DEADLINE REMINDER: PSOM Limited Application - Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists
To: School of Medicine Faculty
From: Katherine L. Nathanson, MD and Scott D. Halpern, MD, PhD
Co-Chairs, PSOM Limited Applications Selection Committee
Re: 2022 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists
Date: Sept. 16, 2021
- The University has been invited to submit nominations for the Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists, a program that recognizes promising faculty-rank researchers in three disciplinary categories: Life Sciences, Physical Sciences and Engineering, and Chemistry.
- The Blavatnik National Awards recognize excellence in these three disciplinary categories.
- The University is permitted to nominate one faculty member for each of the three disciplinary categories. The Office of the Vice Provost for Research is coordinating the review and candidate selection process for the University.
Details of the internal competition below. PSOM is invited to submit one nomination for both the Life Science and Chemistry categories.
Blavatnik guidelines are at: http://blavatnikawards.org/awards/national-awards/nomination-guidelines/
FAQs at: http://blavatnikawards.org/awards/national-awards/faq/
National finalists from previous years. http://blavatnikawards.org/honorees/national-finalists/
Blavatnik Award Details:
- One Blavatnik National Awards Laureate in each disciplinary category will receive $250,000 in unrestricted funds. The award money is given directly to the Laureate. Indirect costs are not applied to the award.
Eligibility
- Have been born in or after 1980*
- Hold a doctorate degree (PhD, DPhil, MD, DDS, DVM, etc)
- Currently hold a tenured or tenure-track academic faculty position (or equivalent) at any stage and with any other current funding
- Currently conducting research as a Principal Investigator in one of the Life Sciences, Chemistry or Physical Sciences & Engineering
- The Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists strive for nominee equality and diversity, and strongly encourage the nomination of women and members of other historically underrepresented groups in science and engineering.
Life Sciences
Agriculture and Animal Sciences
Biomedical Engineering & Biotechnology
Clinical Medicine & Epidemiology
Computational Biology, Bioinformatics & Systems Biology
Developmental Biology
Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
Genetics & Genomics
Immunology
Microbiology
Molecular & Cellular Biology
Neuroscience
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Biochemistry & Structural Biology
Chemical Biology
Chemical Engineering
Environmental Chemistry & Biogeochemistry
Green Chemistry
Inorganic & Solid-State Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Physical Chemistry
Polymer Chemistry
Synthetic Chemistry
Theoretical Chemistry
*Age limit exceptions will be considered in exceptional circumstances upon a detailed written submission from the nominating institution.
Blavatnik Evaluation Criteria:
Nominees and their work as independent investigators will be evaluated according to the following criteria:
- Quality: The extent to which the work is reliable, valid, credible, and scientifically rigorous.
- Impact: The extent to which the work addresses an important problem, advances scientific progress, and is influential in the nominee’s field, related fields, or beyond, and/or has the potential to benefit society.
- Novelty: The extent to which the work challenges existing paradigms, establishes a new field or considerably expands on an existing field, employs original methodologies or concepts, and/or pursues an original question.
- Promise: The nominee has potential for further significant contributions to science, and the research program will generate further impactful and novel discoveries.
PSOM Review and Selection Process
The Office of the Vice Provost for Research (OVPR) will oversee the final review and selection of the nominees. (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) is also an invited institution and faculty based at the hospital should apply through CHOP and may not apply through both CHOP and PSOM.)
Each candidate must submit the following:
- A coversheet that includes:
- Nominee’s first and last name and date of birth (mm/dd/yyyy)
- Nominees official title, academic rank, department, school
- Disciplinary category (see list above) and project title
- Names, academic ranks and institutions for two letter writers familiar with nominee’s scientific contributions who will provide letters of support
- Rationale for Nomination from your Chair: A 200-word statement that explains why the nominee should be selected as the institutional nominee and should be based on his/her strong record of significant independent scientific contributions, early career success, and promise of sustained or accelerated progress in the future.
- Nominee’s Research Summary: A research summary (1,000-words maximum), written by the nominee, should describe up to five of the nominee’s most significant scientific contributions and research accomplishments from their independent career. The research summary should be accessible to another scientist working in their overarching disciplinary category (e.g. Life Sciences) but not in their specific field of study (e.g. Neuroscience). Key results, their impact on the nominee’s field of study, and the nominee’s specific role in the described work should be included. Information about the nominee’s positions, awards, and service activities should be excluded. One figure illustrating the most significant results is allowed. Citations and figure caption do not count toward the word limit.
- A statement (maximum of one page) describing nominee’s outreach activities and/or professional service, with particular focus on activities and service related to increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in the scientific community. Topics to discuss include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Teaching and Mentoring: Commitment to teaching and mentoring students, especially those of broadly diverse demographics and/or social backgrounds;
- Collaboration and Leadership: Involvement or leadership in committees, task force groups, professional societies, and organizations;
- Service, Engagement, and/or Outreach: A record of community engagement or outreach activities (e.g. volunteer activities, communicating science to the public, etc.).
- Research: Current and/or planned research relevant to underserved populations or inequalities, or issues relevant to DEI, such as race, gender, sexuality, health disparities, human rights, educational access, ability, etc.
- Nominee’s Curriculum Vitae (4-page maximum) which should include the following (see sample: (Label file: LastName_FirstName-CV.pdf) CV Format Example
- Full name, current institution(s), and position title.
- Education and training, including postdoctoral training and/or residency.
- Employment history.
- Honors and awards with years when they were received.
- Select peer-reviewed publications – List only published work or manuscripts in press authored during independent career; do not include manuscripts that are submitted or in preparation or those published during graduate or postdoctoral studies. Conference abstracts and proceedings should only be included if they are the primary way of disseminating new results in the nominee’s field.
- Select patents and patent applications, with years.
- Research grants – List funding for the main ongoing and completed projects on which the nominee is a PI or a co-PI.
- Materials must be submitted by email in a single pdf file to Dorothy Leung at dorothyl@pennmedicine.upenn.edu by 9:00 AM on Thursday, Sept. 30.
- Subject line of email should be Blavatnik_Discipline of Nomination_nominee’s surname_nominee’s first name (e.g. Blavatnik_Life Sciences_Doe_Jane
If you have any questions, please contact Dorothy at dorothyl@pennmedicine.upenn.edu
Please send any questions to dorothyl@pennmedicine.upenn.edu