{"title":"大学研究:管理方面和本科生的未来","authors":"R. Valentin, Pavel Ileana Alexandra","doi":"10.5549/IJSR.1.3.68-69","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Research was introduced in universities more than a hundred years ago, around the same time the scientific method of research grew into what it is now [1,2]. The University of Columbia created its first centre where teaching, research and patient care were combined in 1928 [3] whilst The University of Cambridge started doing research only after 1945 [4]. An important point to mention here is Rockefeller University, which, since its creation in 1901, has been involved in biomedical research [5]. The introduction of research to universities was meant to bring together two important aspects of medical education: learning and discovering. We observe that this allows students to learn what was discovered first hand, assuring an up-to-date curriculum; as well as to learn how to discover. Yesterday’s students are today’s scientists and there is no better point at which to start being interested in research as those young years in which some of the most important characteristics of the human being are: curiosity, motivation to achieve and the ability to work. Undergraduates also are unlikely to not be disconcerted by the lack of significant results or the inability to be at the forefront of the research team. Introducing research into universities seems to have been highly successful. We cannot even imagine, at the moment, how it would have been if professors didn’t do research. We have also grown to expect our teachers to be the best in their area of interest and who else would we want to be the creators of tomorrow’s medicine, if not the best of the best? An important aspect of university research is represented by the funds required for it to be done. This leads us to the administrative aspects of research, which can be taken care of by economists employed by the university, so as to leave researchers free to do their job. A significant role is played by the dean of the university who represents the person best suited to act as a liaison between the medical professionals and the other persons implicated in research, such as biologists, biochemists, research assistants, bio-statisticians and others. As such, a dean must devote a good amount of time to pursue grant opportunities, assuring a healthy relationship between the numerous people involved in the various projects of the university and the investors (pharmaceutical companies, the government etc.). With this spectrum in mind we realize that a dean should be willing to reduce his own research and find pleasure in these administrative aspects. However, a good dean ought to be an experienced researcher himself, as this will allow him to see both facets of the problem: the medical one, as well as the financial and economical one [6]. An important point, which is not to be ignored, is represented by the ability of dedicated university-based researchers to spark the interest of students into research from their first undergraduate years. However, for a student researcher there is one important requirement: a mentor. The lack of one can be a real problem, due to the shortage of time that already exists, as teachers have to educate, practice and do research [7,8]. Several solutions have been found to this problem. One of them is represented by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants directed towards these faculty members who work with five to ten students in a real research program and, after one year of the program implementation, the results are presented at various conferences; with both parties involved gaining in the process [9]. The best union between research and teaching can be found in programs which are innovative through the main subjects of their curricula. Biomedical informatics falls exactly into this category. It focuses both on newer aspects of medicine, such as the path of drugs from molecules to bedside treatment and the new areas of genomics, as well as on the improvement of the educational program. This is done through both internal and external peer review, asking the opinion of both students and postgraduates and through self-assessment reports [7]. Several such programs can be found in the Czech Republic [10], the United States of America [11,12], Australia [11] and China [13]. Numerous countries have low research budgets, distributed between several select academic centers and hospitals. This makes it harder for researchers in smaller universities, who face geographic isolation, to do meaningful research and share their results. A solution to this problem was found through the use of novel technologies like teleconferencing which allows for the peer support needed [14, 15]. It has been done by the Western Writers Coercion Group [16]. This is an inter-institutional, interdisciplinary faculty writing