The ongoing underrepresentation of minorities in the sciences limits the effectiveness of our nation's biomedical research enterprise and constrains innovation and productivity in the scientific workforce. To overcome these limitations, the overall goal of our proposed BUILD project is to transform teaching, training, and research at the partnering institutions by creating an intellectually safe and affirming environment in which minority students can thrive and become scientists. Our approach is grounded in the robust psychosocial literature on stereotype threat that explains why underrepresented students underperform in and exit science, and the emerging literature on the use of affirmations to mitigate it. Consequently, we propose a comprehensive approach to sustainable reform of science teaching and research training that addresses institutional deficits that trigger stereotype threat, and affirms the value of underrepresented investigators in the biomedical research workforce. In this effort we capitalize on the institutional history, strategic goals, and inherent diversity of SF State, a predominantly undergraduate institution that has. attained national prominence for scientific teaching, research training, and preparation of underrepresented students for biomedically-related careers. Our research partner, the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), will contribute to this effort by providing BUILD scholars with unique educational experiences, and collaborating on the development of training modules to support underrepresented students and faculty in the biomedical sciences. Additionally, UCSF will provide SF State minority faculty with research training and professional development opportunities. Thus completion of activities described in the Research Enrichment Core (REC) will enable young investigators (i.e., the BUILD scholars) and minority faculty at SF State to fully integrate into the biomedical research workforce and improve its practice for all members of our society.

Public Health Relevance

The benefits of increasing the diversity of biomedical researchers include greater scientific innovation and a more skilled workforce focused on the research questions of crucial significance for underserved communities. SF BUILD will increase the diversity of biomedical researchers through improved education, training, and mentoring practices via research opportunities focused on health disparities.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Linked Education Project (RL5)
Project #
5RL5GM118984-03
Application #
9103912
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Thornton, Pamela L
Project Start
2014-09-26
Project End
2019-06-30
Budget Start
2016-07-01
Budget End
2017-06-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
San Francisco State University
Department
Biology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
942514985
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94132
Zeiger, Andrew M; White, Marquitta J; Eng, Celeste et al. (2018) Genetic Determinants of Telomere Length in African American Youth. Sci Rep 8:13265
Sun, Xiaobo; Gao, Jingjing; Jin, Peng et al. (2018) Optimized distributed systems achieve significant performance improvement on sorted merging of massive VCF files. Gigascience 7:
Mak, Angel C Y; White, Marquitta J; Eckalbar, Walter L et al. (2018) Whole-Genome Sequencing of Pharmacogenetic Drug Response in Racially Diverse Children with Asthma. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 197:1552-1564
Estrada, Mica; Eroy-Reveles, Alegra; Matsui, John (2018) The Influence of Affirming Kindness and Community on Broadening Participation in STEM Career Pathways. Soc Issues Policy Rev 12:258-297
Estrada, Mica; Eroy-Reveles, Alegra; Ben-Zeev, Avi et al. (2017) Enabling full representation in science: the San Francisco BUILD project's agents of change affirm science skills, belonging and community. BMC Proc 11:25
Chitewere, Tendai; Shim, Janet K; Barker, Judith C et al. (2017) How Neighborhoods Influence Health: Lessons to be learned from the application of political ecology. Health Place 45:117-123
Ramirez, Julio; Elmofty, May; Castillo, Esperanza et al. (2017) Evaluation of cortisol and telomere length measurements in ethnically diverse women with breast cancer using culturally sensitive methods. J Community Genet 8:75-86
Ardila-Mantilla, Federico (2016) Todos Cuentan: Cultivating Diversity in Combinatorics. Not Am Math Soc 63:1164-1170
Akom, Antwi; Shah, Aekta; Nakai, Aaron et al. (2016) Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) 2.0: how technological innovation and digital organizing sparked a food revolution in East Oakland. Int J Qual Stud Educ 29:1287-1307
Trujillo, Gloriana; Aguinaldo, Pauline G; Anderson, Chelsie et al. (2015) Near-peer STEM Mentoring Offers Unexpected Benefits for Mentors from Traditionally Underrepresented Backgrounds. Perspect Undergrad Res Mentor 4: