Post on 31-Mar-2015
Professor Anne Lingford-Hughes
Professor of Addiction BiologyConsultant Psychiatrist, CNWL NHS
Foundation Trust.MRC Clinical Fellowships Panel
My career path.• At school, interested in biology not sure about being a
doctor.• Applied to medical school – 5 rejections
– (Finally) Got in to medical school the following year• Still ambivalent about being a doctor, so took up offer a
PhD, then post-doc• Then after 5yrs returned to clinical training• Awarded Wellcome Clinical Research Training Fellowship
– 2nd time • Clinical training completed• Senior Lecturer, Reader at University of Bristol• Professor at Imperial College London.
Be clear why you are interested in research or why you want to do it
Freedom to pursue my curiosity
Specialist Training
Integrated Academic Training Path (England Only)
Academic Position
CCT
CSLA (112)
Further specialty/sub-specialty
training
Senior Clinical Fellowship / Chair
(94)
HEFCE
* There are also 14 NIHR fellowships and 1 MRC bioinformatics training fellowship at the more junior initial post-doctoral level
Academic Clinical
Fellowship (281)
NIHR NIHRClinical
Lectureship (207)
1 2 3 4 5Clinical Training
Following on from Academic
Foundation Year
Research Training
Fellowship (355)
Clinician Scientist
Fellowship*(142)
Schemes.• Clinical research training fellowship: twice a yr
– provides up to three years' support for clinically qualified, active professionals to undertake specialised or further research training in the bio-medical sciences within the UK for a PhD. A further year’s funding is available for patient orientated clinical research training fellowships.
• Clinician scientist fellowship: once a year – is a post-doctoral clinical fellowship providing up to four years'
support. There is also a patient-oriented version of the scheme that provides up to five years' support, which is intended for research which requires up to 40 per cent of the fellow's time to be spent in clinical work.
• Senior Clinical fellowship: once a year– The MRC’s senior clinical fellowships aim to develop outstanding
medically and other clinically qualified professionals such that they become research leaders. Is for 5 years
Aims and objectives of the research training programme
1. to provide (mental) health research leaders of the future.2. to provide researchers with the armamentarium of key skills necessary to address the ambitions set out in the MRC-led review of (mental) health research.3. to ensure integration of high quality academic training with professional development.4. to build capacity in (mental) health research. 5. to increase the capacity of the research community of the future to deliver new treatments for (mental) health conditions and preventive strategies for (mental) illness.
• What’s my likelihood of getting one?
The InstitutionThe Project
You
Process: selection• Application checked & validated by organisation• First assessment of your application.
– CV is important.• Likely that will be some sifting so that manageable number is sent out for
review.• Application sent to external reviewers
– Min 2 reviews needed can be 5-6• A ‘bad’ review does not mean you will not get through• A ‘good’ review with no meat to it does not always help you
– review by panel members• After discussion select ~20 applicants for interview• Interview by panel of ~ 8 board members• Rank applications, discussion about candidates scored on the ‘borderline’
of funding.
Clinician Scientist Fellowship
Senior Clinical Fellowship
Approx Years post PhD
52 awards (+2x10 Clin Pharm/Path)
/ ~130
10-12 / 50
3 /15
Clinical Research Training Fellowships
Clinical Training /
CL
Clinical Training /
ACF
Clinical Training /
SCL
Overview of schemes 1
MRC Research Fellowships for Clinicians
-3 -2
-1
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
MRC PhD studentship portfolio & grants profiles are aligned
Number of Live MRC PhD Awards - J anuary 2011
462, 24%
283, 15%
168, 9%
120, 6%
111, 6%
782, 40% Doctoral Training Grant
MRC Intramural Students
Studentships in Capacity Development areas*
Clinical Research Training Fellowships
MRC Centre Studentships
Industrial CASE Studentships
Planning When to start?
• It is never too early.– 2-3 years
• Your CV– Have you got the appropriate/any publications?
• Takes time
– Have you experience in the techniques you want £1million for?– Have you been to a conference, met with key people in the
field?• ‘I do not know the candidate, but heard them present at a
conference/read their latest interesting/important paper’
• If in doubt speak to someone– Funding Organisation– University– Current award holder
Planning your application.• Which organisation funds your area of interest?
– Look at strategic aims– Look to see what they are funding– Tailor your application specifically to those of the funding organisation
• ‘Not much gets funded in my area’– why?– therefore is there a need to fund YOU since you will build your career and others and
therefore this help to build up this important discipline– rare disease?
• At your institution - who has been awarded one?– Can you see successful applications?– Can you see unsuccessful applications?
Preparing application
• Start early– Read the guidance– Application submission dates are published well in
advance– How much notice does your university office want?
• Finance, approvals etc
– Does your Head of Department know YOU and about the application?
– What other people need to sign off or provide letters of support for the application?
Your research
Not your supervisors..... Or their ‘rehashed’ project grant – ‘I’ not ‘we’
Particularly at intermediate fellowships – you need show independence
What do I look for?
• The candidate – Achievement and potential of the candidate
• The project– Does it make sense, do I understand why doing it?– Feasibility and timeliness of project– Suitability of location
• Is it interesting / important?
The project.
• Think about a project which is cutting edge, novel, will address important biological questions and will fit into a niche.
• Is it what you want to do?• Can you enthuse others about it?• Why is it interesting / important to study?• Why is this the best place to do your research.
The application• First draft of the application.
– Does it make sense scientifically?
• Hypothesis?• Experimental plan including
analysis and statistics– Be specific
• What are your research aims? • Why is each one important? • What classes of statistical
model will you be working with (and why is that a good idea).
• Preliminary data?
• Does host lab have appropriate techniques, data available? – should you also spend time
somewhere else ?
• Is there an appropriate collaborator/group?
• Can you do the project in the fellowship period– Is it too ambitious– What happens if expt A leads to
expt B and expt A does not ‘work’– Is everything in place?
If you can't write down in a couple of sentences why a research aim is important, maybe it isn't...
If you can’t write down a hypothesis, then how do you know your experiment is designed correctly?
Advice, next iteration.• Who is going to look at this?
– Your supervisor– Who else?
• Research Support Services• People who have held fellowships• People who have sat on grants panels• Senior academics• ‘someone who does not like you/ is very tough’
– Does it make sense to your best friend / mother / ‘man in the street’?
– If any of these people raise issues or criticise then you need to understand why
• You may think they have missed the point but so could a reviewer…….
Other bits.
• Why do you want an academic career?• Career aims• Who will benefit?• Justification of costs etc
Interview
• Be so good they can’t ignore you. (Steve Martin)
Interview.• Who is on the panel
– What is their expertise, who is likely to interview you?– Methods / statistics
• ‘Full’ room– Panel and staff from the organisation
• Give short presentation– Are you good at presenting?– Can you sell ice to the eskimos ie can you convince the panel – remember
most will not know anything about your area of interest – to fund you
• Generally 2 people lead your interview one after each other, though others can ask questions after them.– Lasts ~20mins and goes fast– Body language– How to deal with difficult questions
• Set up as many practice panel interviews as you can.
And if at first you don’t succeed………
• Getting a fellowship is hard because there are a lot of good, smart researchers out there applying for them
• Why? • Feedback
– About project– About you– About supervisor/institution
• The process will have helped you develop your ideas about your research
• Continue to work on your CV, techniques etc
Best of luck.