利用跨专业、非正规教育结构,支持历史上代表性不足的本科生的生物医学研究培训。

Lisa K Marriott, Aaron Raz Link, Roberto Anitori, Ernest Blackwell, Andrea Blas, Jennifer Brock, Tracey Burke, Julia A Burrows, Alexis P Cabrera, Derek Helsham, Lorna B Liban, Marilyn R Mackiewicz, Mika Maruyama, Kathryn C A Milligan-Myhre, Perry J C Pangelinan, Margaret Hattori-Uchima, Russell Reed, Benjamin E Simon, Beylul Solomon, Alma M O Trinidad, Letisha R Wyatt, Alonso Delgado Covarrubia, Adrienne Zell, Thomas E Keller, Cynthia Morris, Carlos J Crespo
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引用次数: 2

摘要

研究经验为新的生物医学研究科学家提供了重要的培训。越来越多来自代表性不足的人群的学生学习科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM),进入研究途径,使STEM领域多样化。然而,在研究环境之外,旨在帮助这些学生导航生物医学研究路径的支持结构并不总是可用的;在实验室技术技能培训和正式指导之外的项目支持组件也没有得到很好的理解。本研究利用多机构研究培训计划,加强俄勒冈州跨学科基础设施和培训(EXITO),探索九所机构如何设计新的课程结构(浓缩),以满足加强本科生研究培训和学生成功的共同目标。EXITO的本科生参加了一个全面的、为期3年的研究培训项目,其中的浓缩部分在9个地点提供:3所大学和6所社区学院,在规模、人口结构和地理位置上都非常不同。在30个月的时间里,研究人员对培训项目中各网站支持学生的方法进行了研究。所有站点都独立创建了自己的非正式课程结构,并通过互助性的同侪小组实施。描述设计和实施的站点数据按主题编码,以确定跨站点的基本程序组件,并使用学生反馈来三角测量结果。丰富让学生有时间批判性地反思他们在研究中的兴趣、经历和身份;与同行和专业人士建立联系;并支持隐性课程和隐性课程的协商。学生们报告说,低压力的环境和以学生为中心的课程平衡了与学术和研究相关的高要求。核心课程主题将“浓缩”描述为培养学生之间的社区意识,让学生接触职业道路和技能,并支持学生职业身份的发展。非正式的跨专业课程使学生能够为彼此建立不同的生物医学身份和途径,同时为机构结构提供信息,以提高不同本科生在学术和研究中的成功。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Supporting Biomedical Research Training for Historically Underrepresented Undergraduates Using Interprofessional, Nonformal Education Structures.

Research experience provides critical training for new biomedical research scientists. Students from underrepresented populations studying science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) are increasingly recruited into research pathways to diversify STEM fields. However, support structures outside of research settings designed to help these students navigate biomedical research pathways are not always available; nor are program support components outside the context of laboratory technical skills training and formal mentorship well understood. This study leveraged a multi-institutional research training program, Enhancing Cross-Disciplinary Infrastructure and Training at Oregon (EXITO), to explore how nine institutions designed a new curricular structure (Enrichment) to meet a common goal of enhancing undergraduate research training and student success. EXITO undergraduates participated in a comprehensive, 3-year research training program with the Enrichment component offered across nine sites: three universities and six community colleges, highly diverse in size, demographics, and location. Sites' approaches to supporting students in the training program were studied over a 30-month period. All sites independently created their own nonformal curricular structures, implemented interprofessionally via facilitated peer groups. Site data describing design and implementation were thematically coded to identify essential programmatic components across sites, with student feedback used to triangulate findings. Enrichment offered students time to critically reflect on their interests, experiences, and identities in research; network with peers and professionals; and support negotiation of hidden and implicit curricula. Students reported the low-pressure setting and student-centered curriculum balanced the high demands associated with academics and research. Core curricular themes described Enrichment as fostering a sense of community among students, exposing students to career paths and skills, and supporting development of students' professional identities. The non-formal, interprofessional curricula enabled students to model diverse biomedical identities and pathways for each other while informing institutional structures to improve diverse undergraduate students' success in academia and research.

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