PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New report summarizes key themes in American doctoral education

Summary report, "Doctorate Recipients from United States Universities: 2009" is available online

2010-12-04
(Press-News.org) A new report recently released by the National Science Foundation, titled "Doctorate Recipients from U.S. Universities: 2009," presents a statistical overview of the U.S. doctoral education system in snapshots and long-term trends.

It notes the American system of doctoral education is widely considered the world's best, as evidenced by the large number of international students who choose to pursue a doctorate at U.S. universities. But this status is subject to the many factors that shape U.S. doctoral education.

"Given the increased global engagement and economic prosperity in developing nations, STEM graduates will have many more career options and residency choices," said Subra Suresh, director of NSF. STEM graduates are students who earned a degree in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

"The United States has long been the favorite destination to pursue graduate education and subsequent research opportunities. We could see a change in that trend," he said making the case for revitalizing America's STEM pipeline, the graduate school system through which students prepare to enter the high-tech workforce.

This new report aims to provide decision makers with information that underlies informed improvements in the U.S. doctoral education system. The data contained in it serve as a measure of investment in human resources devoted to science, engineering, research, and scholarship, and as such are an indicator of the capacity for knowledge creation and innovation. They reflect political, economic, social, technological, and demographic trends.

The report is the latest edition in an annual series formerly called "Doctorate Recipients from U.S. Universities: Summary Report." The report is the work of the Science Resources Statistics Division of NSF's Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences Directorate.

Data for the report come from an annual census of individuals who receive doctoral degrees from research studies at accredited U.S. academic institutions. This census, the Survey of Earned Doctorates, or SED, is a continuous examination of doctoral education ongoing since 1957.

The 2009 edition unveils major changes in the format and organization of the report.

It is now printed in a compact, portable volume that calls attention to important trends in doctoral education, and is organized around five themes: who receives a doctorate, which fields attract study; what influences the path to the doctorate, how it is paid for, and postgraduation trends.

Online, the reader is invited to explore trends in greater depth. All of the detailed data tables previously published in the summary report are now available online, along with interactive graphics, presentation slides, and links to related content. The data tables are available both in portable document format (PDF) and as Microsoft Excel files for easy viewing, printing, and downloading.

INFORMATION: The SED is sponsored by six federal agencies: the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Institutes of Health, NSF, U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Department of Education.

This summary report is available online at the National Science Foundation's website.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers create high performance infrared camera based on type-II InAs/GaSb superlattices

2010-12-04
Researchers at Northwestern University have created a new infrared camera based on Type-II InAs/GaSb superlattices that produces much higher resolution images than previous infrared cameras. Created by Manijeh Razeghi, Walter P. Murphy Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and researchers in the Center for Quantum Devices in the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, the long wavelength infrared focal plane array camera provides a 16-fold increase in the number of pixels in the image and can provide infrared images in the dark. Their ...

Researchers create new high-performance fiber

2010-12-04
Researchers at Northwestern University have nanoengineered a new kind of fiber that could be tougher than Kevlar. Working in a multidisciplinary team that includes groups from other universities and the MER Corporation, Horacio Espinosa, James N. and Nancy J. Farley Professor in Manufacturing & Entrepreneurship at the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, and his group have created a high performance fiber from carbon nanotubes and a polymer that is remarkably tough, strong, and resistant to failure. Using state-of-the-art in-situ electron microscopy testing ...

The gene-environment enigma

The gene-environment enigma
2010-12-04
Personalized medicine centers on being able to predict the risk of disease or response to a drug based on a person's genetic makeup. But a study by scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis suggests that, for most common diseases, genes alone only tell part of the story. That's because the environment interacts with DNA in ways that are difficult to predict, even in simple organisms like single-celled yeast, their research shows. "The effects of a person's genes – and, therefore, their risk of disease – are greatly influenced by their environment," ...

Preventing physician medication mix-ups by reporting them

2010-12-04
INDIANAPOLIS – The most frequent contributors to medication errors and adverse drug events in busy primary care practice offices are communication problems and lack of knowledge, according to a study of a prototype web-based medication error and adverse drug event reporting system. Research on the use of MEADERS (Medication Error and Adverse Drug Event Reporting System), developed by investigators from the Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University School of Medicine led by Atif Zafar, M.D., appears in the November/December 2010 issue of the Annals of Family Medicine. "We ...

Albert Einstein College of Medicine helps address need for improved cancer care in rural America

2010-12-04
December 2, 2010 – (BRONX, NY) – Nearly a quarter of Americans live in rural areas, which consistently report higher cancer mortality rates than urban and suburban areas. Among the complex causes for this disparity is that only 10 percent of physicians practice in rural areas and almost 4 out of 10 rural residents live at least an hour from an urban area. Finding the time, transportation, and financial resources for travel to urban academic medical centers, the standard bearers for quality cancer care, often proves difficult. Most rural residents have their cancer treated ...

