Keywords
MD/PhD training programs - postdoctoral fellows - mentoring - good scientific practice
- career planning
Schlüsselwörter
MD/PhD Ausbildungs-programme - Nachwuchs-wissenschaftler - Betreuung - gute wissenschaftliche
Praxis - Karriereplanung
Introduction
Working with Dr. Stefano Barco, Mainz/Zurich, and closely interacting with postdoctoral
fellows during my current stay at Boston Children's Hospital have stimulated me to
think more deeply about the education of the new generation of scientists. Apart from
instructions to improve practical and mental skills, including research planning and
data analysis, what kind of training should young scientists receive?
To start with, we should ask the question “what are the essential characteristics
of a true scientist?” A brief answer might be: “They are individuals with a driving
force of curiosity about what makes ‘things’ work”. A more thorough and specific characterization
would include that scientists must be endowed with patience, intelligence, endurance,
enthusiasm and a keen and permanent desire to learn and to understand.
The mentees
Basic facts of ‘nature’ and life sciences are taught to young students during their
academic education at universities with graduate programs. But how to become a successful
or even outstanding scientist? If the saying is true that great scientists are born,
not made, then every successful scientific career would be programmed by the individual
genes. However, becoming an outstanding scientist is something that one can best learn
from those who are making active contributions to science. Therefore, choosing the
‘right’ mentor within the ‘right’ environment is a crucial step that requires careful
consideration. “Train with the best” is certainly an essential advice to students
who are planning a scientific career. However, it is not that easy to follow and realize
this advice. True role models of mentors are rare, and training of graduate, MD, or
PhD students and postdoctoral fellows can be an exhausting and stressful burden to
academic teachers. Remarkably, there is a significant consistency among established
scientists that those who later became the most successful and prominent representatives
in their field had in fact outstanding mentors during postdoctoral training.
Interaction of mentees and mentors
Interaction of mentees and mentors
Advanced training is a decisive stage of life of aspiring MD and PhD researchers or
postdoctoral fellows. During this period, a pivotal turning point for their future
career is taking place. Therefore, the young scientists should be eager to receive
the best possible training. In this context, it is important to bear in mind that
their activity in the laboratory is not primarily to augment the research program
of the principle investigator but to increase their experience and to elaborate their
skills. Therefore, special training programs are required to assure that at least
some of the fellows are enabled to become outstanding scientists of the next generation.
To bring this very much to the point: postdoctoral fellows should not be regarded
as technicians who are working longer hours for less compensation.
Choosing the appropriate settings and targets for research is one of the most relevant
abilities for aspiring researchers to learn. Therefore, the mentor should discuss
alternative projects and approaches with the mentee who should have the option to
delineate a proposed project. Students and fellows should be discouraged from working
on high-risk, ‘winner-take-all’ experiments and projects. The mentor should inspire
the mentee but, vice versa, the mentee must not be ‘seduced’ by the mentor's enthusiasm
or ambition. Challenge and promotion as well as criticism and crediting by the mentor
should be well-balanced.
Networking with fellows and established investigators from other laboratories, improving
communication and presentation skills, and receiving advices or support for career
planning are also relevant issues of training programs.
Perspectives for mentees
Given the fact that not all trainees of even the best graduate and postdoctoral programs
succeed in science, it remains crucial to fellows to decide how they plan to spend
their life. In fact, not everyone is suited for an academic research career. If this
happens to be the case, it is better to find out about it sooner rather than later.
The competition among trained postdocs who have completed their fellowship is enormously
high. At Harvard, the rate of those who are accepted subsequently in an academic position
is about 15%. Thus, having completed postdoctoral training, the majority of fellows
leaves laboratory science for careers in business, pharmaceutical industry, or research
outside of universities. However, this choice should not be considered a failure either
of the trainee or the program. More importantly, the mentees' experience allows them
to make the choice that is more appropriate to them.
The impact of mentors on mentees
The impact of mentors on mentees
From a psychological perspective, it is nowadays generally accepted that most of our
individual personality traits are firmly established in early childhood. In view of
this, it may be interesting to observe the extent to which a scientific personality
reflects the environment provided during academic education, specifically during postdoctoral
training.
If the young scientist's mentor has a generous personality in sharing insights, tools
and credit for discoveries, so will be the mentee. If the mentor is highly self-critical
in evaluating his own scientific activities, the student will rather adopt the same
approach and virtue. If the mentor has the personality of a pedantic bean counter,
the young trainee may assume the same practice or become a meticulous nitpicker at
best. And finally, a scientist who cuts corners, who is more concerned about personal
glorification than about progress in science is at risk to generate the same kind
of progeny among the fellows. These examples may be a little bit overdrawn. However,
they illustrate the mentors' high responsibility towards their mentees.
The mentors' responsibility towards mentees
The mentors' responsibility towards mentees
As academic teachers and scientists, we should be aware of the particular responsibility
to MD and/or PhD students. Specifically, we should serve as good role models. This
high demand to ourselves provides a profound basis of additional standards, so that
the new generation of scientists will have the same virtues that we admire in science
and research. These virtues include an open mind, as opposed to unthinking acceptance
of authority or knowledge of what has already been learned and is thought to be true,
permanent inquisitiveness, and, above all, honesty. These virtues will remain mandatory
to unravel secrets of nature in health and disease.
To train talented young scientists and to prepare them today for leadership positions
in the world of science of tomorrow is an essential and privileged task of academic
mentors.