# Expanding Participation by Minorities in Biomedical Sciences

> **NIH NIH R25** · UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND BALTIMORE COUNTY · 2021 · $918,410

## Abstract

Project Summary
The IMSD Graduate Fellows Program has had a dramatic impact on PhD-level training of Underrepresented
(UR) students at The University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). Since its inception in 1997, UR
participation in supported departments (biology, chemistry, biochemistry, chemical/ mechanical
engineering, human services psychology, and physics) has increased from 0%, 1%, 0%, 1%, 8%, and 0%,
respectively, to 13%, 16%, 17%, 16%, 21%, and 3%, respectively. Expansion in 2007 to the Graduate Program
in Life Science (GPILS) at our sister campus, the University of Maryland Baltimore (UMB), triggered a near
doubling in UR GPILS enrollment at UMB (from 22 students in 2007 to 39 students in 2014). Total IMSD
enrollment continues to grow, with 87 IMSD PhD students enrolled in the Fall of 2015 (52 African American,
24 Hispanic, 1 Native American, 3 Pacific Islander, 1 Caucasian with disability, and 6 non-UR (1 declared-
disadvantaged Caucasian male, 2 women of Middle Eastern descent, 1 East Indian, and 2 Asian)). Retention
has reached an all-time high (90% in the current funding period; 87% over the past 10 years; 81% since
inception), and UR PhD production has increased dramatically, from 7 UR PhD degrees awarded over the 15
years preceding IMSD to 78 total PhDs awarded to IMSD Fellows (32 since our last competitive renewal).
Of the 78 graduates, 56 (72%) matriculated directly to Postdoctoral positions. Although nearly all of the
quantitative objectives of the current support period have been met, significant challenges remain. In particular,
although 20 former IMSD Fellow graduates obtained full- or part-time university/college faculty
positions, and 5 additional postdocs are actively applying for tenure-track positions, only one former Fellow
currently holds a tenure-track position. Since UR colleagues in tenured academic positions are likely to have
the broadest impact as mentors and policy makers, and since the percentage of tenured UR faculty has
remained flat for decades, we clearly must do a better job of preparing IMSD Fellows for negative pressures
that are impacting their matriculation to tenure-track positions -- including published reports that UR students
are less competitive for NIH funding, that the U.S. is producing too many PhDs, and that there are declining
academic opportunities. In addition, UR participation in PhD programs at UMBC and UMB remains well below
national population averages. Overall objectives include: (1) growth to 100+ enrolled Fellows while
maintaining high retention, (2) expansion in STEM departments where UR participation has lagged, and (3)
increase competitiveness for tenure-track faculty positions. New activities include: (i) mock study sections and
workshops to improve grantsmanship, (ii) new individualized (using IDPs) and cohort-level advising activities,
(iii) expansion of the IMSD speaker exchange, to increase exposure and match Fellows with like-minded
postdoc advisors at supportive institu...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10127648
- **Project number:** 5R25GM055036-25
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND BALTIMORE COUNTY
- **Principal Investigator:** MICHAEL FINLEY SUMMERS
- **Activity code:** R25 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $918,410
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 1996-09-30 → 2023-09-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10127648

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10127648, Expanding Participation by Minorities in Biomedical Sciences (5R25GM055036-25). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10127648. Licensed CC0.

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