| Literature DB >> 32762839 |
Stephanie M Davis1, Harinder Singh1,2, Cara M Weismann1, Adriana Bankston1, Juan Pablo Ruiz Villalobos1,3.
Abstract
Over the past 20 years, a series of reports written by groups of senior researchers and administrators have recommended changes to improve the training environments for graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in the United States. However, academic institutions and departments have largely failed to implement these recommendations, which has exacerbated the problems faced by these trainees. Here, based on input from trainees at different career stages, we outline seven practical changes that academic institutions and departments can make to improve their training environments.Entities:
Keywords: early-career researchers; mentorship; none; research culture; science training
Year: 2020 PMID: 32762839 PMCID: PMC7413740 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.59806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Recommendations.
Seven concrete actions for department leadership with examples.
| Guideline | Examples | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Supplemental Mentorship | ||
| Departments should require at least one other mentor figure beyond the main supervisor, or the creation of a mentorship committee for graduate students and postdocs. | The University of Michigan has recently piloted a mentorship committee program for postdocs ( | |
| 2. Peer Support | ||
| Departments should facilitate peer cohorts for social support and peer mentorship, particularly where training start times are not synchronized, such as for postdocs. | The | |
| 3. Required Mentor Training | ||
| Departments should require mentor training not merely as a compliance exercise, but as an investment into the professional development of their faculty, staff, and senior trainees. | All basic science graduate science programs at | |
| 4. Exit Surveys | ||
| Departments should require anonymous exit surveys from all trainees and staff, publishing aggregate data to ensure the transparent reporting of a department’s climate; diversity and inclusion efforts; bullying and harassment; and trainee mental health. | To date, 53 schools have signed onto the | |
| 5. Clear Guidelines and Timelines | ||
| Departments should provide graduate students and postdocs with clear guidelines and timelines, beyond grad student qualifying exams; the timing of career stage advancement should not solely depend on the main supervisor or thesis committee. | Universities in the United Kingdom, such as | |
| 6. Standard and Transparent Salary and Benefits | ||
| Departments should provide trainees with benefits and salaries adjusted for the local cost of living, along with transparent and standardized benchmarks for raises based on years of training. | To our knowledge, the | |
| 7. Career and Professional Development Resources | ||
| Departments should require trainees to participate in career and professional development training and workshops of their choice, allowing for exploration of careers beyond academia. | While many schools provide career development opportunities, we highlight the | |