Nature
of Student Activities
The DRC-REU Program
will consist of an intensive nine-week Summer Research Institute
(SRI). The SRI will provide students with theoretical and methodological
education under the guidance of the senior faculty mentors.
During this time period, students will be exposed to a variety
of research and professional development activities which will
contribute to strengthening the students' social science background
and provide the basic foundations to prepare them to enter a
graduate program. The nine-week SRI consists of six (6) core
modules and a series of social and cultural activities, as follows:
- An intensive course
module on the social science aspects of disasters (Weeks 2-5).
The primary objective of this module is to provide an introduction
to the field of disaster studies and to highlight the importance
and contributions of a social science perspective.
- A research methods
module focusing on research techniques, methodology, and procedures
most often used in disaster research (Weeks 2-5)
- A faculty research
project module, which will include presentations and discussions
by DRC researchers and mentors on their current and on-going
research projects (Week 1).
- A research ethics
module emphasizing the importance of the ethical implications
of disaster research and ethical issues in social science
research (Week 2)
- An academic, research,
and professional development module with two types of workshops:
a workshop on the development of research and technical skills
and a workshop on professional development. As part of the
trainees' professional development and immersion into disaster
research, students will attend the University of Colorado's
Natural Hazards Research Center's annual Hazards Research
and Application Workshop in Boulder Colorado (Weeks 2
to 7).
- An Invited Speaker
Series with presentations by leading scholars in the disaster
field (Weeks 2-6)
- Social
and Cultural Activities. A number of social and cultural activities
(including an annual opening/welcome reception and field trips
to Baltimore, New York City, Philadelphia or Washington DC)
will take place in order to enhance students' professional
development, provide opportunities for networking with faculty
and administrators, and allow students to develop a sense
of cohesion and to promote the development of a cohort experience
(Weeks 1-9).
REU trainees will
carryout their research projects under the guidance of a mentor.
REU trainees will begin working on the development of their
research projects in Week Two of the program. As time proceeds,
students will devote more time to hands-on research work. During
the last four to five weeks of the summer training experience,
students will be primarily working on their research projects
under the guidance of their faculty mentors. Table 1 shows the
proposed activities for a “typical” week for an
REU trainee during the SRI.
A
“Typical” WEEK |
Activities
|
Monday-Thursday
|
|
8:00-9:00
|
Breakfast
|
9:00-10:15
|
Research
Methods Module (Weeks 2 to 5) |
10:15-10:30
|
Break
|
10:30-12
:00 |
Module
course on the social science aspects of disasters (Weeks
2 to 5) |
12:00-1:00
|
Lunch
|
1:00-2:00
|
Academic,
research, and professional development module workshops
(Weeks 2 to 7) |
2:00-3:00
|
Individual
meetings with faculty mentors and principal investigators
|
3:00-5:00
|
Hands-on/Independent
research work under guidance of faculty mentors |
Friday
|
1st
two Fridays: discuss possible research topics
Fridays 3-5: Independent work
|
|