When I was a Ph.D. student at Yale, I dreamed of working as a university professor, directing a research laboratory, and training students of my own. I have been a professor for a little over four years now. Of the lessons I have learned in this time, the one I have taken most to heart is that scientists at American universities spend far more time dreaming of research than actually carrying it out.
By "dreaming," I mean that university scientists design studies and submit many applications to federal agencies for grants to conduct these studies. This dreaming takes time - a few months for each dream, or each grant application submitted. Most university scientists I know spend far more time writing, revising, and submitting applications than publishing articles, writing books or actually collecting data for research studies.
It was not always this way. The last three decades have seen a sobering, gradual decline in research funding in America. Molecular biologist Carol W. Greider of the Johns Hopkins University, a 2009 Nobel laureate, recently highlighted this change in an interview with the Chronicle of Higher Education. Greider noted that success rates for federal funding were roughly 33 percent in 1985; the current rate is 17 percent; and now as sequestration begins, it may drop to 15 percent. To illustrate the effects of sequestration, an article published last week on the news and information site of Boston University notes that in preparation for future budget cuts, one of its psychology professors, Howard Eichenbaum, will not hire undergraduates as research assistants nor accept new graduate students or post-doctoral fellows into his laboratory.
It gets worse. Unless their application receives approval for funding, the months a university scientist spends preparing and submitting that grant application often go down the drain - completely wasted human capital. Further, for many university scientists, writing applications and conducting pilot research studies to further bolster the chances for success takes the form of free labor. That is, unless a funding agency pays them for the work, they are not compensated for it. This is because university scientists draw much of their salary from teaching and training undergraduate and graduate students. Even if some of these scientists do receive compensation for research, they work on this research far longer than their job description entails.
The consequence of this is that the fewer university scientists America funds, the more scientists who work for free to advance America's positioning in the research world. Importantly, many countries are bolstering their support of their scientists even as America weakens support for science.
And it gets even worse.
For each scientist trained at an American university, federal and state governments invested in their training. Our country invests tens of thousands, sometimes hundreds of thousands, of dollars into the education of scientists in the form of tuition remission and stipend support. Most scientists at American universities could not have received their training without government support.
What if our country does not then support the research these scientists conduct, once they graduate and seek to establish laboratories of their own? The answer is this: We invested tax dollars on these scientists, only to see the money go to waste because we did not continue to invest in their vital work.
Scientists across the nation are hard at work, dreaming to find a cure for your father's Parkinson's disease. They dream to find a way to protect you from the ravages of HIV and AIDS. They dream of securing the resources necessary to develop programs designed to prevent your child from developing an anxiety or mood disorder, or protect them from exposure to community crime and violence.
How long do you think scientists will continue to dream in America? What if they find a way to wake up in a country that supports them? As our nation spends fewer resources on its scientists, we push them further toward thinking about carrying out their work somewhere else. The end result is America's investment in its future scientists winds up benefiting another country - one that comes through with the resources to fund science.
Andres De Los Reyes is an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Maryland at College Park. Email: adlr@umd.edu. He wrote this for the Baltimore Sun.
Andres De Los Reyes / U.S. squandering its scientists by cutting research funds - pressofAtlanticCity.com: Commentary
1-877-773-7724
SubscriberServices@pressofac.com
Breaking News
Andres De Los Reyes / U.S. squandering its scientists by cutting research funds
Posted: Monday, March 18, 2013 12:01 am
Andres De Los Reyes / U.S. squandering its scientists by cutting research funds
When I was a Ph.D. student at Yale, I dreamed of working as a university professor, directing a research laboratory, and training students of my own. I have been a professor for a little over four years now. Of the lessons I have learned in this time, the one I have taken most to heart is that scientists at American universities spend far more time dreaming of research than actually carrying it out.
By "dreaming," I mean that university scientists design studies and submit many applications to federal agencies for grants to conduct these studies. This dreaming takes time - a few months for each dream, or each grant application submitted. Most university scientists I know spend far more time writing, revising, and submitting applications than publishing articles, writing books or actually collecting data for research studies.
