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1.
Article in English | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1385839

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: The incorporation of young researchers to universities today poses challenges and reflections. Several concepts that should be kept in mind when starting an academic career are analyzed, with an emphasis on research. Adequate postgraduate training, the type of higher education institution, contractual forms, insertion and interaction with groups, time dedicated to research, equipment available for research and research funds are concepts that are analyzed to guide young researchers in the beginning of an academic career at a university.


RESUMEN: La incorporación de jóvenes investigadores a las universidades hoy en día plantea desafíos y reflexiones. Se analizan varios conceptos que se deberían tener presentes al momento de comenzar una carrera académica, con énfasis en la investigación. La adecuada formación de posgrado, el tipo de institución de educación superior, formas contractuales, inserción e interacción con los grupos, tiempo dedicado a la investigación, equipamiento disponible para las investigaciones y fondos de investigación son conceptos que se analizan para orientar a jóvenes investigadores en el inicio de una carrera académica en una universidad.

2.
Rev. méd. Chile ; 145(12): 1569-1578, dic. 2017. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-902482

ABSTRACT

In the last 150 years, scientific research has produced extraordinary discoveries in Medicine and there is no doubt that research will continue contributing substantially in the future but there is no the same conviction regarding how to provision such capacities in medical graduates. In Chile, the Faculties of Medicine created several doctorate programs in Medical Sciences (Ph.D.) to strengthen medical research. However, the low number of physicians who apply to these programs is a caveat. These programs provide the advanced third-cycle competencies expected by students aspiring for an excellence research certification and their incorporation into academia. Universities stand out in their capacity to adapt themselves to educational needs, developing programs designed to fill specific gaps. Ph.D. programs intercalated to the medical career show that this is the correct approach. The development of specific doctorate programs for the small number of physicians interested in research and for medical students with a strong interest in research could be an innovative solution to motivate and encourage them to develop a career in clinical investigation. Using this approach, Medical Schools and Doctorate in Medical Sciences programs would jointly stimulate the training of medical scientists.


Subject(s)
Humans , Schools, Medical/standards , Universities/standards , Certification/standards , Biomedical Research/standards , Education, Medical, Graduate/standards , Physicians/trends , Research Personnel/trends , Schools, Medical/trends , Students, Medical , Time Factors , Universities/trends , Career Choice , Certification/trends , Chile , Curriculum/standards , Curriculum/trends , Biomedical Research/trends , Education, Medical, Graduate/trends
3.
Korean Journal of Medical History ; : 429-468, 2014.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-70795

ABSTRACT

This paper traces how Koreans of north area became medical doctors in colonial Korea. Most of the past research have focused only on the well-known medical doctors, or even when they discussed a great number of doctors, many research tended to only pay attention to the explicit final results of those doctors. This research, on the other hand, includes ordinary medical doctors as well as the renowed ones, and adjusts the focus to the lifetime period of their growth and activities. As a result, the misunderstanding and obscurity about the Korean medical doctors of north area during this period have been cleared. The new characteristics of the Korean medical doctors of this period have been found, along with their embodiment of historical significance. At the time, Koreans had to get through a number of qualifications in order to become doctors. First is the unique background of origin in which the family held interest in the modern education and was capable of supporting it financially. Second is the long-term status of education that the education from elementary to high school was completed without interruption. Third is the academic qualification that among various institutions of higher education, medical science was chosen as a major. Fourth is the condition of career in which as the career as a doctor had consistently continued. Thus, in oder to become a modern medical doctor, Koreans had to properly complete these multiple steps of process. The group of Korean medical doctors in north area, which was formed after getting through these series of process, possessed a number of characteristics. Firstly, as the upper-middle classes constituted the majority of medical doctors in Korea, the societal status of doctors rose and the foundation for the career as a doctor to be persisted as the family occupation settled. Secondly, the research career and academic degree became the principal method to escape from the discrimination and hierarchy existed between doctors. A PhD degree, especially, was the significant mark for clearly displaying the abilities and outcomes of the doctors. Lastly, the research career, education experience, clinical training and such that the Korean doctors of the period had built up were weak at the time, however, they were important sources for the future medical science development. Indeed, after Liberation, the rapid settlement and growth of Korea's medical science field were largely beholden to thus. Therefore, the growth of the Koreans as doctors did not cease in colonial Korea, but instead continued onto the history of future generations. In spite of the fact that the Korean doctors's growth and activities were greatly limited under the forceful policy of colonial domination of the era, the efforts the Korean doctors had put were not in vain. Likewise, if we do not fix our attention at the dominating policy and system, but rather put together the actors' correspondence and struggles of the period, then the Korean doctors will be a part of the living history. Hereby, the clue to the paradox between the suppression of medical science in colonial Korea and its leap after Liberation can be untied.


Subject(s)
Colonialism , Education, Medical/history , Faculty/history , History, 20th Century , Korea , Physicians , Schools, Medical/history
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