Choose
Development! New NSF-Funded Program for Broadening
Participation
By Marsha E. Lucas
In an effort to
increase the number of underrepresented minorities (URM)
and persons with disabilities entering doctoral
programs in pursuit of research careers in
developmental biology, the Society for Developmental
Biology (SDB) has launched a new three-year National
Science Foundation (NSF)-funded project called
CHOOSE DEVELOPMENT!
CHOOSE DEVELOPMENT!
is a program that emphasizes professional
development and research training through the
pairing of undergraduate students with developmental
biology research faculty who serve as academic
mentors. The students, recognized as SDB fellows,
will spend two summers conducting independent
research in their mentor’s laboratory. They will
present their research at SDB regional and/or
national meetings and receive support from the
larger developmental biology community. It is
expected that most SDB fellows will choose and be
accepted into graduate programs in developmental
biology or related areas.
Graciela Unguez, an associate professor at New
Mexico State University (NMSU), is the primary
investigator on the CHOOSE DEVELOPMENT! grant.
She has personally mentored some 30 URM
undergraduate students at NMSU and serves as
Associate Director of the NIH Minority Biomedical
Research Support-Research Initiative for Scientific
Enhancement (MBRS-RISE) program.
"CHOOSE DEVELOPMENT!
will allow students at the college level to have an
opportunity to be part of a lab community of
scientists that is doing research on any of the
multiple areas that aims to better understand how
plants and animals develop," Unguez said. "This
program also aims to attract more students that are
not well-represented in the scientific community.
... We in the science fields want and need a wider
range of viewpoints and ideas, and this is a step
towards that goal that the Society for Developmental
Biology is fully supporting."
The program is open
to undergraduate students with disabilities and
those belonging to URM groups (African Americans,
Hispanics, Native Americans, Native Hawaiians and
Pacific Islanders; see
footnote #4 in National Academies report) who are
US nationals or permanent residents. Preferences
will be given to sophomores or students in their
second year of college.
Critical to the
success of this program are the SDB academic
mentors. SDB is currently recruiting mentors who are
committed to the program’s mission of inclusiveness
and to enhancing student preparedness for graduate
school. SDB academic mentors are required to be SDB
members, hold a research grant, and have space for a
summer student. They will be given specialized
training to enhance their effectiveness as mentors.
Depending on the lab situation, a lab mentor (postdoc,
advanced graduate student, or lab manager) who will
assist in providing hands-on training for the SDB fellow, will
also receive mentor training.
SDB will assist
academic mentors in applying for supplemental grant
support to help defray any additional expenses. A stipend and
travel/living assistance will be provided for the SDB fellows
during their summer research period. Travel
assistance and a meeting registration fee waiver
will be provided to one of the mentors (academic or
lab) as well as the fellow to attend one SDB meeting
per year (annual or regional).
Recently retired University
of Missouri professor,
Karen Bennett,
will be the program coordinator for this new
initiative. She was a member and acting chair
of SDB's Professional Development and Education
Committee and spearheaded the
SDB Boot Camp for New Faculty and
SDB Faculty Re-Booth Camp. She discussed
how CHOOSE DEVELOPMENT! can be successful.
"We need
‘buy-in’ by SDB members—for some to become mentors
for future SDB fellows, for all who can to pass
on their skills and advice, and for regional and
annual meetings to provide SDB fellows a
venue that demonstrates we, as a Society, value them
as young scientists starting out on a hard, but
exciting life path," she said
Applications for
both SDB fellows and SDB academic mentors will be
available online in December on the
CHOOSE
DEVELOPMENT! page of the SDB website. The
application deadline is March 1, 2013.
Applications will be reviewed beginning in January
2013 and exceptional candidates may be accepted
before the March 1 deadline. For more information on
the program and eligibility visit
CHOOSE DEVELOPMENT! Spread the word by
downloading the program flyers for
SDB Fellows and
SDB Academic Mentors.
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