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Archive for highlights – Page 8

Call for Applications: 2017 DHST Prize for Young Scholars

The International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology, Division of History of Science and Technology (IUHPST/DHST) invites submissions for the fourth DHST Prize for Young Scholars, to be presented in 2017. Initiated at the 22nd International Congress of History of Science in 2005 held in Beijing, the DHST Prize is awarded by the IUHPST/DHST every four years to up to five young historians of science and technology for outstanding doctoral dissertations, completed within last four years.

The 2017 DHST Prize does not specify distinct categories, but submissions must be on the history of science or technology in any part of the world. The Award Committee will endeavor to maintain the broadest coverage of subjects, geographical areas, chronology and civilizations (African, American, Asian, Islamic, Western and Ancient Civilisations, and others not included in the above list).

Submission deadline: August 31, 2016

Click here for more information and to apply.

Call for Applications: Foundation for Child Development Young Scholars Program

The Foundation for Child Development  FCD Young Scholars Program (YSP) supports policy and practice-relevant research that is focused on the early learning and development needs of the nation’s children who are growing up under conditions of economic insecurity and social exclusion.

To view additional eligibility criteria, research focus, timeline, for more information about the YSP and to apply, please visit the FCD Website and download the YSP Guidelines.

YSP encourages applications from scholars who are:

  • Themselves from historically disadvantaged or underrepresented groups, e.g. first-generation college graduates, and those from low-income communities.
  • Scholars who represent a variety of disciplines and methodological approaches.

Research Focus

All proposed research should focus on the ways in which the knowledge, skills, and dispositions of the early care and education workforce (ECE workforce) can support young children’s growth and development across the birth through age eight continuum.

Eligibility
Eligible researchers will have received their doctoral degrees (e.g., Ph.D., Ed.D., Psy.D., M.D., J.D., etc) within one to seven years of application submission. Ten years for physician applicants.

Application Deadline

LOIs must be submitted by June 1, 2016, 3:00 PM, New York time.  Please see the FCD Website for additional information.

Call for Applications: Data Science Institute Provost Ignition Grants

The Institute is pleased to announce a call for proposals from Columbia University faculty and research staff.  Aimed at advancing research that combines data science expertise with domain expertise, the ROADS Provost Ignition grant is intended to assist researchers who are interested in this theme to come together. We are particularly drawn to faculty teams whose proposed project will enable them to develop successful proposals for large scale grants.  We will look for applications that propose unique and novel approaches to bring scholars together to work on projects that cross traditional discipline boundaries. In essence, we are looking for methods that are not just “business as usual.”

Proposals are due May 26th. More details can be found here.

Call for Applications: Graduate Fellowship in Precision Medicine: Ethics, Politics, and Culture

Columbia University’s new working group on Precision Medicine: Ethics, Politics, and Culture is seeking graduate fellows for the 2016-2017 academic year. Graduate students from any of Columbia’s schools whose work is related to any aspect of precision medicine are invited and encouraged to apply.

Project Description:

Precision Medicine—an emerging approach for disease treatment and prevention that takes into account individual variability in genes, environment, and lifestyle for each person—raises a myriad of cultural, political, and historical questions that the humanities are uniquely positioned to address. As part of its overall Precision Medicine Initiative, Columbia is initiating a broad based exploration of questions that precision medicine raises in law, ethics, the social sciences, and the humanities, which we believe will establish the University as the center for scholarship relating to precision medicine and society. The Precision Medicine: Ethics, Politics and Culture Project will be the first of its kind to bring Columbia faculty from the humanities, social sciences, law, and medicine into dialogue with leading scholars from the United States and abroad to discuss how humanistic questions might enhance our understanding of the ethical, social, legal, and political implications of precision medicine research, and to inform humanists about evidence, evaluation, and research outcomes from serious interdisciplinary engagement with this emerging medical field.

The working group provides an excellent opportunity to engage in interdisciplinary discussion, networking, and other work related to recent developments and the future of precision medicine and society. The project is co-directed by Rachel Adams, PhD (Columbia University), and Maya Sabatello, LLB, PhD (Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons).

Fellowship Requirements:

Graduate fellows will be expected to attend all meetings (6 public events followed by working group meetings led by visiting scholars during the academic year); read circulated materials prior to the meetings and take part in conversation; assist with promotion and publicity for meetings on Columbia’s campuses; and otherwise support and facilitate the work of the group. Fellows will receive a $2,500 stipend for the year. Only Columbia graduate students are eligible. Applicants with disabilities and applicants belonging to minority groups are encouraged to apply.

