Presentation Transcript
Slide1: An Institutional Approach to Student Diversity:
A Centralized Organization Structure which Retains Local Responsibility
Richard McGee, Ph.D.
Associate Dean for Student Affairs, Mayo Graduate School
Director, Office of Minority Student Affairs, Mayo Clinic
Challenges faced in 1991: Challenges faced in 1991 Mayo Clinic not known as a graduate training program among minority or majority students
No undergraduate school in Rochester
Mayo Clinic not on the radar screen for minority students or faculty advisors
Rochester was a small, homogeneous city
Faculty and staff had little experience interacting with traditional underrepresented groups
Minority enrollment close to zero
The Context - Mayo Clinic Rochester: The Context - Mayo Clinic Rochester Location - Rochester, Minnesota
Population 68,000 (now 86,0000) - otherwise rural
Mayo Graduate School ~ 120 PhD students (integrated core curriculum with 7 PhD fields)
Mayo Medical School - 128 MD students (34/year)
MD/PhD program ~ 40 students (6/year)
School of Health-Related Sciences ~ 300 students
Research postdocs - 350-400
Graduate School of Medicine ~ 900 clinical residents
About 130 primary research faculty
Rochester is Rapidly Changing!: Rochester is Rapidly Changing! Since 1990 Rochester has grown from 68,000 to 86,000
Minority population has grown from ~6% to 13.7%
Public school minority students increased from 8.9% to 18.7%
22.1% minority students K-5
56 different first languages
Organizational Structure for Education at Mayo Clinic: Organizational Structure for Education at Mayo Clinic Accredited PhD, MD and MS degree-granting authority
Governing Body is the Education Committee - Includes Director for Education (~Provost), Deans of each school, other faculty and administrators
Each School governed by a Dean and a school Education Committee
Minority Student Affairs Began in 1991 Structure/Design: Minority Student Affairs Began in 1991 Structure/Design Central Office of Minority Student Affairs - Virtual
Coordinates activities across all four Mayo schools
Primary focus on developing a pool of science-oriented students interested in research or clinical medicine
Attendance at all major minority student meetings and relationships with minority-serving schools
Series of developmental, non-degree programs to bring Mayo Clinic onto the radar screen of minority students
Aggressive elevation of visibility (marketing)
Minority Student Affairs Began in 1991 Structure/Design: Minority Student Affairs Began in 1991 Structure/Design Each School retains responsibility for sustaining an effort to recruit and promote success of underrepresented minority students
No special programs for enrolled students - philosophy of meeting needs of all students with flexibility in curricula if needed and wherever possible
Education leadership clear about the value and importance of diversity, and financial support for the Office and programs
Faculty buy-in good but not universal
Minority Student Programs: Minority Student Programs SURF program (70-100 students) usually has 25-30% minority students
Mayo Minority Scholars program - 2-year expanded SURF experience focused on 'Faculty Development'
Several summer programs for minority medical students to increase visibility and overall diversity
Philosophy that overall diversity among students, residents and postdocs helps the graduate school
Mayo Clinic Initiative for Minority Student DevelopmentTraining in Patient-Oriented and Translational Research: Mayo Clinic Initiative for Minority Student Development Training in Patient-Oriented and Translational Research Funded since 1996 by NIGMS Minority Biomedical Research Support (MBRS-IMSD) program
Currently funded at about $570,000/year
Co-Directed by R. McGee, PhD and G. Poland, MD
Mission is to guide student development toward basic and clinical research careers - and recruitment to Mayo!
Hypothesis - some minority students more likely to persist toward research careers if they see the value of research
Also trying to develop model for early identification and motivation of clinical investigators
IMSD Components: IMSD Components Summer research for minority undergraduates (SURF) and medical students - key weekly group meeting
Postbaccalaureate Research Assistantships - whole new model to increase minority student persistence toward research careers - about 10 total/year
Small number of pre-doc positions
Fellowships (1 or 2 years) for medical students to complete Certificate or Masters in Clinical Research - 2-4/year
Joint MD/PhD program with the University of Puerto Rico, School of Medicine - 1 with hopes for more
Postbaccalaureate Research Program(MARC-PREP now available): Postbaccalaureate Research Program (MARC-PREP now available) For underrepresented minority students and others committed to minority health research issues - at least 10/year
1 or 2 years of research before PhD, MD/PhD or MD programs
Paid as 75% Laboratory Technician ($21,000 annual salary)
Eligible for medical insurance and other employee benefits
Core Curriculum plus options for other graduate courses
- Clinical Research Protocol Development (lab research option)- 2 credits
- Biostatistics in Clinical Research - 2 credits
- Responsible Conduct of Research - 1 credit
- Clinical Epidemiology - 1 credit (optional)
For details see the poster - effective but plenty of challenges
So has it worked?: So has it worked? Graduate School averaging about 12-15% underrepresented minorities but highly variable from year to year
Medical school averaging about 15%
MD/PhD - highly variable since so small
Clinical residencies about 8-10%
Faculty supportive and open to student needs
Very high fraction of students succeed
Other outcomes and benefits: Other outcomes and benefits Mayo Graduate School has become much more visible among minority students and their advisors
Providing students for T32 training grants in Molecular Neuroscience, Tumor Biology, Immunology