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Hauptverfasser: Manyibe, Edward O., Moore, Corey L., Aref, Fariborz, Sagini, Meshack M., Zeng, Steve, Alston, Reginald J.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2017
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1154076
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author Manyibe, Edward O.
Moore, Corey L.
Aref, Fariborz
Sagini, Meshack M.
Zeng, Steve
Alston, Reginald J.
author_facet Manyibe, Edward O.
Moore, Corey L.
Aref, Fariborz
Sagini, Meshack M.
Zeng, Steve
Alston, Reginald J.
Manyibe, Edward O.
Moore, Corey L.
Aref, Fariborz
Sagini, Meshack M.
Zeng, Steve
Alston, Reginald J.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Minority-Serving Institutions and Disability, Health, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research Participation Challenges: A Review of the Literature and Policy Manyibe, Edward O. Moore, Corey L. Aref, Fariborz Sagini, Meshack M. Zeng, Steve Alston, Reginald J. Minority Group Students Disabilities Health Independent Living Rehabilitation Programs Institutional Characteristics Black Colleges Tribally Controlled Education Hispanic American Students College Students Literature Reviews Purpose: This article provided a comprehensive overview of select challenges that oftentimes prevent minority-serving institutions (MSIs) in the United States (i.e., historically Black colleges/universities, Hispanic-serving institutions, and American Indian tribal colleges/universities) from participating optimally in the federal research enterprise (i.e., National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research and National Institutes of Health). Methods: The authors completed a detailed synthesis of the available peer review and grey literature and policy on the subject matter while using the structural empowerment and critical mass models as theoretical lenses. Results: Select research infrastructure issues (i.e., restrictive administrative culture, heavy teaching and service practices, inefficient offices of sponsored programs, the lack of research seed money units, inefficient institutional review boards, and limited library resources and technology infrastructure) and limited training opportunities (i.e., postdoctoral fellowship training programs, and grant writing training) are important considerations in MSI research capacity and productivity context. Conclusions: New state-of-the-science research capacity building approaches, paradigms, and conceptual models that address individual MSI-based investigators' research skill development needs, institutional research infrastructure systems weaknesses, and federal research agency systems and policy issues need to be explored and scaled up for further efficacy testing through rigorous scientific methods.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1154076
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2017
record_format eric
spellingShingle Minority-Serving Institutions and Disability, Health, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research Participation Challenges: A Review of the Literature and Policy
Manyibe, Edward O.
Moore, Corey L.
Aref, Fariborz
Sagini, Meshack M.
Zeng, Steve
Alston, Reginald J.
Minority Group Students
Disabilities
Health
Independent Living
Rehabilitation Programs
Institutional Characteristics
Black Colleges
Tribally Controlled Education
Hispanic American Students
College Students
Literature Reviews
Minority-Serving Institutions and Disability, Health, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research Participation Challenges: A Review of the Literature and Policy Manyibe, Edward O. Moore, Corey L. Aref, Fariborz Sagini, Meshack M. Zeng, Steve Alston, Reginald J. Minority Group Students Disabilities Health Independent Living Rehabilitation Programs Institutional Characteristics Black Colleges Tribally Controlled Education Hispanic American Students College Students Literature Reviews Purpose: This article provided a comprehensive overview of select challenges that oftentimes prevent minority-serving institutions (MSIs) in the United States (i.e., historically Black colleges/universities, Hispanic-serving institutions, and American Indian tribal colleges/universities) from participating optimally in the federal research enterprise (i.e., National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research and National Institutes of Health). Methods: The authors completed a detailed synthesis of the available peer review and grey literature and policy on the subject matter while using the structural empowerment and critical mass models as theoretical lenses. Results: Select research infrastructure issues (i.e., restrictive administrative culture, heavy teaching and service practices, inefficient offices of sponsored programs, the lack of research seed money units, inefficient institutional review boards, and limited library resources and technology infrastructure) and limited training opportunities (i.e., postdoctoral fellowship training programs, and grant writing training) are important considerations in MSI research capacity and productivity context. Conclusions: New state-of-the-science research capacity building approaches, paradigms, and conceptual models that address individual MSI-based investigators' research skill development needs, institutional research infrastructure systems weaknesses, and federal research agency systems and policy issues need to be explored and scaled up for further efficacy testing through rigorous scientific methods.
title Minority-Serving Institutions and Disability, Health, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research Participation Challenges: A Review of the Literature and Policy
topic Minority Group Students
Disabilities
Health
Independent Living
Rehabilitation Programs
Institutional Characteristics
Black Colleges
Tribally Controlled Education
Hispanic American Students
College Students
Literature Reviews
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1154076