| Literature DB >> 21867500 |
Evelyn Cornelissen1, Robin Urquhart, Vivian Wy Chan, Ryan T Deforge, Heather L Colquhoun, Shannon Sibbald, Holly Witteman.
Abstract
Trainees (e.g., graduate students, residents, fellows) are increasingly identifying knowledge translation as their research discipline. In Canada, a group of trainees have created a trainee-initiated and trainee-led national collaborative to provide a vehicle for trainees to examine the diversity of knowledge translation research and practice, and to link trainees from diverse geographical areas and disciplines. The aim of this paper is to describe our experience and lessons learned in creating the Knowledge Translation Trainee Collaborative. In this meeting report, we outline the process, challenges, and opportunities in planning and experiencing the collaborative's inaugural meeting as participant organizers, and present outcomes and learnings to date.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21867500 PMCID: PMC3179928 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-6-98
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Attendee characteristics
| Planning Committee (n = 11) | Successful Applicants (n = 19) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | 1 male (9%) | 5 male (26%) |
| Province | 1 Nova Scotia (9%) [Dalhousie University] | 1 Nova Scotia (5%) [Dalhousie University] |
| Training | 1 Post Doctoral/Fellows (9%) | 5 Post Doctoral/Fellows (26%) |
*The high percentage of female participants is representative of the proportion of applicants who were female.
Identity, mission, and vision statements
| Who We Are | The Knowledge Translation Trainee Collaborative (KTTC) is a community of practice in knowledge translation (KT). Members of the KTTC are junior researchers and practitioners who are interested in continuing to learn about and advance the field of KT, and who want to collaborate and build networks with other KT trainees. We define trainees as students, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, faculty, community learners, scientists/researchers from a wide spectrum of academia, healthcare professionals, healthcare administrators, and/or others who are new to KT and are interested in actively exploring and developing KT research and practice. |
|---|---|
| We envision a sustainable network that provides accessible, ongoing opportunities for collaboration and learning; represents diversity of thought in KT theory, methods and tools; and grows and advances the field of KT. | |
| We are creating our vision by sharing opportunities for: | |
Challenges and opportunities identified during and after the inaugural meeting
| Challenges | Opportunities |
|---|---|
| ▪ Ensuring the KTTC achieves diversity ( | ▪ Growing academic and administrative interest in KT |
*The increasing number of KT trainees is reflected by the growing number of trainee awards and opportunities in Canada: e.g., the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) now provides doctoral research awards and new investigator awards focused on KT science and KT Canada holds a Strategic Training Initiative in Health Research grant from CIHR to create an internationally-recognized national training initiative to train graduate and post-doctoral students in KT and KT science.