To apply, please submit a one-page letter of interest, CV, and informal transcript to Liz Bowen ([email protected]) by April 22. Questions about this fellowship and the project more generally can be sent to this email as well. Successful applicants will be notified by May 31, 2016.

Call for Applications: 2016 Carl B. Boyer Memorial Prize in the History of Science

The Carl B. Boyer Memorial Prize in the History of Science may be awarded annually to the Columbia University undergraduate who writes the best essay on any topic in the history of science or mathematics as judged by a faculty committee.

Eligibility: All undergraduates in Columbia College, Barnard College, the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and the School of General Studies are eligible.

Deadline and Submission: Prize essays must be submitted by 10:00 am, Thursday, April 21, 2016

Applicants may submit their essays in PDF format, and this form, to [email protected].

Format: Prize essays should normally be no more than 12,000 words (approximately 40 pages of double-spaced typescript) in length and must be typed in standard double-spaced format, properly paginated and each page clearly marked with the candidate’s name.  Essays should contain appropriate references to original sources and a bibliography of all major works consulted.

Topics: There are no particular restrictions as to subject, period, or style.  “Science or mathematics” may be taken to include medical sciences and technology where related to scientific development.

Call for Applications: Dartmouth College Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement (ICE) Fellows Program

Housed at the campus of Dartmouth College, the Institute for Cross-­Disciplinary Engagement (ICE) promotes and facilitates lively dialogue between members of academia, public intellectuals, spiritual leaders, and the public at large in a variety of formats, from web-accessible courses and public lectures to fellowships and workshops. Through its activities, ICE aims to create a transformative bridge between the sciences and the humanities, going beyond the “two-­cultures” divide as it addresses some of the fundamental questions of our time.

ICE Fellows are scientists and humanists seeking to find time to work on projects that call for a broader cross-­disciplinary approach. They should consider the fellowship as an opportunity to seek new approaches or deepen already existing lines of inquiry. Fellows will have the opportunity to engage with faculty, scholars, and students, and will deliver a public lecture.

The length of residence may vary from two weeks to a full term, with longer terms considered based on the strength of the project and the availability of funds. ICE Fellows will be provided with attractive housing in Hanover, NH, a generous weekly stipend, a fully-­equipped office on campus, and access to Dartmouth’s libraries and facilities. Residencies will occur within the timeframe of September 2016 to June 2019.

Distinguished scholars, or those at the early stages of their careers, are invited to apply. We strongly encourage applications from diverse populations.

THE APPLICATION DEADLINE IS APRIL 15, 2016. FELLOWS WILL BE ANNOUNCED IN SPRING 2016.

Applications are accepted through Interfolio and must be received on or before April 15, 2016.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON FELLOWSHIPS VISIT: http://ICE.DARTMOUTH.EDU

DIRECT QUESTIONS TO: [email protected] or (603) 646-­1380

Call for Applications: RWJ Health Policy Research Scholars

The goal of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Policy Research Scholars is to create a large cadre of diverse doctoral students from multiple (nonclinical, research-focused) disciplines—students whose research, connections, and leadership will inform and influence policy toward a Culture of Health. Specifically, we aim to recruit doctoral students from a variety of social sciences (e.g., urban planning, health, economics, ethnography, education, social work, etc.) who are training to be researchers.

Eligibility: For the 2016 cohort, the Health Policy Research Scholars program will enroll up to 50 scholars who are interested in health policy research and from underrepresented populations and/or disadvantaged backgrounds. Examples of eligible individuals include, but are not limited to, first-generation college graduates, individuals from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, individuals from racial and ethnic groups underrepresented in doctoral programs, and individuals with disabilities. Health Policy Research Scholars will be completed concurrently with the doctoral program and is designed to enhance and enrich the doctoral program.

Please see application guidelines on the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation website for full details and to apply.

Application Deadline: April 19, 2016, 3:00 PM ET

Fellowship/Postdoc Opportunities at the Chemical Heritage Foundation

The Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF) in Philadelphia, PA (USA) is excited to announce three openings for projects in the area of the history of health, medicine, and disease within CHF’s Institute for Research.

  1. Research Fellow: Institutional Histories of Medicine and Biosciences
  2. Research Fellow: Scientists with Disabilities Oral History Project
  3. Public History Fellow:  Clinical Medicine in the 20th Century

Each position is part of a specified project with limited duration funding and needed project outcomes. All offer opportunities for work, collaboration, and training with other departments at CHF (museum, oral history, applied history, and outreach and interpretation). Applications must be sent individually for each open position as specific requirements and duties vary. All Research Fellows will join a thriving research community developing new tools for science studies through oral history and applied history and emerging research topics in materials and culture, health and disease, instrumentation, innovation and regulation, and experiences of minorities in science.

