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Experiences of Penn’s Neuroscience Graduate Group Rita Balice-Gordon Chair
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Biomedical Graduate Studies is University-Wide School of Medicine School of Arts & Sciences School of Veterinary Medicine School of Dental Medicine School of Engineering & Applied Sciences Schoolof Nursing Children's Hospital of Philadelphia & other affiliated institutions
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NGG is part of the BGS umbrella Biomedical Graduate Studies Neuro- science Pharm. Biochem. & Mol. Bio- physics Epidem. & Bio- stats. Gen- omics & Comp. Biology Immun- ology Cell and Molecular Biology Cancer Biology Cell Biology & Physiol- ogy Devel., Stem Cell & Regen. Biology Gene Therapy & Vaccines Genetics & Gene Regul. Micro., Virol. & Parasit.
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Recruiting Ph.D. students BGS sets recruitment dates with Graduate Group Chairs Each Graduate Group has the same budget for recruitment Each Group organizes its recruiting days schedule, activities Each Group evaluates its candidates and assigns a numerical score Each Group presents its candidates to the BGS Admissions Committee, and the best students are admitted essentially blind to Graduate Group
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Accepting Ph.D. students BGS sends formal acceptance letters Each Group handles its own follow-on correspondence (phone, email) Students contact the Graduate Group with their decision BGS and/or TGs support Ph.D. students for the first 21 months, The Thesis Advisor and/or TG support students until thesis defense
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NGG Curriculum: Past Fall 4 cu NGG Core I Cell, Mol. NGG Core II Biophysics Elective 1 or 2 credit Lab RotationNGG Journal Club + Seminars Spring 4 cu NGG Core III Systems Elective 1 or 2 credit Lab RotationNGG Journal Club + Seminars
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BGS implemented required Core courses in 2002 Strong feeling that Cell Biology, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology were foundational to all biomedical scientific disciplines Strong feeling that student preparation was uneven Lengthy and vigorous discussion of optimal number of required courses for all BGS students Result was implementation of 1 required Core course: BIOM 600
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Issues that arose for the NGG NGG courses were highly rated by students, had been fine-tuned over a 15+ year period after extensive review by NGG faculty NGG courses are small (20+ students), discussion based, participation essential BIOM 600 was large, lecture only (120+ students), more undergrad than grad style, high level Not neuro- focused Some of our students in computational and cognitive neuroscience didn’t have the background to succeed in BIOM 600
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NGG Negotiated a Compromise All NGG students meet with our Academic Review Committee at the beginning of each semester during the first 2 years The ARC reviews each student’s portfolio Decides with student input whether BIOM 600 is appropriate If not, students take upper level ugrad / grad Biology course We added a neuro-centric “recitation” section to BIOM 600, in which NGG students discuss papers related to lecture topics over a pizza lunch
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Strengths and weaknesses of NGG’s current curriculum BGS requirement is met with little difficulty NGG student needs are met – our focus is “couture” rather than “off the rack” education. NGG students don’t have a formal course in Cell / Mol. Biology of Neurons, etc. Some of our students struggle with BIOM 600, in particular those with psychology, physics, engineering and math backgrounds; if students receive a C, an additional seminar style course is taken.
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New BGS Core course initiative: 2010 - ? BGS feels strongly that organismal physiology is foundation to all biomedical scientific disciplines BGS would like to standardize training in statistics The impact on NGG’s curriculum and time to Ph.D. would be substantial We favor course development in these areas, and others, as electives
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