It was not always this way. The last three decades have seen a sobering, gradual decline in research funding in America. Molecular biologist Carol W. Greider of the Johns Hopkins University, a 2009 Nobel laureate, recently highlighted this change in an interview with the Chronicle of Higher Education. Greider noted that success rates for federal funding were roughly 33 percent in 1985; the current rate is 17 percent; and now as sequestration begins, it may drop to 15 percent. To illustrate the effects of sequestration, an article published last week on the news and information site of Boston University notes that in preparation for future budget cuts, one of its psychology professors, Howard Eichenbaum, will not hire undergraduates as research assistants nor accept new graduate students or post-doctoral fellows into his laboratory.
It gets worse. Unless their application receives approval for funding, the months a university scientist spends preparing and submitting that grant application often go down the drain - completely wasted human capital. Further, for many university scientists, writing applications and conducting pilot research studies to further bolster the chances for success takes the form of free labor. That is, unless a funding agency pays them for the work, they are not compensated for it. This is because university scientists draw much of their salary from teaching and training undergraduate and graduate students. Even if some of these scientists do receive compensation for research, they work on this research far longer than their job description entails.
The consequence of this is that the fewer university scientists America funds, the more scientists who work for free to advance America's positioning in the research world. Importantly, many countries are bolstering their support of their scientists even as America weakens support for science.
And it gets even worse.
For each scientist trained at an American university, federal and state governments invested in their training. Our country invests tens of thousands, sometimes hundreds of thousands, of dollars into the education of scientists in the form of tuition remission and stipend support. Most scientists at American universities could not have received their training without government support.
What if our country does not then support the research these scientists conduct, once they graduate and seek to establish laboratories of their own? The answer is this: We invested tax dollars on these scientists, only to see the money go to waste because we did not continue to invest in their vital work.
Scientists across the nation are hard at work, dreaming to find a cure for your father's Parkinson's disease. They dream to find a way to protect you from the ravages of HIV and AIDS. They dream of securing the resources necessary to develop programs designed to prevent your child from developing an anxiety or mood disorder, or protect them from exposure to community crime and violence.
How long do you think scientists will continue to dream in America? What if they find a way to wake up in a country that supports them? As our nation spends fewer resources on its scientists, we push them further toward thinking about carrying out their work somewhere else. The end result is America's investment in its future scientists winds up benefiting another country - one that comes through with the resources to fund science.
Andres De Los Reyes is an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Maryland at College Park. Email: adlr@umd.edu. He wrote this for the Baltimore Sun.
Posted in Commentary on Monday, March 18, 2013 12:01 am.
Similar Stories
Most Read
Opinion Home
Editorial Cartoons
Commentary
Editorials
Letters
Recent Polls
Your Lawmakers
Connect with us
By Dave Enscoe, Advertising Department More »
SEARCH PROPERTIES
Place A Classified Ad »
By Arv Voss, Motor Matters More »
SEARCH CARS+
Place A Classified Ad »
WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy added 175,000 jobs in May — a steady pace that shows strength in the face of tax increases and government spending cuts if not enough to reduce still-high unemployment. More »
SEARCH JOBS+
Place A Classified Ad »
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN PRINT
AND ONLINE TODAY »
Browse Classified Categories
Place A Classified Ad »
Featured Businesses
Add your business here »Designer Consignment
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-5444
Rio Auto
Palermo, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-390-0001
Historic Cold Spring...
Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-898-4504
Up The Creek Marina
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-272-9252
Richard T Fauntleroy Pc
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-646-4466
...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-788-8789
Bennett Chevy
Egg Harbor Twp., NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-0444
Wild Styles/Boost Mo...
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-846-7030
Gutter Giants LLC
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
Cape May County Hear...
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210 [Map]
609-465-9199
Montreal Inn
Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-7011
Cape Regional Medica...
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210 [Map]
609-463-2000
Surrey Beach House ...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-822-6550
Ladies Invitational ...
Absecon, 08201 [Map]
Boardwalk Honda
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-428-4475
Ventnor Heights Auto...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-823-0520
KAS Website Design C...
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-703-4696
Eddie's Auto Body Shop
Erma, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-4613
The Boat Shop
Manahawkin, NJ 08050 [Map]
609-597-1271
Mouse Trap Bowling A...
