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| Funder | UKRI Inn.Scholar |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Oxford |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | May 12, 2021 |
| End Date | Dec 19, 2023 |
| Duration | 951 days |
| Number of Grantees | 6 |
| Roles | Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator; Award Holder |
| Data Source | UKRI Gateway to Research |
| Grant ID | MR/V03927X/1 |
There is a growing need for specialised expertise in data science to support the work of researchers and healthcare professionals including clinical scientists, specialist registrars or consultants in medical microbiology in the UK, as the nature of their work changes and needs to incorporate big data, sequencing and genomics.
While curricula in the UK teach some genomics and data analysis and interpretation to these audiences, most training is left to advanced professional courses through postgraduate programmes and other independent training providers.
This proposal is motivated by the great demand in training for data science skills for genomics related to infectious pathogens, and a growing need for skilled trainers. Our goal is to enhance training capacity across the UK, able to provide education in Data Science for Pathogen Genomics and Surveillance for healthcare professionals working in the field of clinical microbiology.
We plan to achieve this by 1) implementing a series of Train-the-trainer (Tt) courses 2) offering mentorship and encouraging networking and 3) building and publishing freely available training resources. While regular training courses provide individual participants with skills on how to analyse and interpret their own data, TtT approaches apply the concept of forward teaching and equip professionals who are already knowledgeable in pathogen genomics data science with the skills needed to train others.
A key focus will be training participants in teaching and facilitation skills. We will also develop a project-based learning approach, where participants will be mentored to build their own training materials. This will be followed by in-person sessions, where they will demonstrate how they will deliver training to others and will receive feedback on their teaching methods.
Participants will be supported to deliver training in their research or work environments, through mentorship and networking.
By the end of the project, we will publish freely available, ready-to-use training resources for use by trainers in data science for pathogen genomics in the UK.
This proposal brings together the expertise of the Centre for Genomic Pathogen Surveillance (CGPS) and the Wellcome Genome Campus Advanced Courses and Scientific Conferences (ACSC), who have previously collaborated in running several courses, including "Train-the-trainer Capacity Building for Genomic Surveillance of AMR in LMICs" (2019, Wellcome Genome Campus).
CGPS works to translate the analysis of pathogen spread and AMR research into public health benefit, by the generation of open-access tools for the interpretation of local sequence data in a global context. CGPS has experience in all aspects required to build capacity in genomic AMR surveillance, drawn from running an NIHR Global Health Research Unit, in collaboration with laboratories from Colombia, India, Nigeria and The Philippines.
ACSC have over 30-years experience in delivery of training courses for researchers and healthcare professionals. Key courses include Genomics of Clinical Microbiology and Genomics for Clinical Virology, which are primarily targeted at genomics researchers and healthcare professionals including clinical scientists, specialist registrars or consultants in medical microbiology in the UK.
Online Future Learn MOOC courses developed by ACSC (https://www.futurelearn.com/search?q=bacterial+genomes) attract tens of thousands of participants every year. To date, ~13% of the online participants are from the UK (10,7k from the UK out of 79k total).
In summary, this project will develop a framework for new training resources tailored to professionals in clinical microbiology fields, enabling use of data science tools to enhance healthcare in the UK. Emphasising on mentorship and network building, the programme will provide a sustainable, standardised and scalable training model both for TtT and for direct training.
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute; University of Oxford
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