DISEASE PREVENTION AND CONTROL DOCTORAL SEMINAR 2005-2006    Course Number: 223.861.01

Calendar      (Note: this website calendar is the most up-to-date)

 

INTRODUCTION & ORGANIZATION (please scroll down)

 

Instructors:

Lawrence H. Moulton, Ph.D.

Office: E5519 Wolfe St Bldg  Phone: 410-955-6370

e-mail: LMOULTON@JHSPH.EDU

 

Mark C. Steinhoff, M.D.

Office: E5501 Wolfe St Bldg 410-955-1623

e-mail: MSTEINHO@JHSPH.EDU

 

Course website:   http://www.dpcp.org/doctoral/dpc06.htm




GOALS

By the end of the next two terms, students will be in a stronger position from which to prepare their research proposals. Skills will have been gained in formulating research questions, identifying and resolving design problems, and in presenting and critiquing research protocols and results in the scientific literature.

STRUCTURE

Third and Fourth Terms 2006: Primarily student critiques of published research articles, and presentations of preliminary dissertation research ideas. Focus on research question, study design used, alternative designs that could have been used, possible follow up lines of inquiry.  

Enrollment is limited to International Health DPC doctoral students.

Grading will be PASS/FAIL; one unit of academic credit will be given per term.

 

ARTICLE CRITIQUE SESSIONS

Students will be assigned as discussion leaders for each "article critique" session covering an article of the student's own choosing.  These should be published research (not review or editorial) articles that are available online at http://www.welch.jhmi.edu/eresources/ejournals.cfm .  Preferably, the article will be one that may furnish the springboard for a student's own dissertation research; perhaps it is an article that has opened a new line of enquiry, or presents research that the student hopes to extend (or refute!).  Note, it should NOT be a review article, or an editorial; it should be original research that presents new data. If you have doubts about the acceptability of an article, please see me.  Students should email a .pdf version of the selected article 10 days in advance of their scheduled presentation to lmoulton@jhsph.edu, and I'll forward it to the rest of the students.  Each session will begin with an oral presentation lasting no longer than 20 minutes, The focus may be on theoretical or methodological considerations. At least two discussion questions or problems should be specified that will be addressed in the subsequent class discussion.  Following the presentation, the discussion leader will introduce each discussion point in turn, explaining how it is related to the articles.

Slides for the presentations should be made in PowerPoint or similar presentation software.  An LCD projector will always be available.

DISSERTATION IDEA SESSIONS

In a format similar to the critique sessions, students will also make a presentation (about 20 minutes) of a potential research design that could serve as the basis for his or her dissertation.  Students will derive the most benefit for these sessions if they can send a background article, or written summary of the proposal, to me (Moulton) 10 days in advance of the presentation, which I will send to the others.


REQUIREMENTS

Regular attendance and active participation in the seminar are very important. In total, two presentations are required over the two terms.

 

 

MISCELLANEOUS

Students,
You may want to sign up for this "Immunization Newsbrief." I highly recommend it.
Regards, Don Burke

Immunization Newsbriefs is published Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays (except for holidays) by Information, Inc., of
Bethesda, MD.  A searchable archive is also available at
http://www.immunizationinfo.org/newsbriefs/search.cfm .

To SUBSCRIBE to Immunization Newsbriefs, please go to
http://www.infoinc.com/imnews2/regform.html.
 

Students,
You may want to sign up for PROMED Digest, too.  I highly recommend this one, too.
Regards, Don Burke

To subscribe to the promed-digest list, send a message to:  "majordomo@promedmail.org"
Leave the subject line blank and type "subscribe promed-digest" as the message
 

01/25/2006