# Expanding a Model Program Which Has Increased the Number of Underrepresented Students in Biomedical-RelevantGraduate Programs

> **NIH NIH T34** · UNIVERSITY OF WEST FLORIDA · 2020 · $85,917

## Abstract

SUMMARY:
The proposed renewal and expansion of the current UWF MARC Scholars Program seeks to
dramatically increase retention, academic performance, degree attainment, and graduate school
matriculation rates among underrepresented biomedical minority students at the University of
West Florida (UWF). The program is modeled after UWF’s Chemistry Scholars and current MARC
Scholars Programs, inclusion programs modeled after the Meyerhoff Scholars Program at
UMBC.17-18 These programs are designed to support high-potential underrepresented (UR)
students who start college with an interest in STEM. Five years after establishing Chem Scholars,
the ethnically UR Chemistry graduates have increased from an average 6% during 2009-2012 to
an average 30% during 2012-2017. The percentage of ethnically UR students pursuing
biomedically relevant PhD or MD-PhD degrees has increased from 0% during 2010-
2012 to an average 60% in 2012-2017. Perhaps more impressive is the average past 5-year
percentage of ethnically UR majors matriculating to PhD or MD/PhD programs exceeds the
percentage of non-UR by 11%. NIH-funded MARC Scholars expanded the model into Biology and
Physics in 2014 solely for ethnically UR students. To date, 15 ethnically UR MARC Scholars have
been accepted, 100% of MARC Scholars (15 of the 15 MARC Scholars) graduated with a BS degree
(Biology, Chemistry, and/or Physics), and 93% (14 of the 15) of MARC Scholar graduates have
matriculated to PhD or MD-PhD programs. (These MARC results were updated from the 2018
competitive renewal submission)
The proposed expanded MARC Scholars seeks to further expand the current MARC Scholars
Program to also support financially disadvantaged UR students pursuing biomedical research
careers. The proposed expanded program will continue to encompass the four major components
of the model programs with several additions tailored specifically to UWF MARC Scholars. MARC
Scholars will provide the following: 1) academic and social integration via the a 2-year research
experience (on and off campus) and STEM Living Learning Community; 2) rigorous academic
preparation via Writing, Critical Thinking and Professional Development workshops and seminar
series tailored specifically for STEM and biomedical topics, a STEM Writing course, an RCR
Course, and research experience both at UWF and R-1 institutions; 3) a support system
implemented through MARC Scholars, “intrusive advising,” and regulated mentoring and
advising for both academic coursework, research, and MARC Scholars; and 4) preparation for
MARC Scholars, matriculation to graduate school, and ultimately to a research career through
individual development plans, application materials preparation, and resume building
workshops. These resources are currently available only through NIH-funding of MARC Scholars
specifically for high-achieving UR junior and senior students pursuing biomedical degrees at
UWF and long-term research careers.

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10168728
- **Project number:** 3T34GM110517-07S1
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF WEST FLORIDA
- **Principal Investigator:** Peter J. Cavnar
- **Activity code:** T34 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $85,917
- **Award type:** 3
- **Project period:** 2014-06-01 → 2024-05-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10168728

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10168728, Expanding a Model Program Which Has Increased the Number of Underrepresented Students in Biomedical-RelevantGraduate Programs (3T34GM110517-07S1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-28 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10168728. Licensed CC0.

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