Tech’s ‘born scientist’
Courtesy photo
Self professed “born scientist” Jaylen Mumphrey feels right at home in a lab.
Louisiana Tech Associate Professor of Biological Sciences Jamie Newman was meeting with members of one of her graduate student teams in Newman’s Lab last autumn when one of the newer members of the team began playfully picking on Jaylen Mumphrey, one of the team’s veterans, for having her come to the lab on the weekend to complete a western blot, an analytical technique in molecular biology to detect proteins in a sample.
“I can’t understand why you would want to spend your weekend in the lab,” the student said.
“I can’t understand,” Mumphrey said, “why you wouldn’t want to.”
A self-professed “born scientist” who feels at home in the lab, Mumphrey is assured of more time there when he begins the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Postbac Intramural Research Training Award (IRTA) program in July in Bethesda, Maryland, an opportunity that allows the Dallas native to spend one or two years working full-time and side-by-side with some of the leading scientists in the world in an environment devoted exclusively to biomedical research.
Newman asked Dr. John Stewart IV to mentor Jaylen through the University’s new Alumni Mentoring Program. Stewart graduated from Tech with a BS in zoology in 1991 and went to medical school at Howard University in Washington, D.C., where he also participated in research at the NIH. He spent another four years in research labs at the National Cancer Institute and today is a practicing clinical scientist at the University of Illinois College of Medicine but also is actively involved in researching novel therapies for the treatment of cancer.
After email exchanges and Zoom meetings, Stewart suggested Mumphrey apply for the NIH program. When he was accepted, Mumphrey told his advisor and instructor, “Dr. Newman, things like this don’t happen for people like me.”
“I think of myself as an unlucky guy in general, so I do not feel that opportunities of this magnitude present themselves to me,” Mumphrey said later. “Secondly, as a black man, I did not see any black scientists in my community while I was growing up. With that being said, since I never saw anyone who looked like me in science, to have an opportunity to work at one of the top research facilities in the world seemed far-fetched or near impossible.”
Stewart sensed both Mumphrey’s openness to a different experience and also his need for that. Also an African-American, Stewart had no black professors at Tech, but he did know African American doctors in Shreveport “and they helped me,” he said, “know what I could achieve.”
Stewart also had mentors who encouraged him to go to school in the east so he’d be close to the NIH.
“It sent me on a different trajectory,” Stewart said. “I needed to be planted. It’s the same thing for Jaylen. It’s hard to ‘be it’ unless you can ‘see it.’ He needs to be around scientists who look like him and have had similar experiences and have risen to the top of their professions. This is an amazing opportunity for Jaylen in that it’ll change the way he thinks about science and potentially change his career trajectory.
Mumphrey is very aware of the magnitude of the opportunity, grateful Stewart told him about the program, and happy that Newman “holds me accountable,” he said, “sets high expectations for me, and pushes me to be a great scientist. She gets all the credit.”