School of Medicine

Social distancing has graduate students defending theses online

The pandemic and resulting shelter-in-place orders have compelled graduate students to complete the last step of their graduate programs – defense of each student's thesis in front of faculty, friends and family – virtually. Medical Sciences Training Program student Alaric D’Souza, PhD, (bottom left) celebrated over Zoom after the successful defense of his thesis March 30. (Image: Luke Diorio-Toth)

Across campus, centrifuges have stopped spinning, incubators have been shut off, and lab benches sit empty as graduate students, postdoctoral researchers and technicians at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis obey state and local shelter-at-home orders. Only researchers investigating ways to stop COVID-19 or performing other essential duties are allowed in the usually bustling research labs of the School of Medicine.

The closure of research labs in March has forced graduate students who planned to defend years of research – the last, critical step to earning a PhD – to adapt quickly. One to two School of Medicine graduate students have defended their theses online every week since mid-March, when the university, in response to the pandemic, began instituting changes to discourage gatherings.

“My defense was scheduled last summer,” said Alaric D’Souza, PhD, a Medical Scientist Training Program student who successfully defended his thesis March 30 from the third floor of his house. “My parents were supposed to fly in from California, but in early March I told them to cancel their tickets because I didn’t think it was safe for them to travel. In the end it worked out, because they were able to attend via Zoom. I have family all over – India, Ohio, Georgia – and a lot of people watched who wouldn’t have been able to come in person.”

A successful thesis defense traditionally is celebrated with a lab party. Once D’Souza’s defense was over, his labmates changed their Zoom backgrounds to feature silly pictures of him and toasted him from their homes.

“Congrats,” tweeted Gautam Dantas, PhD, a professor of pathology and immunology and D’Souza’s thesis adviser. “We promise to be more raucous when we’re no longer in COVID-19 lockdown!”

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