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Zipkin Receives Fulbright Senior Scholar Fellowship

Oct 29, 2021

In November 2018, biology graduate students packed a classroom at Tel Aviv University (TAU) to learn advanced statistical methods from an American expert in the field. MSU quantitative ecologist Elise Zipkin led the session emphasizing how important those methods are to the students’ own research.

On the back of that successful visit, Zipkin has been awarded a Fulbright Senior Scholar Fellowship, which will send her to Israel for four months of research and teaching in 2022. With thousands applying every year, receiving a Fulbright Fellowship is a prestigious honor.

“I am thrilled to see Elise receive this well-deserved recognition,” said Phil Duxbury, NatSci Dean. “This honor speaks not only to the significant contributions that Dr. Zipkin makes to her field, but also to the importance of collaboration—particularly in addressing global challenges—and training the next generation of scientists to carry on this critical work.”

Teaming up with TAU professors Jonathan Belmaker, a biogeography specialist, and Ofir Levy, a scholar in microclimate prediction, Zipkin developed a research and teaching proposal that bridges their three disciplines.

“I have always dreamed of being a Fulbright Fellow, so this is a huge honor,” said Zipkin, an associate professor in Integrative Biology and the Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior Program Director (EEB). “Because TAU students were so excited about that initial stats workshop, I felt the need to include a teaching component in my proposal. I want to share my expertise in ecological modeling with more Israeli students.”

Zipkin plans to lead a series of four full-day workshops in Israel for graduate students that will build off the two-semester course series that she helped develop for EBB graduate students. MSU EEB’s in-depth curriculum on statistical methods in modern biology is globally unique and includes Bayesian analysis, a method used to improve accuracy while allowing for uncertainties in data. Zipkin will focus the TAU workshops on Bayesian analysis, currently a hot topic in biological fields.

Read full story at College of Natural Science's website.