1 / 9

Georgetown University Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience (IPN)

Georgetown University Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience (IPN). First year: Introduction to discipline and department. Critical thinking and questioning Coursework, including Neuroscience Survey Lab rotations Coursework should require analysis/thinking rather the regurgitation

jaden
Download Presentation

Georgetown University Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience (IPN)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Georgetown University Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience (IPN)

  2. First year: Introduction to discipline and department • Critical thinking and questioning • Coursework, including Neuroscience Survey • Lab rotations • Coursework should require analysis/thinking rather the regurgitation • 1st year IPN Core course: modules that cover breadth of neuroscience, team taught by experts in each discipline • Seminars, summer Neurofest, social events, and rotations help to incorporate students into the community

  3. Introduction to the research enterprise • Students complete 3 laboratory rotations in the first year (starts July 1). • Students present a short seminar on each rotation project to the IPN community. • Students write a mini-grant proposal and conduct a mock NIH study section with full reviews, including assigning priority scores.

  4. Significant Transition • Annual “Neurolunch” seminar presentation • Once per year, each student, starting in the 2nd year, presents to the entire membership. • May include data from pilot studies, failed experiments, recently submitted/published papers, ideas for new directions. • Serves multiple purposes • Developing/sharpening presentation skills • Explaining/ defending research to broad audience • Receiving feedback and constructive criticism • Self-assessment of progress

  5. Significant Transition (cont’d) • Comprehensive Exam: 2 components • 1) Written exam: cumulative final for the “core course” • Taken at the end of the first year (NEW). • Choice of 4/6 questions on didactic material. • Choice of 2/4 questions requiring analysis of papers from the literature. • Closed book/in-class format • 2) Oral Exam: preparation for dissertation research • Taken in the second year • Student examined for 1-2 hours by 3 faculty and the proposed mentor • Exam focuses on topic identified by student, typically in the area of the proposed thesis • Certifies that student has knowledge base and analytical skills to initiate independent research

  6. Dissertation and defense • Student and mentor confer on dissertation topic. • Mentor and committee provide guidance in selecting focused, hypothesis-driven research questions. • Student typically writes pre-doctoral fellowship proposal. • Student and mentor work closely; consultation with committee varies. • When are you finished? When your advisor and committee say so . . . • Oral defense: public presentation (1 hour) followed by closed examination by committee.

  7. Other features(Commonalities ?) • Teaching opportunities (optional) • Howard Hughes Summer Institute • For “gifted” rising sophmores in the biology department. • IPN students teach one or two lectures each in a minicourse (can get course credit for teaching). • Focus is on creating interactive, experimental learning. • Disorders and Diseases of the Brain • Team taught course for undergraduates • Completely organized and taught by doctoral students from the IPN (can get course credit for teaching). • Students typically teach one or two lectures in their area of interest.

  8. Innovation • IPN students escort and run tour station activities for an annual Brain Awareness Week visit : • for a group of 50 7th grade students from a DC public school. • Interactions with visiting seminar series speakers: • join the first and second year for a ‘journal club’ discussion of one of the speakers recent papers • have lunch with thesis students in their area of research.

  9. Novel Idea • Alternative formats (in place of traditional comprehensive exam) to mark the completion of coursework and transition to thesis research • Teaching a course • Oral exam only • Presentation • Grant proposal

More Related