Newcastle University
ニューカッスル大学のミッション
世界レベルのリサーチ大学として、最も質の高い教育と学習を実現し、イギリス東北部の経済・社会・文化の発達において主導的な役割を果たすこと。
ニュース
£9m for biosciences students to meet challenges of the future
2012年1月25日
Newcastle University is leading the collaboration with Durham and Liverpool universities and will be given £4.5m by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, (BBSRC), with another £4.5m from other sources.
This Doctoral Training Partnership is one of 14 across the UK supported by £67m of new investment in postgraduate training and development in the biosciences by BBSRC. It has also announced a number of industrial CASE (iCASE) studentship awards.
The programmes will provide highlly
skilled scientists for academia, policy and industry and support the
BBSRC mission to further scientific knowledge for economic growth,
wealth and job creation - improving the quality of life in the UK and
beyond.
Newcastle University's Professor Barry Hirst, lead
for the Doctoral Training Partnership, said: “This is a fantastic
investment for training bioscientists. Approximately, £5.5 million of
the investment will come to the northeast.
"Training will
focus on our world-class research in national strategically important
research areas, including into lifelong health and wellbeing, diet and
health, microbial food safety, animal health and welfare, and crop
science. It will bring top-class scientists from all over the country
and further afield to train in the north-east.”
Minister for
Universities and Science, David Willetts, speaking about the national
investment, said: “This £67 million investment in postgraduate training
is excellent news for students, research organisations, industry and
the UK as a whole. The brightest and best students will be finding
solutions to some of the biggest challenges facing us all, from food
security through to renewable energy.
“The partnership approach
means that many institutions are combining their strengths to provide
students with improved training and relevant work experience. This will
better equip them for future careers, be it in research, industry, or
elsewhere.”
The DTPs represent a new, more strategic approach
from BBSRC to deliver highly skilled scientists for the UK research
base. Taken as a whole, the DTP programme will deliver scientists with
the training to meet major social and economic challenges in food
security, sustainable bioenergy and renewable materials and improving
lifelong health and wellbeing, as well as supporting those undertaking
research in core underpinning bioscience.
An innovative and
integral element of the programme, built in to enhance the
employability of the DTP students, is the requirement for them to
undertake a three-month professional internship outside of the lab to
widen their experience of the areas of work in which they can apply
their PhD skills and training. Destinations for these internships will
include policymaking, media, teaching and industry.
BBSRC will
be working closely with each DTP to support the delivery of excellent
training and facilitate the development of a cohort of highly skilled
BBSRC early career scientists. To provide greater support for the
research training costs of each student, and to recognise rising
research inflation, BBSRC is awarding significantly higher research
training grants for each student of £5,000 per student, per year.
Dr
Celia Caulcott, BBSRC Director of Innovation and Skills said: “We
believe that this approach is a great way of doing things, enabling us
to support the very best students working in the most important areas
from food security through to crucial underpinning bioscience.
“DTPs
are all about training researchers to be the best they can be. By doing
this we can make real inroads into answering global conundrums which
will ultimately have a massive impact on the UK economy and further
afield.”