Clarion, a Boston-based life sciences strategy consulting firm, will hold its 2020 leadership training program for current advanced degree candidates on Wednesday, May 26th - Thursday, May 27th, 2021. Applications are due by Sunday, April 4th, 2021 at 11:59PM, ET. The PROPEL program is open to the following candidates: - PhD candidates (completing program by Fall 2022) - Post-doctoral researchers - MD candidates (completing program by Fall 2022) - MD residents and fellows Candidates must have expertise in disciplines related to life sciences, medicine, or other...
Virtual Event - See Agenda or Register for Details
The course is organized by postdoc career development administrators from The Torrey Pines Training Consortium (TPTC), which members include Salk Institute for Biological Studies, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute (SBP), Scripps Research and UC San Diego.
The course is designed to equip postdocs and junior faculty in the biomedical, physical and life sciences with the professional competencies to lead innovative and productive research programs. However, graduate students and research staff may also find this training informative and may attend. ...
Gain leadership skills as a scientist. We will discuss understanding yourself and how you relate to others. Good communication skills. Developing yourself as a leader without power. This session is specifically for scientists at the undergraduate level.
Have you recently selected a dissertation advisor and started work toward your thesis? Have you started thinking about which faculty might serve you best on your DAC? In this workshop, early career graduate students will consider the roles that their potential DAC members will play in their personal and professional development and identify personal priority areas to cover when recruiting DAC members. Participants will also be given the opportunity to ask questions about DAC membership of a panel of experienced faculty members, followed by small group discussions with senior...
Within the span of a week, things have changed quickly, unexpectedly, and uncomfortably. Over 250 colleges and universities have gone virtual overnight. What now? What if this disorienting season of quarantine is not simply isolating and inconvenient? What if it can provide a newfound space for reflection to ask some of life’s biggest questions and reorient ourselves around the truth to be discovered?