in outreach programs as an authentic role model and share educational experiences with historically underrepresented students in science. 


Connect with Castillo on LinkedIn.


Read more about Juan Castillo, PhD, and his reaction to his story being shared in the Become A Researcher series.


Cecilia Hinojosa, PhD

Cecilia Hinojosa’s path to being a researcher was also partly inspired by her family and the people she grew up around in her hometown of El Paso, Texas. 


Hinojosa graduated with a bachelor’s in psychology from the University of El Paso, Texas (UTEP), where she participated in the NIH-funded research program BUILDing SCHOLARS.


She also has a PhD in experimental psychology from Tufts University.


Hinojosa is currently a postdoctoral research fellow at the Emory University School of Medicine, working under the mentorship of Jennifer Stevens, PhD, and Sanne van Rooij, PhD.


Cecilia Hinojosa

Her research focus is on better understanding the neurocircuitry of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) using neuroimaging techniques and the role substance use may have in the development and maintenance of the disorder.


Read more about Cecilia Hinojosa, PhD, and her reaction to her story being shared in the Become A Researcher series.


J. Zak Peet

J. Zak Peet

J. Zak Peet is a graduate student pursuing a PhD in the Community Research and Action program at Binghamton University, part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system. He received a Bachelor of Arts in honors psychology and a Master of Arts in psychological science, both from the California State University, Northridge (CSUN).


Peet participated in the NIH-funded BUILD PODER program, where he discovered his passion for scientific research and gained the skills it takes to become a researcher. 


In his episode, Peet talks about his journey from homelessness and addiction to finding academic success as a later-in-life student.


His personal experience informs his research interests, which lie within the realm of homelessness and substance abuse through the lens of critical race theory (CRT) and intersectionality.


Specifically, Peet is interested in how race and gender intersect to perpetuate the stigma that surrounds addiction and homelessness. Although academia is of great importance for Peet, he also prioritizes self-care — daily meditation and a connection with nature are high on his priority list.


Read more about Zak Peet, and his reaction to his story being shared in the Become A Researcher.


Halaevalu F. Ofahengaue

Vakalahi, PhD

Dr. Halaevalu Vakalahi is a Pacific Islander woman, born in Tonga and raised in Hawai’i.


She is the incoming President and CEO of the Council of Social Work Education and outgoing professor and dean of the College of Health & Society at Hawai’i Pacific University (HPU) with kuleana over public health, social work, physical therapy, occupational therapy, physician assistant, and previously, nursing.


With over 24 years in academia, she is privileged to have served in various faculty and administrative positions in a number of universities, professional organizations and communities. 


Halaevale Vakalahi

Vakalahi is blessed to have contributed peer-reviewed articles, chapters/references, co-edited/co-authored books on Pacific people and communities, broader communities of color, leadership and mentorship, and women of color in academia. She is committed to diversity, inclusion and equity as women’s issues that ultimately impact family and community well-being, with a deep commitment to the advancement of women in academia.


Her eclectic educational background with a Bachelor of Science in Business Management (BYU-Hawaii), Master of Social Work (University of Hawai’i-Manoa), and Master of Education and PhD in Social Work (University of Utah), have informed her leadership, scholarship, teaching and service, which she hopes has forwarded social and economic justice in some small way.


Connect with Dr. Vakalahi on LinkedIn.



Read more about Halaevalu Vakalahi, PhD, and what she shares in her episodes of Become A Researcher.


Keith Norris

Keith Norris, MD, PhD

Dr. Keith C. Norris is a professor of medicine and the Executive Vice Chair of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion for the Department of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He is the Co-director of the community engagement research program for UCLA’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute, and the Senior Principal Investigator and Co-director of the Administration Core of the Coordination and Evaluation Center at UCLA. 


As a young boy growing up in the Jamaica neighborhood of Queens, New York, Norris was passionate about science and math–interests that eventually led him down the path of becoming a researcher. He attended Cornell University to pursue medicine and he ultimately graduated with a Doctor of Medicine from Howard University. In 2014, he earned a PhD in religious, spiritual and metaphysical philosophy.

He has co-authored hundreds of articles in peer-reviewed journals, as well as scientific abstracts. He also serves on the editorial boards for Ethnicity & Disease, the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology and the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. 


Connect with Dr. Norris on LinkedIn.



Supported by the National Institutes of Health

Award #U54GM119024

CONTACT

info@diversityprogramconsortium.org