support group that began in June, 2003. Meetings are held every week via teleconference, with the aim to improve the writing skills and productivity of its members and are open to both faculty members and graduate students [17]. The opinion of this author is that groups as this one, using cheap or even free teleconferencing solutions (such as Skype), could offer a solution to the above mentioned problem. At the moment, research has become so important that most countries use undergraduate research as a way to measure the quality of a university, through items like those included on the National Survey of Student Engagement, used in the United States of America [7,8,18,19]. Bucharest, Romania; A final demonstration of the extent to which research has grown in universities is the way of measuring a country’s research activity through the prestigious prizes received by","PeriodicalId":299761,"journal":{"name":"International journal of students' research","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"University research: administrative aspects and the future of undergraduates\",\"authors\":\"R. Valentin, Pavel Ileana Alexandra\",\"doi\":\"10.5549/IJSR.1.3.68-69\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Research was introduced in universities more than a hundred years ago, around the same time the scientific method of research grew into what it is now [1,2]. The University of Columbia created its first centre where teaching, research and patient care were combined in 1928 [3] whilst The University of Cambridge started doing research only after 1945 [4]. An important point to mention here is Rockefeller University, which, since its creation in 1901, has been involved in biomedical research [5]. The introduction of research to universities was meant to bring together two important aspects of medical education: learning and discovering. We observe that this allows students to learn what was discovered first hand, assuring an up-to-date curriculum; as well as to learn how to discover. Yesterday’s students are today’s scientists and there is no better point at which to start being interested in research as those young years in which some of the most important characteristics of the human being are: curiosity, motivation to achieve and the ability to work. Undergraduates also are unlikely to not be disconcerted by the lack of significant results or the inability to be at the forefront of the research team. Introducing research into universities seems to have been highly successful. We cannot even imagine, at the moment, how it would have been if professors didn’t do research. We have also grown to expect our teachers to be the best in their area of interest and who else would we want to be the creators of tomorrow’s medicine, if not the best of the best? An important aspect of university research is represented by the funds required for it to be done. This leads us to the administrative aspects of research, which can be taken care of by economists employed by the university, so as to leave researchers free to do their job. A significant role is played by the dean of the university who represents the person best suited to act as a liaison between the medical professionals and the other persons implicated in research, such as biologists, biochemists, research assistants, bio-statisticians and others. As such, a dean must devote a good amount of time to pursue grant opportunities, assuring a healthy relationship between the numerous people involved in the various projects of the university and the investors (pharmaceutical companies, the government etc.). With this spectrum in mind we realize that a dean should be willing to reduce his own research and find pleasure in these administrative aspects. However, a good dean ought to be an experienced researcher himself, as this will allow him to see both facets of the problem: the medical one, as well as the financial and economical one [6]. An important point, which is not to be ignored, is represented by the ability of dedicated university-based researchers to spark the interest of students into research from their first undergraduate years. However, for a student researcher there is one important requirement: a mentor. The lack of one can be a real problem, due to the shortage of time that already exists, as teachers have to educate, practice and do research [7,8]. Several solutions have been found to this problem. One of them is represented by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants directed towards these faculty members who work with five to ten students in a real research program and, after one year of the program implementation, the results are presented at various conferences; with both parties involved gaining in the process [9]. The best union between research and teaching can be found in programs which are innovative through the main subjects of their