| Literature DB >> 29196426 |
Arri Eisen1,2, Douglas C Eaton3.
Abstract
How does the United States maintain the highest-quality research and teaching in its professional science workforce and ensure that those in this workforce are effectively trained and representative of national demographics? In the pathway to science careers, the postdoctoral stage is formative, providing the experiences that define the independent work of one's first faculty position. It is also a stage in which underrepresented minorities (URMs) disproportionately lose interest in pursuing academic careers in science and, models suggest, a point at which interventions to increase proportions of URMs in such careers could be most effective. We present a mixed-methods, case study analysis from 17 years of the Fellowships in Research and Science Teaching (FIRST) postdoctoral program, to our knowledge the largest and longest continuously running science postdoctoral program in the United States. We demonstrate that FIRST fellows, in sharp contrast to postdocs overall, are inclusive of URMs (50% African American; 70% women) and as or more successful in their fellowships and beyond as a comparison group (measured by publication rate, attainment of employment in academic science careers, and eventual research grant support). Analysis of alumni surveys and focus group discussions reveals that FIRST fellows place highest value on the cohort-driven community and the developmental teaching and research training the program provides.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29196426 PMCID: PMC5749967 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.17-03-0051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
FIGURE 1.Rate of publishing by FIRST fellows. The frequency of postdoctoral publishing is described by a Poisson (exponential) distribution with excess zero events (postdocs who do not publish). For a Poisson distribution, the population mean and variance are equal. Most traditional parametric statistics cannot be used to test hypotheses (but specialized tests to compare means can be used; see Methods).
Impact of FIRST on partner MSIs, 2000–2016
| Activity | Number |
|---|---|
| New courses and labs developed and taught | >35 |
| Existing courses and labs revised | >40 |
| MSI undergraduates mentored by FIRST fellows in research labs | 19 |
| Peer-reviewed teaching publications coauthored by fellows and MSI teaching mentors | 9 |
| FIRST fellows hired as faculty by partner MSIs | 19 |
Publication rate of FIRST fellows and two comparison groupsa
| Postdoctoral publications per postdoctoral yearc | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethnicityb | All fellows | Majority | Minority | |||||||||
| Postdoc groups | No. | W/As | URM | First | Other | Total | First | Other | Total | First | Other | Total |
| FIRST fellows | 168d | 82 | 86 | 0.48 ± 0.77 | 0.57 ± 0.79 | 0.98 ± 1.2 | 0.65 ± 0.83 | 0.56 ± 0.66 | 1.2 ± 1.2 | 0.25 ± 0.36 | 0.44 ± 0.57 | 0.66 ± 0.71 |
| Emory T32 fellows | 92 | 85 | 7 | 0.33 ± 0.52 | 0.43 ± 0.92 | 0.76H ± 1.2 | 0.35 ± 0.53 | 0.43 ± 0.95 | 0.78H ± 1.3 | 0.1 ± 0.25 | 0.5 ± 0.5 | 0.59 ± 0.60 |
| IRACDA T32 fellowse | 536 | 472 | 64 | 0.45 ± 0.69 | 0.27H ± 0.63 | 0.71H ± 1.1 | 0.49 ± 0.69 | 0.32 ± 0.80 | 0.81H ± 1.2 | 0.33 ± 0.56 | 0.28 ± 0.41 | 0.62 ± 0.89 |
aMean publication rates ± SD are given for FIRST fellows and current T32 fellows at Emory and current and former T32 fellows at institutions with long-established IRACDA programs (Emory, UNC, Penn, Tufts, and University of Arizona). Only publications from within fellows’ postdoctoral training time and only from fellows with between 6 and 60 months of training are included.
bW/As, whites/Asians; URM, underrepresented minority.
cValues marked with a superscript “H” are significantly less than FIRST publication rates.
dNumber of fellows with more than 6 months and less than 60 months as a postdoctoral fellow. Total current census as of July 1, 2016, is 177.
e“IRACDA T32 Fellows” refers to T32 postdoctoral fellows who are at select institutions that also happen to have IRACDA programs, of which FIRST is one.
FIGURE 2.(A) Employment outcomes for FIRST fellows and national T32 fellows. The employment outcomes of 145 FIRST alumni and 644 former T32 fellows are divided into business/industry (black), university/academic (red), and other (green), including self-employed; primary or secondary school instructors; U.S., state, or local government. (B) Divides the university/academic category and the other category of A into component elements, showing an almost equal division of FIRST faculty into research-intensive, liberal arts, and minority-serving institutions. “Other” includes self-employed and primary or secondary school instructors.
FIGURE 3.FIRST alumni grants. (A) Numerical data available from NIH about the mean time from completing a T32 postdoctoral fellowship until grant awards of various types. (B) Mean times from A are superimposed on the distribution of the number of FIRST fellows who have graduated from the program and remained in academic environments. (C) Based on the mean times and the times after leaving the FIRST program, it is possible to make conservative estimates of the number of grants FIRST fellows are likely to have been awarded to compare with the actual grants awarded. Although the numbers are small, FIRST fellows appear to have met expectations for acquiring grants. R01 equivalents include NSF awards that pay faculty salary and an indirect cost rate the same as a R01.