Notices

Johns Hopkins Nurse Educator Academy
This new academy is designed for nurses who seek to master
teaching skills. Participants will learn contemporary
techniques and strategies, become familiar with the next
generation of teaching technologies, improve presentation
skills and test education theories.
Sponsored by the Institute for Johns Hopkins Nursing,
the sessions will be held Jan. 16 to 21 at the Mt.
Washington Conference Center. The program may be taken for
academic graduate credit or continuing education credit.
For more information or to register, go to
www.ijhn.jhmi.edu
e-mail
ijhn@son.jhmi.edu or call 443-287-4745.

Johns Hopkins Patient Safety Academy
Building Nursing Capacity for Safety Initiatives is a
program for nurses who want to become safety champions and
lead interdisciplinary safety programs. The new academy
will prepare participants to identify and prioritize
organizational safety issues; use a diverse set of safety
measures and tools provided in the clinician toolbox; plan,
implement and evaluate a safety improvement plan at the
unit or organizational level; develop expertise as a safety
champion and change agent; and make the case for safety by
analyzing and presenting data in a compelling way.
To register or inquire about this program, go to
www.ijhn.jhmi.edu
e-mail
ijhn@son.jhmi.edu or call 443-287-4745.

NIH Clinical Research Scholar Awards
These awards will provide multiyear funding to four junior
faculty and five postdoctoral trainees in a
multidisciplinary program for research training to begin
July 2005.
Scholars will receive rigorous, mentored clinical
research training and/or dedicated time and resources for
mentored clinical research and will learn how to
investigate problems in their field from a
multidisciplinary perspective. Emphasis can be on clinical
problems at many interfaces: bench to bedside, bedside to
clinical practice or clinical practice to populations.
Support for a stipend, a master's or doctoral degree and
performance of a research study is included. Applications
are due Feb. 1.
Detailed program announcements and application
instructions can be found at
www.jhsph.edu/gtpci.

Summer Research Fellowship Program
The 2005 Howard Hughes Summer Research Fellowship Program
invites applications from freshmen, sophomores and juniors
in the schools of Arts and Sciences and Engineering. The
selected students will receive a $3,000 stipend to conduct
laboratory research during the summer with a Johns Hopkins
faculty member of their choice.
Students should submit applications and supporting
materials-a letter of support from the lab sponsor, letter
of recommendation from a faculty member, transcript,
statement of purpose and proposal-to Gary Ostrander,
associate provost for research, 237 Mergenthaler Hall, by 4
p.m. on Feb. 14. Incomplete or late applications will not
be considered. Applications and additional information
are available in the Office of the Dean, 237 Mergenthaler,
and at
www.jhu.edu/as1/2005HowardHughesHopkinsInfo.html.

Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Program
The Woodrow Wilson Undergraduate Research Fellowship
Program is designed for Arts & Sciences students who are
interested in conducting their own research under the
guidance of a faculty mentor.
While the majority of Wilson research fellows are
accepted to the program as incoming freshmen, current
first-year students are welcome to apply for sophomore
fellowship standing by contacting the program coordinator
directly by e-mail at sdavid@jhu.edu. Students not accepted
into the program as freshmen may reapply during their first
year at Hopkins
Sophomore research fellows receive up to $7,500 over
three years. The funds will be spent on research costs,
which may include travel, equipment and use of archives or
laboratories. Students create and pursue research projects
with help from their faculty mentors. As seniors, Wilson
research fellows publicly present their work to the Hopkins
community.
GO TO DECEMBER 20,
2004
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