SoM/GSE Fellowship Pilot Program Wraps up First Year

March 25, 2024

SoM/GSE Fellow Albaraa Basfar, PhD presents a WIP at Stanford SPIRE in early March. Photo by Ana Mezynski.

Every public-school teacher has passed a rigorous certification process. At Stanford Graduate School of Education (GSE), they take things one step further researching pedagogy to “achieve equitable, accessible and effective learning for all.” By comparison Surgery’s old educational mantra: “See one. Do one. Teach one.” seems woefully out-of-date.

“Much of the research in medical education lags behind that of the global education discipline as a whole,” said Dr. James Korndorffer, who serves as Vice Chair of Education in Stanford’s Department of Surgery. “The advances in medical education research from collaboration will benefit all disciplines involved, the learner and also through the learner, a lifetime of patients.”

Korndorffer decided to create a fellowship program linking Stanford’s School of Medicine (SoM) and GSE after enrolling in the Stanford Medicine Leadership Academy in 2018. Although the idea was put on hold due to the COVID19 pandemic, Korndorffer was able to secure funding with the assistance of the Dean of the Graduate School of Education, Daniel Schwatz PhD, the Senior Associate Dean for Medical Education, Neil Gesundheit MD MPH and the Associate Dean for Graduate Medical Education Laurence Katznelson, MD and enrolled the first two postdoctoral fellows in 2023.The program is currently wrapping up its first year.

The pilot program included two postdoctoral fellows:

• Zihan Zhou, PhD under the mentorship of Radiology’s Kawin Setsompop, PhD and Psychology/GSE’s Jason Yeatman, PhD and

• Albaraa Basfar, PhD under the mentorship of GSE’s Farzana Saleem, PhD and S-SPIRE’s Arden Morris, MD.

The fellowship's focus on applying research to real-world applications directly aligned with my passion for improving educational equity for underrepresented minorities (URiM),” said Basfar. “The program provided a unique opportunity to develop and implement relevant research that could have a tangible impact in the field of education.”

Morris said she felt similarly but from the opposite angle.

“I had been searching for a way to improve our pipeline/pathway program for STEM-interested teens from URiM backgrounds (SMASH-Med). I hoped this post-doc could take over the program and generate new knowledge in terms of measuring success in a pipeline program,” said Morris. “I also wanted to better connect with colleagues in GSE, and this was a nice opportunity to do that with Saleem, who studies aspects of resilience among racial/ethnic minoritized teens.”

So far, Basfar, Morris, and Saleem have completed analyses from a survey of medical students to understand the interplay of formal and informal mentorship, sense of belonging, and peer/social support among medical students across the US. Basfar is also working on a systematic review to assess cumulative evidence on how best to define and measure success of such pipeline or pathway programs.

“This is an important program because it allows students multidisciplinary exposure to both the GSE and the SoM,” said Farzana Saleem, PhD, an assistant professor at the GSE. “Students have access to faculty and support across the two schools and have the opportunity to consider how education and medicine intersect.”

Zhou will present "Development and validation of a rapid robust 3D-MRF with fast online recon suitable for large-scale neuroscientific and clinical applications" at the annual meeting for the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine in Singapore at the beginning of May and "A novel approach for quantitative T1 measurements: Validation in a longitudinal pediatric sample” at the Organization for Human Brain Mapping’s annual meeting in Seoul, Korea at the end of June.

“The fellowship has solidified my interest in developing and implementing research-based solutions to improve educational equity for underrepresented minorities,” said Basfar. “I've received invaluable training in grant writing and the intricacies of working in academia. This training will be instrumental in my job search.”

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As the Director of Communications for Stanford Surgery, Rachel Baker tells the stories of her department's faculty, staff, and trainees. With the help of an amazing team of content creators, she produces and curates original articles, photos, videos, graphics, and even podcasts.She works personally with each division, center, program, and lab within her purview to define their audience and reach their goals while maintaining a consistent brand voice. She hosts quarterly professional development workshops open to all AEM web authors--please email her if you'd like to join! She also offers both 1:1 and group education to faculty and residents on a variety of topics including media training, using social media to advantage, and presentation refinement. Rachel holds a Bachelor's degree in journalism with a focus on photography from Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. A transplant from the DC-area, she still misses foliage and argyle but has happily adopted the official NorCal hobbies of visiting wineries, hiking local trails, and eating avocado.

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