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Educational SessionsThursday, February 8 • Friday, February 8 • Saturday, February 8
2:45-4:15 pm Educational Session I
This session will also provide you with strategies for dealing with missing data, and speakers will describe intent-to-treat analysis as well as additional analyses that should accompany this approach. 4:30-6 pm Educational Session II In this session, you'll learn about the career trajectory of becoming a faculty member—from master's, doctoral, postdoctoral, and career de-velopment training to tenured faculty member. The session will provide a review of the essential knowledge and skills needed to become a faculty member at a research-intensive environment. It will also address the criteria to use in selecting one's initial position and the resources needed to become an independent researcher. In addition, you'll get strategies to succeed in the following:
In addition, senior faculty responsibilities for mentoring junior faculty are discussed.
11 am-12:30 pm Educational Session III
This session will also illustrate knowledge transfer strategies that clinicians can apply to close the gap between research and practice, including initiatives such as standard of care/guideline development, systematic reviews, audit feed-back, opinion leader/training/coaching models, communities of practice, and dissemination/im-plementation research and participatory action research.
11 am-12:30 pm Education Session IV Although it holds an important place in current and historical inquiry into phenomena of interest to oncology nurses, qualitative research often remains enigmatic and elusive for many investigators who may be interested in pursuing research using qualitative approaches. This session offers an intensive, focused examination of paradigms for inquiry common to oncology phenomena and the stances on inquiry that emerge from these paradigms. Standpoint and collective stances are compared within philosophical, interactionist, and anthropological traditions. In this session, a discussion of framing questions and choosing methods among major traditions is followed by an outline of data sources and analytic techniques. Mixing qualitative and quantitative methods is addressed and balanced against single method approaches. This session will conclude with a brief discourse on objectivity and subjectivity in relation to judging quality and disseminating findings. Your participation will be encouraged.2-3:30 pm Educational Session V This session will provide a look to into the dramatic changes on the horizon in cancer control and treatment research. The new paradigm of personalized, preemptive, predictive, and participatory care will transform healthcare delivery. You'll engage in dialogue about potential future research relevant to targeted therapies and identify strategies for successful conduct of such research in the cancer cooperative groups. Exemplars of successful nursing research through the cooperative group mechanism will provide a window to opportunities and challenges in conducting research in cooperative groups. |