| Literature DB >> 35198624 |
Graciela A Unguez1, Karen L Bennett2, Carmen Domingo3, Ida Chow4.
Abstract
The demographic profile of the scientific and biomedical workforce in the United States does not reflect the population at large (https://ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsf21321/data-tables; www.census.gov), raising concerns that there will be too few trained researchers in the future, the scope of research interests will not be broad enough, gaps in equity and social justice will continue to increase, and the safeguards to the integrity of the scientific enterprise could be jeopardized. To diversify the pool of scientists, the Society for Developmental Biology (SDB) developed the Choose Development! Program-a two-summer immersion for undergraduate students belonging to underrepresented (UR) populations in STEM to join the research laboratory of an established SDB member. This research-intensive experience was augmented by a multi-tier mentoring plan for each student, society-wide recognition, professional development activities and networking at national meetings. The strengths of the Choose Development! Program were leveraged to expand inclusion and outreach at the Society's leadership level, the Board of Directors (BOD), which then led to significant changes that impacted the SDB community. The cumulative outcomes of the Choose Development! Program provides evidence that community-based, long-term advocacy, and mentoring of young UR scientists is successful in retaining UR students in scientific career paths and making a scientific society more inclusive.Entities:
Keywords: choose development; developmental biology; diversity and inclusion; summer research program; undergraduate research
Year: 2022 PMID: 35198624 PMCID: PMC8859855 DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2021.762836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Sociol ISSN: 2297-7775
FIGURE 1Transformation of the Society for Developmental Biology into a more diverse and inclusive scientific society through a comprehensive research-intensive experience and long-term mentoring of undergraduate students.
Demographics of Choose Development! fellows (2013–2020).
| American Indian | African American | Hispanic / Latino | Hawaiian / Pacific Islander | Female / Male | Students with disabilities | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2-years College | - | - | 2 | - | 1 / 1 | - |
| PUI | - | 2 | 1 | - | 2 / 1 | - |
| R1 and R2 | 1 | 8 | 20 | 1 | 17 / 11 | 3 |
PUI: primarily undergraduate institution.
R1 and R2: research intensive university; Research University.
Some students self-identified as multi-racial or multi-ethnic.
Academic/ professional status of Choose Development! fellows with Bachelor’s degree.
| Total with BS /BA | Doctoral program | Master’s program | Medical school | Gap year app Grad | Industry | Unknown |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | 15 (50%) | 4 (13%) | 3 (10%) | 4 (13%) | 2 (7%) | 2 (7%) |
FIGURE 2(A): Choose Development! Fellows at the 2018 SDB Annual Meeting meet Nobel Laureate Dr. Eric Wieschaus (center). Fellows from left to right: Evan Brooks, Alexis Camacho-Avila, Amber Rock, Caroline Pritchard, Christian Wilson and Josean Reyes Rivera. (B): Choose Development! Fellows at the 2019 SDB Annual Meeting lunch with renowned developmental biologists. From left to right: Lindsey Hernandez (2018); Ruth Lehmann; Richard Behringer; Adriana Vélez (2018–2019); Ida Chow; Qinan Hu (Lab Mentor); Talia Hart (2015); Martin Chalfie; Alexis Camacho-Avila (2017–2018); Mario Capecchi; Josean Reyes Rivera (2016, 2018); Rebecca Green (Lab Mentor); Brigid Hogan; Doug Melton; Grace Jean (2018); Davys Lopez (2013); Diana Ramirez (2018–2019); Christiane Nuesslein- Volhard; Amanda Neves (2018); Lilianna Solnica-Krezel; Graciela Unguez. Martin Chalfie, Mario Capecchi, and Christiane Nuesslein-Volhard are all Nobel Laureates; Ruth Lehmann, Brigid Hogan, Doug Melton and Lilianna Sonica-Krezel are all members of the National Academy of Science and SDB past presidents.
FIGURE 3Screen picture of a weekly Zoom meeting with 2021 Choose Development! Fellows and guest, former SDB President and Noble Laureate Dr. Martin Chalfie. (A) Martin Chalfie, Marsha Lucas (SDB Publications and Communication Director), Jose Segura Bermudez, and Talia Marc. (B) Jahmiyes Wright, Richard Behringer (Choose Development! Program Coordinator), Christian Torres, and Katerine Norton. (C) Zach Mayne, Isabella Higgins, and Graciela A. Unguez (Choose Development! Program Director).
Impact of Choose Development! program on academic and lab mentors—some insights.
| Lab mentors | Academic mentors |
|---|---|
| The lab mentor continued to gain experience in mentoring students, in particular | I realized that undergrads greatly value |
| The Lab Mentor had to | Alerted me to my need to articulate aspects of science as a career that I may not be conveying well to all students - |
| The postdoc became | The Embryology course and the SDB meeting… showed [my SDB fellow] a wider world outside of my lab and our immediate environment… promoted his independence and inspired him to take more control over his project. |
| Interacting with our Fellow really | Figuring out how |
| The Lab mentor | It gave me the opportunity to |
Research publications with data from Choose Development! fellows research projects.