Review of applications will begin immediately in January 2016. The positions will remain open until filled.

 

1)  Research Fellow: Institutional Histories of Medicine and Biosciences

The Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF) in Philadelphia invites applications for a Research Fellow in the Institute for Research beginning immediately and lasting until June 30, 2018. The Research Fellow will be a part of a team of researchers on the Beckman Legacy Project examining the research developing out of the five Beckman Institutes established in the 1980s to foster cutting-edge, interdisciplinary, basic research located at Caltech, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Stanford, University of California, Irvine, and City of Hope. Special emphasis will be given to research that explores the recent history of the instrumentation revolution—particularly engaging with the nature of new imaging and visualization technologies, the broad development of tools and techniques in the life sciences, and the impact of funding availability on the materiality of experimental work. This work relies on documentary evidence, oral histories, and some archival materials. Candidates should have some familiarity with methodology in recent history.

Minimum Qualifications:

  • Ph.D. degree in history or a relevant social science (including familiarity with academic and applied work in science and technology policy, science studies, and/or history of science)

Desired Qualifications:

  • Ability to carry out self-motivated and self-supervised work
  • Superior writing and communication skills as evidenced by presentations at national and/or international meetings and publications in peer-reviewed journals
  • Superior research skills, including qualitative data analysis and archival research; familiarity with oral history a significant asset
  • Knowledge of and recognition in diverse fields: science studies and history of science with a special emphasis on the recent history of medicine
  • High scientific and technical literacy and aptitude in related areas of study

Location: This position can be located in either Philadelphia at CHF or in CA near the research sites.

To apply: Please send a cover letter, CV or resume, two writing samples, and contact information for two references to: [email protected]

 

2)  Research Fellow: Scientists with Disabilities Oral History Project

The Center for Oral History at the Chemical Heritage Foundation is hiring one postdoctoral fellow for a two-year limited duration position focusing on scientists with disabilities.  Our goal is twofold: to conduct life-history interviews with individuals to understand better the ways in which they have navigated built environments and research structures, and the ways in which these environments and structures have changed over the last twenty-five plus years; and to build a collection of oral histories that can serve as the basis for further historical research into the lived experiences and sociotechnical framing of disability within careers in science, medicine, technology, or engineering.  The fellow should have interviewing experience, subject-area expertise, and an interest in working with and developing current CHF holdings.

Minimum Qualifications:

  • Ph.D. degree in history or a relevant social science (including familiarity with academic and applied work in science studies, history of science, and/or disability studies)
  • Interviewing experience

Desired Qualifications:

  • Ability to carry out self-motivated and self-supervised work
  • Superior writing and communication skills as evidenced by presentations at national and/or international meetings and publications in peer-reviewed journals
  • Superior research skills, including qualitative data analysis and archival research
  • Knowledge of and recognition in diverse fields: science studies and history of science with a special emphasis on disability studies
  • High scientific and technical literacy and aptitude in related areas of study

Location: This position is located in Philadelphia at the CHF offices.

To apply: Please send a cover letter, CV or resume, two writing samples, and contact information for two references to: [email protected]

 

3) Public History Fellow:  Clinical Medicine in the 20th Century

The Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF) is actively recruiting for the limited duration (January 2016 – December 2018) position of Public History Fellow.  The Public History Fellow will work with internal teams in the museum and the Institute for Research to conceptualize a collection strategy for artifacts related to 20th-century clinical medicine. The Fellow will bring this strategy into practice through the development and implementation of exhibitions and public programs that bring these stories to wider audiences. The Public History Fellow will contribute to the conceptualization, project management, and installation of CHF exhibitions and interactives – both physical and digital; serve as the content researcher on exhibitions; use that research to create content for CHF’s multi media platforms; contribute to the maintenance and development of the permanent exhibition; and support the creation of opportunities for constituent engagement using artifact collections.

The ideal candidate would possess the following experience and qualifications.

  • Master’s degree in history of science, history, or related field.  Ph.D. strongly preferred.
  • Demonstrated interest and commitment to public history.
  • Strong knowledge of museum principles, concepts, methodologies, techniques, and procedures.
  • Demonstrated record of success in the interpretation and communication of artifacts for a variety of audiences.
  • Excellent written and oral communications skills, with the ability to successfully adapt to multiple audiences.
  • Strong attention to detail, high-level project and time management skills.
  • Proven ability to work on multiple projects simultaneously in a deadline-driven environment.

Location: This position is located in Philadelphia at the CHF offices.

To apply: Please send a cover letter, CV or resume, two writing samples intended for public audiences, and contact information for two references to: [email protected]


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