| Literature DB >> 25005356 |
Lauren Ullrich1, Sonya B Dumanis2, Tanya M Evans3, Alexis M Jeannotte4, Carrie Leonard5, Summer J Rozzi2, Caitlin M Taylor3, Karen Gale6, Jagmeet S Kanwal7, Kathleen A Maguire-Zeiss2, Barry B Wolfe6, Patrick A Forcelli8.
Abstract
A key facet of professional development is the formation of professional identity. At its most basic level, professional identity for a scientist centers on mastery of a discipline and the development of research skills during doctoral training. To develop a broader understanding of professional identity in the context of doctoral training, the Carnegie Initiative on the Doctorate (CID) ran a multi-institutional study from 2001 to 2005. A key outcome of the CID was the development of the concept of 'stewards of the discipline'. The Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience (IPN) at Georgetown University participated in CID from 2003 to 2005. Here, we describe the IPN and highlight the programmatic developments resulting from participation in the CID. In particular, we emphasize programmatic activities that are designed to promote professional skills in parallel with scientific development. We describe activities in the domains of leadership, communication, teaching, public outreach, ethics, collaboration, and mentorship. Finally, we provide data that demonstrate that traditional metrics of academic success are not adversely affected by the inclusion of professional development activities in the curricula. By incorporating these seven 'professional development' activities into the required coursework and dissertation research experience, the IPN motivates students to become stewards of the discipline.Entities:
Keywords: PhD; communication; graduate school; leadership; neuroscience; professional development; public outreach; teaching; training
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25005356 PMCID: PMC4087171 DOI: 10.3402/meo.v19.22623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Fig. 1Schematic representation of activities that IPN graduate students participate in from entry into the program through the end of doctoral training, emphasizing the different facets of stewardship that we attempt to foster during the period of doctoral training.
Fig. 2Box and Whisker plots (1st to 99th percentiles) showing time to degree as a function of what epoch of the program students matriculated during (i.e., 1994 to 2002; 2003 to 2005; 2006 to 2008). Dual-degree (MD/PhD) students are not included. The dotted line (5.25 years) shows the overall median.
Participation rate for individual domains of professional development
| Professional skill | Participation rate, % |
|---|---|
| Leadership | 44 |
| Teaching | 84 |
| Public outreach | 50 |
| Collaboration | 57 |
| Ethics | 100 |
| Mentorship | 100 |
| Oral and written communication | 100 |
Rate of participation in leadership was defined as the number of students enrolled in 2014 that served in student government at any point during their graduate training. Rate of participation in teaching was calculated as described in (19). Rate of participation in public outreach was defined as the number of students enrolled in 2014 that participated in either: Brain Awareness Week or Hot Topics in Health Sciences. All students are required to take the Skills and Ethics course, giving a 100% participation rate. The number in parenthesis indicates the rate of optional participation, defined as the number of students enrolled in 2014 that participated in either: Tea Time, Neuroethics Discussion Group, the RCR pilot program, or as panelists in the Skills and Ethics. Note that all students also participate in ethics training during their first year. Rate of collaboration was defined as the percent of papers published by IPN graduate students with two or more IPN faculty members as authors between 2006 and 2008. All students participate in the peer mentorship program, Neurolunch presentations, and manuscript writing leading to the 100% participation rate for those domains. Rates were assessed by LEU and PAF in 2014.
indicates required participation in at least one of the activities described.
Activities by skill domain influenced by CID participation
| Professional skill | Activity |
|---|---|
| Leadership | Student representatives on program committees |
| Teaching | Creation of Summer course |
| Public outreach | Financial support for BAW |
| Ethics | Tea Time |
| Mentorship | Mentorship questionnaire |
| Oral and written communication | Rubrics for oral comprehensive exams and neurolunch presentations |
Fig. 3Mean (and standard error) of the number of publications (total publications in grey, 1st author publications in blue) produced by IPN students as a function of period of matriculation.
Fig. 4Career path after the completion of degree as a function of what epoch of the program students matriculated during (i.e., 1999 to 2002; 2003 to 2008). 1999 was selected as the cutoff for this to allow an assessment of an approximately equal number of students. This is also the period during which the program initially received funding through the NIH Jointly-Sponsored Predoctoral Training Grant program.