curricula. Biomedical informatics falls exactly into this category. It focuses both on newer aspects of medicine, such as the path of drugs from molecules to bedside treatment and the new areas of genomics, as well as on the improvement of the educational program. This is done through both internal and external peer review, asking the opinion of both students and postgraduates and through self-assessment reports [7]. Several such programs can be found in the Czech Republic [10], the United States of America [11,12], Australia [11] and China [13]. Numerous countries have low research budgets, distributed between several select academic centers and hospitals. This makes it harder for researchers in smaller universities, who face geographic isolation, to do meaningful research and share their results. A solution to this problem was found through the use of novel technologies like teleconferencing which allows for the peer support needed [14, 15]. It has been done by the Western Writers Coercion Group [16]. This is an inter-institutional, interdisciplinary faculty writing support group that began in June, 2003. Meetings are held every week via teleconference, with the aim to improve the writing skills and productivity of its members and are open to both faculty members and graduate students [17]. The opinion of this author is that groups as this one, using cheap or even free teleconferencing solutions (such as Skype), could offer a solution to the above mentioned problem. At the moment, research has become so important that most countries use undergraduate research as a way to measure the quality of a university, through items like those included on the National Survey of Student Engagement, used in the United States of America [7,8,18,19]. Bucharest, Romania; A final demonstration of the extent to which research has grown in universities is the way of measuring a country’s research activity through the prestigious prizes received by\",\"PeriodicalId\":299761,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"International journal of students' research\",\"volume\":\"11 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"1900-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"International journal of students' research\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.5549/IJSR.1.3.68-69\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International journal of students' research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5549/IJSR.1.3.68-69","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
一百多年前,研究被引入大学,大约与此同时,科学的研究方法发展成为现在的样子[1,2]。哥伦比亚大学于1928年创建了第一个集教学、研究和病人护理于一体的中心[3],而剑桥大学在1945年之后才开始做研究[4]。这里要提到的一个重点是洛克菲勒大学,自1901年创建以来,它一直从事生物医学研究[5]。把研究引入大学是为了把医学教育的两个重要方面结合起来:学习和发现。我们注意到,这可以让学生学习第一手发现的东西,确保最新的课程;以及学会如何去发现。昨天的学生是今天的科学家,在年轻的时候开始对研究感兴趣是再好不过的了,因为人类最重要的一些特征是:好奇心、取得成就的动力和工作的能力。本科生也不太可能不因缺乏重大成果或无法站在研究团队的前沿而感到不安。将研究引入大学似乎非常成功。我们现在甚至无法想象,如果教授们不做研究,会是什么样子。我们也逐渐期望我们的老师在他们感兴趣的领域是最好的,如果不是最好的,我们还希望谁成为明天医学的创造者?大学研究的一个重要方面是研究所需的资金。这就引出了研究的管理方面,这可以由大学雇佣的经济学家来处理,这样研究人员就可以自由地做他们的工作。大学院长发挥着重要作用,他是最适合作为医学专业人员与其他参与研究的人员(如生物学家、生物化学家、研究助理、生物统计学家等)之间的联络人的人。因此,院长必须投入大量的时间来寻求资助机会,确保参与大学各种项目的众多人员与投资者(制药公司、政府等)之间建立健康的关系。考虑到这个范围,我们意识到院长应该愿意减少自己的研究,在这些管理方面找到乐趣。然而,一个好的院长自己应该是一个有经验的研究者,因为这将使他看到问题的两个方面:医学方面,以及金融和经济方面[6]。不可忽视的一点是,大学里的研究人员有能力激发学生从本科一年级就开始研究的兴趣。然而,对于一个学生研究者来说,有一个重要的要求:一个导师。由于教师必须进行教学、实践和研究,时间的短缺可能是一个真正的问题[7,8]。对于这个问题已经找到了几种解决办法。其中之一是由美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)授予这些教员,这些教员在一个真正的研究项目中与5到10名学生一起工作,在项目实施一年后,结果在各种会议上发表;双方都在这个过程中获益[9]。研究和教学之间最好的结合可以在通过课程的主要主题进行创新的项目中找到。生物医学信息学正好属于这一类。它既关注医学的新方面,如药物从分子到床边治疗的路径和基因组学的新领域,也关注教育计划的改进。这是通过内部和外部同行评审,询问学生和研究生的意见,并通过自我评估报告[7]来完成的。捷克共和国[10]、美国[11,12]、澳大利亚[11]和中国[13]都有这样的项目。许多国家的研究预算都很低,分布在几个精选的学术中心和医院之间。这使得面临地理隔离的小型大学的研究人员更难进行有意义的研究并分享他们的成果。这个问题的解决方案是通过使用新的技术,如电话会议,它允许所需的同伴支持[14,15]。西方作家强制小组已经做过了[16]。这是一个跨机构、跨学科的教师写作支持小组,成立于2003年6月。每周通过电话会议举行会议,旨在提高其成员的写作技巧和生产力,并向教职员工和研究生开放[17]。 这个作者的观点是,像这样的团体,使用便宜甚至免费的电话会议解决方案(如Skype),可以提供一个解决上述问题的方案。目前,研究已经变得如此重要,以至于大多数国家都将本科生研究作为衡量大学质量的一种方式,通过美国使用的“全国学生参与调查”(National Survey of Student Engagement)中的项目[7,8,18,19]。布加勒斯特,罗马尼亚;衡量一个国家的研究活动的最后一种方法是通过大学获得的著名奖项来衡量一个国家的研究活动
University research: administrative aspects and the future of undergraduates
