Davidson Pamela L, Maccalla Nicole M G, Afifi Abdelmonem A, Guerrero Lourdes, Nakazono Terry T, Zhong Shujin, Wallace Steven P
1Department of Health Policy and Management, Fielding School of Public Health, and the UCLA Clinical and Translational Science Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
2Department of Education, Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
BMC Proc. 2017 Dec 4;11(Suppl 12):15. doi: 10.1186/s12919-017-0082-9. eCollection 2017.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) funds training programs to increase the numbers and skills of scientists who obtain NIH research grants, but few programs have been rigorously evaluated. The sizeable recent NIH investment in developing programs to increase the diversity of the NIH-funded workforce, implemented through the Diversity Program Consortium (DPC), is unusual in that it also funds a Consortium-wide evaluation plan, which spans the activities of the 10 BUilding Infrastructure Leading to Diversity (BUILD) awardees and the National Research Mentoring Network (NRMN). The purpose of this article is to describe the evaluation design and innovations of the BUILD Program on students, faculty, and institutions of the 10 primarily undergraduate BUILD sites.
Our approach to this multi-methods quasi-experimental longitudinal evaluation emphasizes stakeholder participation and collaboration. The evaluation plan specifies the major evaluation questions and key short- to long-term outcome measures (or Hallmarks of Success). The Coordination and Evaluation Center (CEC) embarked on a comprehensive evaluation strategy by developing a set of logic models that incorporate the Hallmarks of Success and other outcomes that were collaboratively identified by the DPC. Data were collected from each BUILD site through national surveys from the Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA (HERI), annual followup surveys that align with the HERI instruments, site visits and case studies, program encounter data ("tracker" data), and institutional data. The analytic approach involves comparing changes in Hallmarks (key outcomes) within institutions for biomedical students who participated versus those who did not participate in the BUILD program at each institution, as well as between institution patterns of biomedical students at the BUILD sites, and matched institutions that were not BUILD grantees. Case studies provide insights into the institutionalization of these new programs and help to explain the processes that lead to the observed outcomes.
Ultimately, the results of the consortium-wide evaluation will be used to inform national policy in higher education and will provide relevant examples of institutional and educational programmatic changes required to diversify the biomedical workforce in the USA.
美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)资助培训项目,以增加获得NIH研究资助的科学家数量并提升其技能,但很少有项目经过严格评估。NIH近期投入大量资金,通过多样性项目联盟(DPC)开展项目,以增加获得NIH资助的劳动力的多样性,这一举措不同寻常之处在于,它还资助了一项全联盟范围的评估计划,该计划涵盖了10个建设基础设施促进多样性(BUILD)奖获得者和国家研究指导网络(NRMN)的活动。本文旨在描述BUILD项目对10个主要为本科院校的BUILD站点的学生、教师和机构的评估设计与创新。
我们对这种多方法准实验纵向评估的方法强调利益相关者的参与和合作。评估计划明确了主要评估问题和关键的短期至长期成果指标(或成功标志)。协调与评估中心(CEC)通过开发一套逻辑模型,采用了全面的评估策略,这些逻辑模型纳入了成功标志以及DPC共同确定的其他成果。通过加州大学洛杉矶分校高等教育研究所(HERI)的全国性调查、与HERI工具一致的年度跟踪调查、实地考察和案例研究、项目接触数据(“跟踪器”数据)以及机构数据,从每个BUILD站点收集数据。分析方法包括比较各机构中参与BUILD项目的生物医学专业学生与未参与该项目的学生在成功标志(关键成果)方面的变化,以及BUILD站点的生物医学专业学生与未获得BUILD资助的匹配机构之间的机构模式差异。案例研究为这些新项目的制度化提供了见解,并有助于解释导致观察到的结果的过程。
最终,全联盟范围评估的结果将用于为国家高等教育政策提供参考,并将提供美国生物医学劳动力多样化所需的机构和教育项目变革的相关实例。