Clinical Fellows
Educational Objective
One of the most challenging phases in the career of a scientist or physician-scientist is the transition from being a trainee to securing and running an independent laboratory. It can be particularly tricky for physician-scientists, due to the added commitments of clinical service.
This series is designed to cover non-scientific aspects of the transition to independence and includes topics such as how to prepare for chalk talk, interviewing tactics, how to start your lab, negotiating a startup package, and more.
Format
One-hour moderated Q&A sessions are provided with a faculty panel from diverse backgrounds. Participants are strongly encouraged to bring their own additional relevant questions. The topics and schedule are emailed in advance. If you believe you qualify based on the criteria below, please email Dr. Malay Haldar with:
- A copy of you CV
- Your current stage of training
- A brief sentence describing your research focus
Participant Qualifications
Trainees from all scientific areas are welcome and attendance is not restricted to immunology-related research.
Our program accepts the following interested participants:
- Clinical Fellows on a research/physician-scientist training track (MD or MD/PhD)
- Advanced post-doctoral trainees (PhDs) who are currently on a training or transitional grant (e.g., T32, K99)
Program Co-Directors
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Malay Haldar, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Email Malay Haldar, MD, PhD
Bio
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Alexander Huang, MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Bio
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Taku Kambayashi, MD, PhD
I3H Graduate Group Coordinator, Associate Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Bio