ASBMB calls for changes to NIH fellowship review
The ͵ÅÄ͵¿ú and ͵ÅÄ͵¿ú Biology submitted five policy recommendations last week to the National Institutes of Health Center for Scientific Review advocating for changes to the National Research Service Award Fellowship application and review process to improve equity and reduce bias:
- Allow applicants to explain the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on their careers.
- Allow victims of harassment to explain disruptions to their careers.
- Incorporate implicit bias training for reviewers.
- Reduce emphasis on undergraduate coursework.
- Reduce the emphasis on the principal investigator’s training track record.
of Miami University, who leads the ASBMB Public Affairs Advisory Committee, said the recommendations were written with this in mind: “A community of researchers with greater diversity of voices, backgrounds and experiences produces research that is more innovative and more impactful.”
He emphasized: “Increased equity in fellowship applications review will improve diversity of awardees and reap positive impacts on the careers of a wider range of trainees and long-term positive impacts for the scientific research enterprise.”
The NIH CSR assesses an applicant’s potential to contribute significantly to biomedical research based on five main criteria:
- Applicant
- Sponsor(s), collaborators and consultants
- Research training plan
- Training potential
- Institutional environment and commitment to training
While past success can be indicative of future success, this approach disadvantages applicants with massive potential who have faced significant challenges outside their control and/or were not exposed to the same opportunities. A recently voiced concerns that the current evaluation criteria make it difficult to assess an applicant’s potential, disadvantage smaller schools with less resources than larger institutions, and cause junior faculty to feel unlikely to succeed in sponsoring an applicant.
On Jan. 6, Bruce Reed, deputy director of the CSR, authored a requesting feedback from the scientific community on how to improve the fellowship review process.
“In answering, think about the characteristics of strong applicants, sponsors, and training programs and the challenge of identifying the applications that have the greatest potential to develop independent, productive research scientists,” he wrote.
ASBMB PAAC member of the University of Pittsburgh, said he suspects “most faculty mentors would agree that the top trainees are those who fearlessly attack difficult problems and, through a combination of curiosity, creative insights and struggle, end up succeeding.”
However, Brodsky said, it’s tough to gauge that in an application.
“I always appreciate the letter or mentor’s statement that discusses how a tough barrier was encountered and overcome as a result of these traits,” he said. “Instead, too many written analyses of a candidate focus only on the accomplishments and offer the impression that results came with ease.”
Other societies, such as the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, have shared similar concerns and have touted the benefits of shifting away from a dyadic mentorship structure in support of mentorship networks.
In for CSR, FASEB wrote: “(T)he National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report ‘’ highlights the benefits of nondyadic mentoring structures. The current emphasis on the sponsor does not create an expectation that trainees sustain a meaningful mentor network.”
Read the ASBMB’s full comments here.
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