TY - JOUR
T1 - An international consensus on effective, inclusive, and career-spanning short-format training in the life sciences and beyond
AU - Williams, Jason J.
AU - Tractenberg, Rochelle E.
AU - Batut, Bérénice
AU - Becker, Erin A.
AU - Brown, Anne M.
AU - Burke, Melissa L.
AU - Busby, Ben
AU - Cooch, Nisha K.
AU - Dillman, Allissa A.
AU - Donovan, Samuel S.
AU - Doyle, Maria A.
AU - van Gelder, Celia W.G.
AU - Hall, Christina R.
AU - Hertweck, Kate L.
AU - Jordan, Kari L.
AU - Jungck, John R.
AU - Latour, Ainsley R.
AU - Lindvall, Jessica M.
AU - Lloret-Llinares, Marta
AU - McDowell, Gary S.
AU - Morris, Rana
AU - Mourad, Teresa
AU - Nisselle, Amy
AU - Ordóñez, Patricia
AU - Paladin, Lisanna
AU - Palagi, Patricia M.
AU - Sukhai, Mahadeo A.
AU - Teal, Tracy K.
AU - Woodley, Louise
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Williams et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - Science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medicine (STEMM) fields change rapidly and are increasingly interdisciplinary. Commonly, STEMM practitioners use short-format training (SFT) such as workshops and short courses for upskilling and reskilling, but unaddressed challenges limit SFT’s effectiveness and inclusiveness. Education researchers, students in SFT courses, and organizations have called for research and strategies that can strengthen SFT in terms of effectiveness, inclusiveness, and accessibility across multiple dimensions. This paper describes the project that resulted in a consensus set of 14 actionable recommendations to systematically strengthen SFT. A diverse international group of 30 experts in education, accessibility, and life sciences came together from 10 countries to develop recommendations that can help strengthen SFT globally. Participants, including representation from some of the largest life science training programs globally, assembled findings in the educational sciences and encompassed the experiences of several of the largest life science SFT programs. The 14 recommendations were derived through a Delphi method, where consensus was achieved in real time as the group completed a series of meetings and tasks designed to elicit specific recommendations. Recommendations cover the breadth of SFT contexts and stakeholder groups and include actions for instructors (e.g., make equity and inclusion an ethical obligation), programs (e.g., centralize infrastructure for assessment and evaluation), as well as organizations and funders (e.g., professionalize training SFT instructors; deploy SFT to counter inequity). Recommendations are aligned with a purpose-built framework—“The Bicycle Principles”—that prioritizes evidenced-based teaching, inclusiveness, and equity, as well as the ability to scale, share, and sustain SFT. We also describe how the Bicycle Principles and recommendations are consistent with educational change theories and can overcome systemic barriers to delivering consistently effective, inclusive, and career-spanning SFT.
AB - Science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medicine (STEMM) fields change rapidly and are increasingly interdisciplinary. Commonly, STEMM practitioners use short-format training (SFT) such as workshops and short courses for upskilling and reskilling, but unaddressed challenges limit SFT’s effectiveness and inclusiveness. Education researchers, students in SFT courses, and organizations have called for research and strategies that can strengthen SFT in terms of effectiveness, inclusiveness, and accessibility across multiple dimensions. This paper describes the project that resulted in a consensus set of 14 actionable recommendations to systematically strengthen SFT. A diverse international group of 30 experts in education, accessibility, and life sciences came together from 10 countries to develop recommendations that can help strengthen SFT globally. Participants, including representation from some of the largest life science training programs globally, assembled findings in the educational sciences and encompassed the experiences of several of the largest life science SFT programs. The 14 recommendations were derived through a Delphi method, where consensus was achieved in real time as the group completed a series of meetings and tasks designed to elicit specific recommendations. Recommendations cover the breadth of SFT contexts and stakeholder groups and include actions for instructors (e.g., make equity and inclusion an ethical obligation), programs (e.g., centralize infrastructure for assessment and evaluation), as well as organizations and funders (e.g., professionalize training SFT instructors; deploy SFT to counter inequity). Recommendations are aligned with a purpose-built framework—“The Bicycle Principles”—that prioritizes evidenced-based teaching, inclusiveness, and equity, as well as the ability to scale, share, and sustain SFT. We also describe how the Bicycle Principles and recommendations are consistent with educational change theories and can overcome systemic barriers to delivering consistently effective, inclusive, and career-spanning SFT.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85176443959&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0293879
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0293879
M3 - Article
C2 - 37943810
AN - SCOPUS:85176443959
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 18
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
IS - 11 October
M1 - e0293879
ER -