Research was introduced in universities more than a hundred years ago, around the same time the scientific method of research grew into what it is now [1,2]. The University of Columbia created its first centre where teaching, research and patient care were combined in 1928 [3] whilst The University of Cambridge started doing research only after 1945 [4]. An important point to mention here is Rockefeller University, which, since its creation in 1901, has been involved in biomedical research [5]. The introduction of research to universities was meant to bring together two important aspects of medical education: learning and discovering. We observe that this allows students to learn what was discovered first hand, assuring an up-to-date curriculum; as well as to learn how to discover. Yesterday’s students are today’s scientists and there is no better point at which to start being interested in research as those young years in which some of the most important characteristics of the human being are: curiosity, motivation to achieve and the ability to work. Undergraduates also are unlikely to not be disconcerted by the lack of significant results or the inability to be at the forefront of the research team. Introducing research into universities seems to have been highly successful. We cannot even imagine, at the moment, how it would have been if professors didn’t do research. We have also grown to expect our teachers to be the best in their area of interest and who else would we want to be the creators of tomorrow’s medicine, if not the best of the best? An important aspect of university research is represented by the funds required for it to be done. This leads us to the administrative aspects of research, which can be taken care of by economists employed by the university, so as to leave researchers free to do their job. A significant role is played by the dean of the university who represents the person best suited to act as a liaison between the medical professionals and the other persons implicated in research, such as biologists, biochemists, research assistants, bio-statisticians and others. As such, a dean must devote a good amount of time to pursue grant opportunities, assuring a healthy relationship between the numerous people involved in the various projects of the university and the investors (pharmaceutical companies, the government etc.). With this spectrum in mind we realize that a dean should be willing to reduce his own research and find pleasure in these administrative aspects. However, a good dean ought to be an experienced researcher himself, as this will allow him to see both facets of the problem: the medical one, as well as the financial and economical one [6]. An important point, which is not to be ignored, is represented by the ability of dedicated university-based researchers to spark the interest of students into research from their first undergraduate years. However, for a student researcher there is one important requirement: a mentor. The lack of one can be a real problem, due to the shortage of time that already exists, as teachers have to educate, practice and do research [7,8]. Several solutions have been found to this problem. One of them is represented by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants directed towards these faculty members who work with five to ten students in a real research program and, after one year of the program implementation, the results are presented at various conferences; with both parties involved gaining in the process [9]. The best union between research and teaching can be found in programs which are innovative through the main subjects of their curricula. Biomedical informatics falls exactly into this category. It focuses both on newer aspects of medicine, such as the path of drugs from molecules to bedside treatment and the new areas of genomics, as well as on the improvement of the educational program. This is done through both internal and external peer review, asking the opinion of both students and postgraduates and through self-assessment reports [7]. Several such programs can be found in the Czech Republic [10], the United States of America [11,12], Australia [11] and China [13]. Numerous countries have low research budgets, distributed between several select academic centers and hospitals. This makes it harder for researchers in smaller universities, who face geographic isolation, to do meaningful research and share their results. A solution to this problem was found through the use of novel technologies like teleconferencing which allows for the peer support needed [14, 15]. It has been done by the Western Writers Coercion Group [16]. This is an inter-institutional, interdisciplinary faculty writing support group that began in June, 2003. Meetings are held every week via teleconference, with the aim to improve the writing skills and productivity of its members and are open to both faculty members and graduate students [17]. The opinion of this author is that groups as this one, using cheap or even free teleconferencing solutions (such as Skype), could offer a solution to the above mentioned problem. At the moment, research has become so important that most countries use undergraduate research as a way to measure the quality of a university, through items like those included on the National Survey of Student Engagement, used in the United States of America [7,8,18,19]. Bucharest, Romania; A final demonstration of the extent to which research has grown in universities is the way of measuring a country’s research activity through the prestigious prizes received by