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Jonathan Crabtree has been contributing to research at Carolina for 31 years.

 A man sits in a hallway of a computer server room
Photo by Megan Mendenhall

 

Jonathan Crabtree has worked for UNC-Chapel Hill in a variety of roles, most recently as the inaugural director of the Research Data Management Core within the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research (OVCR).

What brought you to Carolina?

Coming to Carolina was literally coming home. I grew up nine miles away from Chapel Hill’s campus on a small family farm in Chatham County. My mother and two grandparents worked here, so I had the pleasure of growing up a Tar Heel. I spent summers with my grandfather around Carmichael and Woollen gyms and playing in the “Tin Can” — an old dirt running track surrounded by corrugated tin walls — where the student recreation center is built today.

When I started working at Carolina three decades ago, I was excited to leverage my initial skills in computer networking to help groups in the School of Medicine. I came to work and raise my family in the community I love.

How has your role here changed over the years?

I began as a computing consultant in the School of Medicine information network, installing and managing servers and networks for groups such as pediatric medicine, neurosurgery, and lab animal medicine.

After this initial immersion, I was approached by the Institute for Research in Social Science, now the Odum Institute, to help coordinate and lead the information technology management for the institute. This was my first exposure to data archiving and began my trajectory toward my current role.

While at Odum, I was asked to mange the institute’s data archive — one of the largest catalogs of social science research data in the U.S. — along with the grants that fund its management. I understood the importance of quality data in the research process and knew I needed more skills to be successful in this endeavor.

I knew that Carolina had the best School of Information and Library Science in the country, so I worked with Helen Tibbo to gain the knowledge and experience needed to be successful. I also completed both a master’s and PhD in information science, giving me a total of three degrees from UNC-Chapel Hill.

I began developing a research agenda that helped Odum build the tools and workflows needed to curate, manage, and share data. These funded projects are the foundational base that underpin my current role as director of the Research Data Management Core (RDMC), which was created in the fall of 2023.

What’s kept you at Carolina?

The ability to grow as an individual and an employee. Carolina has provided me with a safe and encouraging environment to learn new skills and branch out into new knowledge areas. I can easily say that my career path has never been boring. New opportunities and challenges are around every bend.

The research community here is one of the most collaborative and inviting in the world, and I am honored to be a part of it. With the encouragement of UNC Research leadership, I built the Global Dataverse Community Consortium — an international collaboration to create and support tools to manage research data.

What contribution are you most proud of?

The creation of RDMC. The unit was established by OVCR in response to new scientific data management and sharing policies from federal funding agencies and other critical stakeholders. RDMC provides institutional data management support to all projects and clinical trials throughout the research lifecycle, regardless of the funding source. It is integral to validating, organizing, protecting, maintaining, and processing scientific data to ensure its accessibility, reliability, and quality to users.

The hard work is just beginning. RDMC envisions a future in which research data receives care and attention throughout its entire lifecycle; campus infrastructure is federated into an ecosystem of expertise, support, and technology that promotes discovery and invention; and Carolina is a beacon of excellence in data stewardship for other institutions.

What is a uniquely Carolina experience you’ve had?

The willingness to share knowledge with our global community and to help make research better around the world is part of being a Tar Heel.

In June 2024, I was asked to participate in the Fulbright Specialist Program as a research data management specialist and traveled to Bogotá, Colombia, to share information and advice with Pontifical Javierian University. And, while the inaugural year of RDMC has been extraordinarily busy, leadership supported me in helping other universities that need research data management assistance.

Rooted recognizes long-standing members of the UNC-Chapel Hill community who have aided in the advancement of research by staying at Carolina. They are crucial to the UNC Research enterprise, experts in their fields, and loyal Tar Heels. Know someone we should feature? Nominate a researcher.

Read more Rooted stories here.

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