Programs
Clinician-Scientist Faculty Mentoring (FaMe) Program
The Clinician-Scientist Faculty Mentoring (FaMe) Program at Penn State College of Medicine is designed to prepare, mentor and build community among physicians and other clinical health providers working to advance medical knowledge through clinical, translational or basic research.
The two-year program includes weekly protected time for research training, alternating between a lecture one week and scholarly advancement time the following week. Lectures include grant-writing workshops, emerging technology seminars, career development seminars and presentations by trainees.
How the FaMe Program is Structured
Overview
Two-hour Grant-Writing Lectures are provided in collaboration with the College of Medicine’s Grants Academy.
In general, four sessions are held over the course of the program, for a total of approximately eight hours of lecture over the two-year program.
Part 1: Learning the system
This section includes information on:
Study section/audience
Which NIH institute?
NI vs. ESI status
When to submit – preliminary data
NIH vs. national foundation grants
R21 vs. R01 vs. K08/K23
MPI grants
P01 grants
SPORE
SBIR/STTR grants
Overview of NIH review process
Part 2: Proposal development
Specific aims page
Overall impact
Basic science vs. translational vs. combined
Background and significance
Rationale/scientific premise
Innovation (novel mechanism; novel animal model; novel drug)
Part 3: Experimental plan development
Experimental plan – “minefield”
Types of plans – fishing expedition; inverted pyramid; forced march/house of cards; round wagon
Pitfalls: Exploratory approach
Pitfalls: Descriptive approach
Pitfalls: Overambitious proposal (How many aims? How many subaims?)
Preliminary data; established in in vivo model; established feasibility of experiments (objective and subjective – can the participant do these experiments?)
Functional/mechanistic approach; gain-of-function; loss-of-function; mapping interactive area(s); mutational analysis; hypothesis-driven experimental approach
In vitro vs. in vivo experiments
Cell lines vs. primary cells
Animal models: GEM vs. PDX
Collaborators – how to choose; purpose of collaborators
Part 4: Proposal writing
In this stage, participants will write and discuss the actual proposal based on their preliminary data (even if insufficient). That proposal is to be presented, discussed and revised, and suggestions how to improve the proposal will be provided.
Overview
Two-hour Clinician-Scientist Career Development Seminars are presented by the FaMe team and guest speakers.
In general, five seminars are anticipated each year, for a total of 10 presentations and 20 hours over the two-year program.
Presentations by the FaMe team
Planning the clinician-scientist career
Promotion to associate professor and tenure: Publication
Promotion to associate professor and tenure: Educational/teaching excellence
Promotion to associate professor and tenure: Administrative/service excellence
Skills development: Critical reading of manuscripts and analysis of data
Conferences and presentations
Presentations by guest speakers
Research collaboration with industry
Negotiation skills
Ethics in research for clinician-scientists
Diversity in the clinician-scientist pool
Overview
One-hour Clinician-Scientist Seminars are presented by trainees.
In general, 10 such seminars are anticipated each year, for a total of 20 presentations and 20 hours over the two-year program.
Presentation structure
In these events, clinician-scientists will:
Present their research (20 minutes)
Discuss research problems and plans (20 minutes)
Outline plans for grant submission (20 minutes)
Overview
Two-hour Emerging Technology Seminars are presented by the FaMe team and guest speakers.
In general, five seminars are anticipated each year, for a total of 10 presentations and 20 hours over the two-year program.
Presentation topics
These seminars are designed to educate clinician-scientists about emerging technologies and to acquaint them with intellectual and logistic resources to use these technologies at Penn State. Each session will combine a one-hour technology review and a one-hour presentation of a project using the technology.
shRNA and CRISPR library
PDX and other animal models for research
Drug development/pharmacokinetics
Next-generation sequencing
Epigenetics
Bioinformatics and biostatistics
Proteomics/metabolomics
MicroRNA and RNA-binding proteins
Microbiome
Imaging (MicroCT, bioluminescence, etc.)
For Details

Professor and Vice Chair for Basic Science Research, Pediatrics