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Source:
Denis Medeiros, 785-532-5508, medeiros@humec.ksu.edu
News release prepared by: Keener A. Tippin II, 785-532-6415,
media@k-state.edu
Thursday,
October 12, 2006
NIH
GRANT TO K-STATE A BRIDGE TO FUTURE FOR MINORITIES IN BIOMEDICAL
SCIENCES FIELD
MANHATTAN
-- A partnership between Kansas State University and several Kansas
community colleges to increase the number of underrepresented minorities
pursuing degrees in the biomedical sciences at four-year institutions
has been renewed for another three years.
Kansas
Bridges to the Future is a research training grant funded by the
National Institutes of Health. It partners K-State with Seward County,
Dodge City, Garden City and Kansas City Kansas community colleges
and Donnelly College in Kansas City, Kan., in a grassroots effort
to identify, mentor and guide minority students with potential for
biomedical science careers.
Denis
Medeiros, head of K-State's department of human nutrition, is the
grant's principal investigator. Medeiros wrote the grant after establishing
the partnership with the five schools during the last three years.
More than 20 minority students have transferred to K-State since
the program began in 2003, with more students in the pipeline.
"We
proposed a grassroots effort beginning at the community college
level to develop biomedical career awareness, enhance the academic
preparation skills of selected Bridges' students, seek parental
involvement, and devote resources to the community colleges to allow
for sufficient academic advisement of these students," Medeiros
said. "The overall goal is to increase the number of Kansas
minority students pursuing graduate degrees in the biomedical field."
Medeiros
said the schools participating in the partnership were selected
because their enrollments reflect the diverse population in their
parts of Kansas: Seward County, Garden City and Dodge City community
colleges have high enrollments of Hispanic students, while Donnelly
College and Kansas City Kansas Community College each have a high
percentage of African-American students enrolled.
"Many
of the community colleges are the first choice of underrepresented
minorities in pursuing their higher education goals," Medeiros
said. "Many of these students are the first in their families
to go to college."
Students
identified for the Bridges program receive dual admission to the
community college and K-State, with tuition waivers. The students
attend a one-week summer institute to make them more aware of scientific
investigation and opportunities after their freshman year.
After
the second year in the program, the students will have the opportunity
to work for eight weeks at K-State in the laboratory of a scientific
investigator. Community college instructors also will be given an
opportunity to work at a K-State laboratory for an eight-week summer
period to help bridge gaps in research training and curriculum development.
All students will be prepared in a rigorous foundation of science,
chemistry and math, Medeiros said.
The students who come to K-State also take part in the Developing
Scholars Program and continue their mentoring with a professor.
Other K-State faculty involved with the project include Anita Cortez,
co-director of the Developing Scholars Program, and Farrell Webb,
associate professor of family studies and human services and associate
director of the Developing Scholars Program.
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