| 2020 |
| Martinez-Gómez, J., Galimba, K.D., Coté, E., Sullivan, A., Di Stilio, V.S. 2020. Spontaneous homeotic mutants and genetic control of floral organ identity in a ranunculid. |
| Hu, Q., Aviles-Velez, A., and Wolfner, M.F. 2020. Drosophila Plc21C is involved in calcium wave propagation during egg activation. |
| Hu, Q., Duncan, F.E., Nowakowski, A.B., Antipova, O.A., Woodruff, T.K., O’Halloran, T.T., Wolfner, M.F. 2020. Zinc dynamics during Drosophila egg maturation and activation. |
| Fellows acknowledged: Adriana Aviles-Velez and Lauryn Worley |
| 2019 |
| Wang, T.N., Clifford, M.R., Martinez-Gómez, J., Johnson, J.C., Riffell, J.C., Di Stiliio, V.S. 2019. Scent matters: differential contribution of scent to insect response to flowers with insect vs wind pollination traits. |
| 2018 |
| Galimba, K.D., Martinez-Gómez, J., Di Stiliio V.S. 2018. Gene duplication and transference of function in paleo AP3 lineage of floral organ identity genes. |
| Anna I Vickrey, Rebecca Bruders, Zev Kronenberg, Emma Mackey, Ryan J Bohlender, Emily Maclary, Raquei Maynez, Edward J Osborne, Kevin P Johnson, Chad D Huff, Mark Yandell, Michael D Shapiro. 2018. Introgression of regulatory alleles and a missense coding mutation drive plumage pattern diversity in the rock pigeon. |
| S. Basu, I. Barbur, A. Calderon, S. Banerjee, A. Proweller. 2018. Notch signaling regulates arterial vasoreactivity through opposing functions of Jagged1 and Dll4 in the vessel wall. |
| Salinas-Saavedra, M., Rock, A.Q., and Martindale, M.Q. 2018. Germ layer specific regulation of cell adhesion: insight in to the evolution of mesoderm. |
| Dubuc, T.Q. *, Stephenson, T.B.*, Rock, A.Q., and Martindale, M.Q. 2018. Hox and Wnt Pattern the First Primary Axis of an Anthozoan Cnidarian before Gastrulation. |
| 2017 |
| Pekar,O., Ow, M.C., Hui K.Y., Noyes, M.B., Hall, S.E., Hubbard, E.J.A. 2017. Linking the Environment, DAF-7/TGFβ signaling and LAG-2/DSL ligand expression in the germline stem cell niche. |
| Fellow Acknowledged: Jesus Martinez-Gómez |
| 2015 |
| Sharma, P., Arazona, O.A., Lopez, D.H., Schwager, E.E., Cohn, M.J., Wheeler, W. and Extavour, C. 2015. A conserved genetic mechanism specifies deutocerebral appendage identity in insects and arachnids. |
NOTE: name of fellow in bold; name of Academic Mentor underlined.
Demographics of the SDB membership (based on voluntary membership responses in 2012 and 2020)
| African American | American Indian | Hawaiian / Pacific Islander | Hispanic / Latino | White | Other / Undisclosed | People w/ Disabilities | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | 16 (2.3%) | 7 (1%) | 0 | 49 (7.2%) | 531 (78%) | 51 (7.5%) | 27 (4%) | 681 (survey) |
| 2020 | 52 (2.9%) | 22 (1.2%) | 5 (0.02%) | 168 (9.30%) | 1,242 (69%) | 289 (16.06) | 29 (0.016%) | 1799 (database) |
Demographics of trainees (undergraduate, graduate and postdocs) in the SDB
| Year | Undergrad and Grad | Hispanic | Non- Hispanic | Undisclosed ethnicity | Black/African American | American Indian | Pacific Islander | White | Asian | Undisclosed race | Disability disclosed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | 473 | 46 (9.72%) | 369 (78.01%) | 58 (12.26%) | 16 (3.38%) | 8 (1.69%) | 4 (0.85%) | 307 (64.90%) | 91 (19.24%) | 68 (14.38%) | 8 (1.69%) |
| 2014 | 571 | 51 (8.93%) | 428 (74.96%) | 92 (16.11%) | 20 (3.50%) | 9 (1.58%) | 3 (0.53%) | 311 (54.47%) | 166 (29.07%) | 85 (14.89%) | 7 (1.23%) |
| 2015 | 588 | 74 (12.79%) | 444 (75.91%) | 70 (11.90%) | 23 (3.91%) | 11 (1.87%) | 1 (0.17%) | 357 (60.61%) | 134 (22.79%) | 82 (13.95%) | 4 (0.68%) |
| 2016 | 660 | 69 (10.45%) | 514 (77.88%) | 77 (11.67%) | 31 (4.70%) | 8 (1.21%) | 2 (0.30%) | 412 (62.42%) | 135 (20.45%) | 94 (14.24%) | 7 (1.06%) |
| 2017 | 594 | 75 (12.72%) | 470 (79.12%) | 49 (8.25%) | 28 (4.71%) | 13 (2.19%) | 6 (1.01%) | 348 (58.59%) | 155 (26.09%) | 79 (13.30%) | 10 (1.68%) |
| 2018 | 583 | 75 (12.86%) | 471 (80.79%) | 37 (6.35%) | 29 (4.98%) | 9 (1.54%) | 4 (0.69%) | 360 (61.75%) | 135 (23.16%) | 69 (11.84%) | 10 (1.71%) |
| 2019 | 601 | 79 (13.14%) | 471 (78.37%) | 51 (8.49%) | 35 (5.82%) | 16 (2.66%) | 5 (0.83%) | 376 (62.56%) | 137 (22.80%) | 69 (11.48%) | 10 (1.66%) |
| 2020 | 703 | 104 (14.79%) | 548 (77.95%) | 51 (7.25%) | 36 (5.12%) | 18 (2.56%) | 3 (0.43%) | 412 (58.61%) | 173 (24.61%) | 99 (14.08%) | 11 (1.56%) |
| 2021* | 602 | 112 (18.60%) | 441 (73.26%) | 49 (8.14%) | 33 (5.48%) | 12 (1.99%) | 3 (0.50% | 334 (55.48%) | 158 (25.26%) | 94 (15.61%) | 13 (2.16%) |