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AU
PSM
in Review
PSM
at American University has been described as "science plus." Here's
what the "plus" means:
Creating
a cohort group
(with others sharing membership in the class): Just prior to the
start of classes, PSM participants, students, Director, Coordinator
and Faculty meet for dinner. Students receive cohort email addresses
and access to Blackboard, software which permits members of a group
to share documents and ideas.
All students are encouraged to sign up on MentorNet.net to “meet”
a mentor with whom questions and answers may be exchanged.
PSMers
are also introduced to two sources of information they will need
as graduate students: a reference librarian and a Career Center
representative. The AU
Library has a rich collection of both paper and online resources
and is part of the Washington
Research Libraries Consortium (WRLC), through which additional
resources are available. The AU
Career Center offers an array of programs, from critiquing resumes
and cover letters to speaking practice to job fairs.
Interacting with the working world
A PSM
education includes exposure to professionals in the working world.
One such opportunity is provided by the Bio/It
Coalition whose monthly meetings attract scientists and IT professionals.
Students,
faculty, and professionals from PSM's Advisory
Council hugely enjoyed a Wisdom Dinner where
students dined in 2004 at a leisurely pace and presented their
questions to working professionals.
When science conferences are to be held in the DC area, the PSM Coordinator facilitates opportunities for PSM students who are encouraged to volunteer in exchange for free attendance at some of the sessions.
A speaker series brought practitioners to campus. A variety of subjects was
addressed and time provided for interaction between students and speakers:
- Gabriele Mclaughlin, Innovation Architect at Xerox Global Services, spoke about personal management. She called upon the members of her audience to manage themselves and their careers lest someone else do it for them. She particularly urged students to become bloggers as a way to build a resume on the spot and to collect a note of recognition for a particular job well done, or a good job may be forgotten.
- Gil
Miller, Chief Technology Officer at Mitretek,
spoke on "Large, Complex Systems: It's Not Just About the Technology
Anymore." Mitretek is a fascinating company in that it
deals with multiple subjects, environment, energy, high tech,
etc. and it's nonprofit. Miller spoke extensively about non-technological
issues and how they impact the design, evolution, and behavior
of large complex systems.
- The third speaker also arrived from Mitretek: Bob Clerman, VP Corporate
Mission Initiatives. He too embodied the goal of becoming multidisciplinary and spoke about the "The Multidisciplinary Leader: Jack of All Trades, Master of What?"
- The final speakers focused on environmental issues. Mel Kollander and David
Madge, both of the Temple Univ. Institute for Survey Research, spoke on
how pollutant exposure can now be monitored with field studies, rather than
distant stationary devices used in the past.
Specific professional skills learning opportunities in the subjects of writing
and leading were also part of the year's work.
It was a year of building, building cohorts, a new program, and an exciting
innovation!
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