Woodbine, NJ 08270 [Map]
609-861-2695
Skelly's Hi Point Pub
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-641-3172
Schooner Island Marina
Wildwood, NJ 08260 [Map]
609-729-8900
On a Mission
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-646-4483
Shore Orthopaedic Un...
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1991
M & S Produce Outlet
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-383-8323
Coastal Designer Outlet
Ocean View, NJ 08230 [Map]
609-624-1544
English Creek Supply
Egg Harbor Twp, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-6168
Mays Landing Golf &...
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-641-4411
One Stop Bait & Tackle
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
609-348-9450
Sack O' Subs
Ocean City, NJ 08226 [Map]
609-525-0460
Access Roofing & Con...
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
888-661-0333
Mangos Restaurant Llc
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-487-7450
Dolfin Dock Inc
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1730
Linwood Care Center
Linwood, NJ 08221 [Map]
609-927-6131
Oreck Floor Care Center
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-272-7590
Atlantic Limousine, Inc
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
800-348-3484
Thompson Marine & En...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-927-2415
Tuckahoe Bike Shop
Woodbine, NJ 08230 [Map]
609-628-0101
Rio Nails And Spa
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-463-8868
Permanent Makeup by Amy
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-383-2769
Captain Andy's Marina
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-822-0916
Newkirk Family Veter...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-2120
Grace Energy
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-465-5545
Perfect Solutions So...
Northfield, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-601-5252
Mama Mia Of Eht
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-484-8877
Up The Creek Tavern ...
Keyport, NJ 07735 [Map]
732-739-0214
Simple Escape Spa
Galloway, NJ 08205 [Map]
609-464-2313
Duke O'fluke
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-926-2280
Avalon Limousine Ser...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-0008
Bloomingsales
Brigantine, NJ 08203 [Map]
609-266-6667
Jack Facciolo, D.O.
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-886-0800
Crabby's Restaurant
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-625-2722
Fioretta Llc
Northfield, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-241-8628
Pier 47
Wildwood, NJ 08260 [Map]
609-729-4774
Frankie's Pizza II
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-625-7566
Carl “Luke” Roth of ...
Villas, NJ 08251 [Map]
609-886-8200
Handcrafted Cabinetr...
West Creek, NJ 08092 [Map]
609-891-0166
Tackle Direct
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-788-3819
Frank’s Jewelers
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-4252
Pappy's Fishin' Stuff
Ocean City, NJ 08226 [Map]
609-398-6996
Absecon Bay Sportsme...
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-484-0409
C-Jam Yacht Sales
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1175
Copiers Plus
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-7587
Raff's Recycling
Cape May Court House , NJ 08210 [Map]
609-465-7406
Matt Blatt Kia
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-573-3100
Vip Skindeep Llc
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-677-9900
JBS Solar and Wind LLC
North Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-7373
Fish Finder the
Brigantine, NJ 08203 [Map]
609-264-0918
Foschi Studio
Linwood, NJ 08221 [Map]
609-927-3044
Royal Suites Healthc...
Galloway, NJ 08205 [Map]
609-748-9900
Professional Physcal...
N. Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-9800
Black Horse Auto Sales
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-272-1877
Foglio's Abbey Floor...
Marmora , NJ 08223 [Map]
609-390-3876
Keeper Back Bay Fishing
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-576-5998
Citywide Towing
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
609-517-3871
Buck Tails Outfitters
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-829-2229
Beachcomber Coins & ...
Egg Harbor Twp, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-1031
Sport Hyundai Dodge
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-1200
Bob's Garden Center
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-6306
Sunnyland Child Care...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-823-4110
Maynard's Cafe
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-822-8423
Find Local Businesses
Popular Categories
Sections
Services
Contact Us
Contacts By DepartmentThe Press of Atlantic City Media Group
PO Box 3100
1000 West Washington Ave.
Pleasantville, NJ 08232-3100
1-877-773-7724
609-272-7000 SubscriberServices@pressofac.com
Search
© Copyright 2013, pressofAtlanticCity.com, Pleasantville, NJ. Powered by BLOX Content Management System from TownNews.com. [Terms of Use | Privacy Policy]