# Biomedical Research Training for Minority Honors Students

> **NIH NIH T34** · BROOKLYN COLLEGE · 2020 · $83,509

## Abstract

Project Summary
This proposal describes and will evaluate a new training supplement to Brooklyn College’s Minority Access to
Research Careers (MARC) Program, which supports the development of the academic, personal, and
professional skills of UR students prior to entry to doctoral programs in the biomedical and behavioral
sciences. It thus addresses our national need for increased diversity and inclusion in STEM. Although our
program has been successful in preparing students to enter and complete PhD degrees in prestigious
graduate programs, we are aware that there are additional training opportunities we need to offer our MARC
Fellows to ready them for success at the doctoral level. Specifically, this project aims to address the computing
skills gap between women and underrepresented minorities and their male majority counterparts as coding
skills become increasingly necessary for successful biomedical research. We will also shore up students’
understanding of basic statistical methods and research design, both directly connected with the validity and
application of biomedical research results. Concerns about our program’s content were confirmed by polling
recent MARC Fellows currently enrolled in doctoral programs, who emphasized the need for training in general
computational tools for biomedical research applications as well as statistical analysis and research design,
preparation that is not always done well in the typical content of undergraduate biomedically-related majors.
The goal of our proposal is to use evidence-based pedagogical methods to develop and test a series of Guided
Team Projects, on-line modules that are problem-based and require collaborations within small teams of
MARC Fellows, organized in a scaffolded manner to become more complex and realistic as participants’ skills
increase. MARC Fellows will learn to how to use and apply computational methods in their own research as
well as mastering the basics of elementary and inferential statistics and research design in the biomedical
sciences using a range of coding tools and specific biomedical examples. The proposed interventions are
based on sound theory and research on active, contextualized learning and employs innovative methods that
the program staff has tested and found effective with UR students. Using what we have learned about on-line
teaching with the abrupt onset of campus closings due to the Covid-19 pandemic, all proposed activities will be
on-line. In the first iteration, the modules will be synchronous and taught in real time by doctoral-level program
staff, while the presentations are preserved by video-capture for use in future asynchronous sessions. To
continue the modules with only modest additional funding in the future, after testing and evaluation, facilitation
will transition to a sustainable model of trained peer facilitators. The Guided Team Project method can be
easily adapted for use with other content and diversity-focused programs in the future.

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10192574
- **Project number:** 3T34GM008078-31S1
- **Recipient organization:** BROOKLYN COLLEGE
- **Principal Investigator:** LOUISE HAINLINE
- **Activity code:** T34 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $83,509
- **Award type:** 3
- **Project period:** 1984-07-01 → 2023-05-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10192574

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10192574, Biomedical Research Training for Minority Honors Students (3T34GM008078-31S1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10192574. Licensed CC0.

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