Additional Requirements
Attend and Present at weekly Pain Research Program Work-in-Progress. The UI Pain Research Program meets weekly for "Topics in Pain and Analgesia", which alternates between a traditional Journal Club format, external seminar series, and Work-in-Progress update presentations. All trainees are expected to attend and are required to present in both the journal club and Work-in-Progress sessions each semester. Presentations rotate equitably among predoctoral trainees and postdoctoral trainees, with additional associated trainees (not funded but associated with trainers' laboratories) presenting as well. Specific guidelines for presenting include:
- For journal club presentations: state why they chose the paper for presentation, provide the rationale, hypothesis and aims for the study, and discuss methodologies and results in terms of rigor and science.
- For WIP presentations: review their study rationale, present their research progress, and indicate future research plans.
Participate in Annual Pain Research Program Workshop. Our annual workshop will occur over 1 1/2 days (Friday and Saturday) typically between May and August, to enable us to augment educational opportunities that occur throughout the year. We cover different topics each year that will be determined by the Executive Committee, with input from program trainees, associated trainees, and trainers.
Attend regional, national and/or international pain meetings. Locally, trainees are expected to present their research each year at the CCOM Research Day, typically in April, and/or other local or regional research meetings. We particularly encourage participation in the annual meeting of the new US Association for the Study of Pain (US_ASP) and/or the World Congress on Pain (IASP) that occurs every other year, but students also attend the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience or a discipline-specific meeting.
NINDS T32 Program Workshop. All the trainees appointed to the grant will be required to attend one of the NINDS hosted T32 Program Workshop.
Cross-training in Clinical and Basic Science. Each trainee will be required to pick 2 of 4 potential shadowing experiences (e.g. pain medicine clinic, basic science lab, PT clinic, mental health clinic) based on their interest and training needs but must be from outside of their expertise. They will then spend at least two half-days shadowing at each. This cross-disciplinary training promotes and strengthens the translational nature of the program bringing unique experiences to each trainee.
Submit external grant application. Postdoctoral trainees are required to formulate an application for funding to a F32, K99/R00, K08, K23, or to an appropriate foundation; we encourage submission by the end of their first year or beginning of their 2nd year as a T32 trainee.
Career Advisory Committee. Each trainee will have a three-member Career Advisory Committee, which will consist of their primary mentor and two additional trainers from the program. While the representation of the Career Advisory Committee may overlap the thesis committee, it may diverge, particularly to ensure diverse representation accross disciplines, basic vs clinical research expertise, etc. The Career Advisory Committee focuses on career direction and provides the trainee an additional means of identifying career goals and objectives. The committee will meet at least annually, beginning approximately 5-6 months after appointment to the UI Pain Research
Program traineeship.
Additional opportunities:
Teaching. In the second year of T32 training, after completion of the core pain courses in year 1, trainees can serve as a teaching assistant for these pain course modules (Introduction to Pain, Pain Syndromes). This allows the trainees to begin to establish their teaching portfolio and improve their oral presentation skills. The Office of Consultation and Research in Medical Education in the CCOM may also serve as an additional resource for postdoctoral fellows who wish to develop or improve their teaching skills.
UI Scientific Editing and Research Communication Core. This core is staffed with experienced scientific editors who provide feedback on grants and manuscripts that greatly helps not only the grammar but importantly, helps students (and faculty) present data in a way that nonexperts can readily understand. Trainees are encouraged to submit their grant application(s) to the Core for feedback prior to submission to a funding agency.
Grant Writing Workshops. Postdoctoral fellows will be encouraged to attend a grant writing workshop, offered yearly, from the Office of the Vice President for Research at the University of Iowa.