New clue in leukemia mystery: Researchers identify 'poison' employed by deadly enzyme mutations

2010-12-04
NEW YORK (Dec. 2, 2010) -- There is new hope for people with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), a fast-growing cancer of the blood and bone marrow. Research led by Weill Cornell Medical College and published today in the online edition of the journal Cancer Cell reveals a surprising and unexpected cancer-causing mechanism. The investigators discovered that newly identified mutant enzymes in AML create a chemical poison to cause leukemia. Their findings should prove useful in treating patients by providing a molecular target against which to develop new drugs against one ...

Effect of 6 mT SMF on phagocytosis depends on macrophage differentiation degree

2010-12-04
The interest in the biological effects of non-ionizing Electro Magnetic Fields (EMFs) and Static Magnetic Fields (SMFs) on the whole organism, as well on cellular systems, has noticeably increased in recent years in consideration of their increased production (from the generation and transmission of electricity, to domestic appliances and industrial equipment, to telecommunications and broadcasting) and the possible health risk for humans. About one century ago, associated with the wide use of electricity, artificial electric and magnetic fields became a part of our living ...

VCU Massey discovery could lead to breakthrough for non-small cell lung cancer

VCU Massey discovery could lead to breakthrough for non-small cell lung cancer
2010-12-04
Richmond, Va. (Dec. 3, 2010) – Research at Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center led by Charles E. Chalfant, Ph.D., associate professor of biochemistry and molecular Biology, discovered a previously unknown mechanism in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells that contributes to their ability to maintain and grow tumors. Narrowing in on this mechanism could provide a breakthrough for the development of effective therapies for NSCLC and other cancers. The findings, recently published in Journal of Clinical Investigation, provide the first example of a ...

Fear of being envied makes people behave well toward others

2010-12-04
It's nice to have success—but it can also make you worry that the jealous people will try to bring you down. New research in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, has found that the fear of being the target of malicious envy makes people act more helpfully toward people who they think might be jealous of them. In previous research, Niels van de Ven of Tilburg University and his colleagues Marcel Zeelenberg and Rik Pieters had figured out that envy actually comes in two flavors: benign envy and malicious envy. They studied people ...

UT Southwestern researchers uncover culprits in life-threatening clotting disorder

UT Southwestern researchers uncover culprits in life-threatening clotting disorder
2010-12-04
DALLAS – Dec. 3, 2010 – Thanks to findings by UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers, individuals with a potentially life-threatening condition predisposing them to blood clots, or thrombosis, might someday receive therapy to prevent the condition. The findings, available online and in a future issue of The Journal of Clinical Investigation, offer new clues into the mechanisms underlying antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). "Patients with APS have circulating antibodies that cause exaggerated thrombosis. The longstanding mystery has been how these antibodies initiate ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Canadian researcher receives funding from ARIA to unlock potential of plants

Visionary support from Veale Foundation will establish university hospitals Veale Healthcare Transformation Institute

Investigating cocaine addiction using fruit flies

Fruit flies on cocaine could reveal better therapies for addiction

New data shows MMR vaccination rate decline across US

Clinical validation of a circulating tumor DNA–based blood test to screen for colorectal cancer

Screening colonoscopy yields among adults ages 45 to 49 after lowering the colon cancer screening age

Trends in county-level MMR vaccination coverage in children in the United States

Brewed for longevity: drinking coffee linked with healthy aging in women

Researchers find early driver of prostate cancer aggressiveness

Insect protein blocks bacterial infection

New study casts doubt on the likelihood of a Milky Way – Andromeda collision

Prevalence of artificial sweetener neotame in U.S.-marketed disposable e-cigarettes

E-cigarette warnings lower vaping interest and raise quit intentions

Record high: Study finds growing cannabis use among older adults

Trends in past-month cannabis use among older adults

How to create aqueous 100 nm-sized materials with polycavities

Epilepsy is more common in patients with frontotemporal dementia than expected

Pre-operative THP leads to a pCR in two-thirds of early-stage HER2+ ER- breast cancer patients

Immune system discovery reveals potential solution to Alzheimer’s

Salamanders suffering from rising temperatures

It’s not too late to start eating better for your brain

Study finds seniors are money savvy – until dementia sets in

Synthetic compound shows promise against multidrug resistance

Researchers recreate ancient Egyptian blues

Immunotherapy before surgery improves lung cancer survival in global clinical trial led by Irish cancer specialist

S2302 Pragmatica-Lung reports out as model for faster, leaner, more representative trials

New Venus observation mission - World's first long-term planetary cubesat study by Korea’s Institute for Basic Science and NanoAvionics

Brain training game offers new hope for drug-free pain management

Attachment theory: A new lens for understanding human-AI relationships

[Press-News.org] New report summarizes key themes in American doctoral education
Summary report, "Doctorate Recipients from United States Universities: 2009" is available online