Oral history interview with Collin R. Diedrich

https://digital.sciencehistory.org/downloads/deriv/ay9vp6t/thumb_large_2X?disposition=inline

Title

Oral history interview with Collin R. Diedrich

Date

2017-Jun-19, 2017-Jun-22

Description

Collin R. Diedrich was born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1983. His parents were originally from Kansas, and they settled in St. Louis to help Diedrich’s grandfather with his wholesale business. Diedrich grew up in a close-knit family with an older brother and a twin sister. His family lived on the same street as his mother’s extended family, and they typically ate dinner together on Sunday nights. When Diedrich was in first grade, his teacher approached his parents about tutoring him in the summer because he was not reading at grade level. He was officially diagnosed with a learning disability in third grade, and his parents hired a tutor, Kathy Clayman, who worked with Diedrich from third to twelfth grade. His mother had to fight for him to receive an individual education plan (IEP) because the school administration did not want to make accommodations for him because he was receiving good grades. In high school, Diedrich planned to become a physical therapist and decided to attend Bradley University, which had an excellent physical therapy program and a good disability resource office. At Bradley, Diedrich focused on running and studying and fell in love with biology in his first biology class, where he received a 96 percent on the first test. After taking a “weed-out” biology class during sophomore year, Diedrich decided to become a biology major and later refined his focus further, desiring to become an HIV researcher. He applied to the University of Pittsburgh for graduate school on a whim and ultimately attended there. As part of his Ph.D. program, Diedrich had to take a two-part examination during his second year. Although he passed the written part, which was the thesis proposal, he failed the oral part. He then went to the Disability Resource Office to learn about techniques he could use to pass the oral portion on his second try. He passed after studying for several months and was able to use his notes for material in a review article. When Diedrich finished his Ph.D. in 2012, he had lined up a postdoc at the University of Cape Town in South Africa to research the immunology of HIV and tuberculosis. The move was a rough adjustment for Diedrich and his wife, Robin Hitchcock, but slowly, he started to see progress in his work. After three years in Cape Town, he returned to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to look at HIV/TB co-infection under an R01 grant. In addition to his work in the lab, Diedrich volunteers his time with the International Dyslexia Association. He expresses appreciation for technological tools and a supportive community of family and friends that helped him succeed with a learning disability.

Source

PA Digital

Language

English

Relation

https://digital.sciencehistory.org/downloads/deriv/ay9vp6t/thumb_large_2X?disposition=inline

Type

sound
text

Subject

Immunology
Learning disabled
Diedrich, Collin R
Dyslexia
HIV (Viruses)--Research
Tuberculosis vaccines
Virology
Medical scientists

Citation

“Oral history interview with Collin R. Diedrich,” Center for Knit and Crochet Digital Repository, accessed May 20, 2024, http://digital.centerforknitandcrochet.org/items/show/34260.

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