CATEGORY |
POINTS |
RESEARCH, CLINICAL, AND/OR ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENTS |
20 POINTS |
Grades:
- Reviewers are looking for progress and an upward trajectory through your academic career, not a perfect GPA
- Reviewers will carefully consider any contexts noted in the personal statement section of the application that have impacted your academic record
|
4 points |
Research and/or clinical contributions or achievements: Reviewers will holistically assess the contributions noted in your CCV and your Research, Academic and/or Clinical Contributions statement. These include:
- scholarships, fellowships, and awards
- contributions as a health professional to patient care, policy, practice
- inventions or patents
- publications aimed at scholarly readers or the public
- presentations at academic conferences, to school or special interest groups
- other scientific outreach activities
|
16 points |
COMMUNITY CONTRIBUTIONS |
20 POINTS |
Social conscience: Your community contributions demonstrate a sense of citizenship and care for the community/communities to which you belong and suggest that you’ll be a caring and contributing member of the TRIANGLE and broader GI/liver communities |
10 points |
Personal Characteristics: Your contributions demonstrate positive personal characteristics (e.g. leadership, service, determination, care for others, sense of justice, etc.) that indicate you will be a positive addition to the TRIANGLE community and the GI/liver field. You effectively articulate how your community contributions, as highlighted in the Community Contributions statement, connect to and have prepared you to move forward with your research and/or career plans. |
10 points |
CAREER AND DEVELOPMENT PLANS |
20 POINTS |
Career and Development Plan: Your plan effectively articulates why and how membership in TRIANGLE and access to TRIANGLE supports will help you achieve your research and career goals
- You do not need to know what career or industry you’re aiming for
- Reviewers want to understand what you want to contribute or improve as someone trained in GI/liver research and/or practice, but you don’t need to know yet specifically where or how you’ll do that
- TRIANGLE programming and supports include many opportunities for career and personal exploration, so your career and development plan can and should involve exploring career options via:
- Career exploration workshops and activities (including the annual IDP creation and review with your mentor)
- Personal exploration workshops and activities (including the annual IDP creation and review with your mentor)
- Networking and mentorship with professionals in business, government, non-profit, or research
- Experiential learning placements in business, government, non-profit, or research
- Other activities that you’d like to propose and/or lead as a TRIANGLE member
|
10 points |
Research and/or Clinical Contributions Statement: You effectively articulate how your research and/or clinical contributions, highlighted in the Research and/or Clinical Contributions statement, connect to and have prepared you to move forward with your research and/or career plans. |
10 points |
RESEARCH PLAN |
30 POINTS |
Scientific quality of the plan: You effectively articulate, for a non-specialist audience that includes researchers, health practitioners, and patients:
- the relevance, significance, and potential impact of your project
- the novelty of your project, i.e. the gap in knowledge that you’re proposing to fill and the necessity of filling it, any novel methods/approaches/tools you’ll be using
- a compelling hypothesis
- clear aims
- the measures you’re taking to ensure a high-quality study (e.g. selection of methods, adequate population size to ensure statistical significance, controlling for confounding factors, carefully considering sex/gender, research ethics (including working with Indigenous patients and participants
- how you’re going to share your research findings
|
15 points |
Feasibility: You effectively articulate:
- how your research and/or clinical experience to date will help you be successful with this project
- any published or preliminary data you’ve already collected
- any training or collaborations you are currently, or are planning to, pursue to fill any skill or knowledge gaps
- why your PI is the right choice for this project in terms of their experience and expertise
|
10 points |
Research environment: Why your institution and lab are the best choice for pursuing the proposed project (including monetary and non-monetary resources, equipment, core facilities, funding, training, professional development, etc.) |
5 points |
SUPERVISOR LETTER |
10 POINTS |
Research environment: The environment is clearly one that will allow the applicant to succeed with the proposed research. |
2 points |
Support of the Project: The supervisor has a clear understanding of the project and their role in ensuring its success via training, support, funding, resources, training, etc. The supervisor has committed the support necessary for the project’s success |
4 points |
Supervision plan: The supervisor clearly articulates a feasible and supportive plan for supervision, contact time etc. that will ensure the success of the candidate and their project |
2 points |
Commitment to TRIANGLE: The supervisor supports the candidate’s full participation in the TRIANGLE program and in professional development activities offered at or outside their home institution, including experiential learning placements and attendance at the TRIANGLE annual summit at CDDW-CLM. Additionally, the supervisor commits to participating in TRIANGLE as a faculty mentor and contributor. Please note that this supervisory commitment is mandatory for all TRIANGLE applicants. Any applicants or supervisors who are concerned about this commitment should reach out to the TRIANGLE program for additional guidance. |
2 points |