- Attendance of group meetings:
From the commencement of your project, you will attend weekly meetings with your supervisor and other students in which you will have the opportunity to learn and discuss the subject area, and to discuss the design of your research project. You may also have the opportunity to attend lab meetings with the supervisor’s other group members.
- Journal club:
Within weekly group meetings, you will be expected to present and critically evaluate a research publication relevant to your project area. You will discuss the methodology and findings with your peers.
- Attendance of School of Life Science Seminars:
Throughout the module you will attend the fortnightly School of Life Sciences seminar series. These seminars will broaden your scientific knowledge and creativity through exposure to new research topics, cutting-edge methods, project design, and presentation methods. You will be expected to write abstracts (250 words) based upon four of the seminars you have attended, upon which you will receive formative feedback to develop your scientific writing skills.
- Attendance of employability event:
You will attend an employability event in which you will learn more about career development and opportunities from Biomedical Scientists working in the region. You will also have the opportunity to gain greater insight into the work performed within clinical laboratories from current practitioners, such as through attending virtual meetings with Biomedical Scientists and/or discussions with Band 4 Associate Practitioners currently studying on our apprenticeship degree programmes.
- Grant proposal:
Once assigned to a supervisor, you will perform a literature review of a topic relevant to Biomedical Science and use this to inform the design of your independent research project that will enable you to address a question or problem you have identified. You will have the opportunity to discuss your ideas and the literature you have read with your supervisor. You will then prepare a 2,000-word grant proposal that explains the problem, how you will seek to address it, and why this is important to do.
- Performance of independent research:
You will undertake 15 weeks of laboratory-based research to obtain high-quality data. You will be expected to spend approximately 1.5 days (10 hours) per week in the laboratory and in meetings with your supervisor at this time.
- Poster presentation:
You will present your work in progress to your peers through the design of a poster. You will be expected to provide a short talk (5-10 minutes) next to your poster and to answer questions on your work.
- Project report:
You will write a 6,000-word report in scientific paper format to present the background to your project, the data you have obtained, and a critical evaluation of your findings in the context of the literature. It is essential that you are diligent in your reading, laboratory work, recording of your results, data analysis, and preparation of your report.