| Literature DB >> 30142043 |
Susan A Gardner1,2, Lorena M Salto1, Matt L Riggs1,3, Carlos A Casiano1, Marino De Leon1.
Abstract
Writing is a critical skill for graduate students, but few studies in the literature describe how it is supported in the training of biomedical graduate students. The Initiative for Maximizing Student Development program at Loma Linda University aims to develop this important skill in its students through an integrated, structured writing intervention. Specifically, the program hired a writing specialist who taught writing seminars, facilitated writing and publishing workshops, and mentored students in one-on-one writing conferences. Doctoral students in the program, primarily underrepresented minority students with some not having English as a first language, all exhibited writing apprehension and blocking behaviors. The percentage of students graduating, publishing, and entering science careers, all of which require writing, is high. To yield insight into how this intervention worked, we conducted in-depth interviews of six of the earliest graduates, derived themes, analyzed data from pre- and post-assessments, and described their publication records. Participating students increased their writing confidence, adopted productive writing strategies, decreased writing anxiety and blocking behaviors, and published successfully.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30142043 PMCID: PMC6234805 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-12-0350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
FIGURE 1.The LLU-NIH IMSD program structured writing intervention model. Component 1 is required of first-year LLU-NIH IMSD students. Component 2 is open to all LLU-NIH IMSD students after they have attended/completed first-year writing seminars.
FIGURE 2.Pre/post Daly-Miller WAT results for the six LLU-NIH IMSD graduate students. The mean apprehension scores (with 95% confidence interval) are shown for the Evaluation Apprehension, Apprehension of Stress Experience, and Quality of Product Apprehension WAT subscales. Higher scores indicate lower apprehension.
FIGURE 3.Pre/post Rose’s WAQ scores for the six LLU-NIH IMSD graduate students. The mean scores are shown (±SD) for the Attitude, Complexity, Lateness, Editing, and Blocking WAQ subscales. Higher values reflect higher levels of desirable beliefs and attitudes.
FIGURE 4.Peer-reviewed journal article publication record as of June 30, 2017, for the six LLU-NIH IMSD students.