Improving Undergraduate Life Science Education for the Biosciences Workforce: Overcoming the Disconnect between Educators and Industry

Author:

Thompson Christopher1,Sanchez Joseph2,Smith Michael3,Costello Judy4,Madabushi Amrita5,Schuh-Nuhfer Natasha6,Miranda Rommel7,Gaines Brian8,Kennedy Kathleen5,Tangrea Michael8,Rivers David1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Loyola University Maryland, Baltimore, MD 21210

2. AstraZeneca, Inc., Frederick, MD 21703

3. Biotechnology Program, Montgomery College, Germantown, MD 20876

4. BioHealth Innovation, Inc., Rockville, MD 20850

5. Life Sciences Institute, Baltimore City Community College, Baltimore, MD 21215

6. Teacher Enrichment Program, Center for Excellence in Education, McLean, VA 22102

7. Department of Physics, Astronomy, and Geosciences, Towson University, Towson, MD 21252

8. **MDBio Foundation, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD 20878; ††Alvin and Lois Lapidus Cancer Institute, Sinai Hospital, Baltimore, MD 21215

Abstract

The BioHealth Capital Region (Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, DC; BHCR) is flush with colleges and universities training students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics disciplines and has one of the most highly educated workforces in the United States. However, current educational approaches and business recruitment tactics are not drawing sufficient talent to sustain the bioscience workforce pipeline. Surveys conducted by the Mid-Atlantic Biology Research and Career Network identified a disconnect between stakeholders who are key to educating, training, and hiring college and university graduates, resulting in several impediments to workforce development in the BHCR: 1) students are underinformed or unaware of bioscience opportunities before entering college and remain so at graduation; 2) students are not job ready at the time of graduation; 3) students are mentored to pursue education beyond what is needed and are therefore overqualified (by degree) for most of the available jobs in the region; 4) undergraduate programs generally lack any focus on workforce development; and 5) few industry–academic partnerships with undergraduate institutions exist in the region. The reality is that these issues are neither surprising nor restricted to the BHCR. Recommendations are presented to facilitate improvement in the preparation of graduates for today’s bioscience industries throughout the United States.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Education

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