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The two laboratory mini-projects conclude your MSc year and prepare you for your PhD projects. MD979 is the first one. Due to the highly inter-disciplinary nature of the IBR DTP, you have a great variety of choice for these projects. You will have an 11-week period for each of the two mini-project modules (MD979 and the subsequent MD980). Normally there would be one experimental biology project and one either theoretical biology project (e.g., bioinformatics, computational biology) or experimental project in chemistry, physics or engineering. The supervisor pool is accordingly expanded to include colleagues across the departments of the Faculty of Science in addition to WMS.
The projects will either be developed by the you together with an academic from the supervisor pool, or initially by the supervisors alone, who will submit projects directly to the mini-project call for presentation to the student cohort at a mini-project “fair”. You should be aware that all projects will first be vetted in the IBR DTP management team before inclusion in the course.
The modules Research Topics in Interdisciplinary Biomedical Research [MD978] and Laboratory Project 1 [MD979] are a pre-requisite for this module.
Students will undertake two laboratory projects in two different disciplines. In most cases, this will be a biology-focused project and one in either chemistry, physics, mathematics, engineering or computer science. If you are a student on the Quantitative Imaging programme, your projects should focus on imaging and image analysis. Projects can be undertaken in WMS or a department within the Faculty of Science at Warwick.
Students are encouraged to develop a project proposal together with a member of staff from the supervisor pool (www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/med/study/mrcdtp/supervisorsandprojects/). In addition, the supervisor pool will be invited to submit potential projects for consideration by the IBR DTP management committee. Projects will be reviewed for fit to the scientific brief and will be then offered to the students. The final choice of project will be made by the student in consultation with the MSc Director.
This course focuses on the development of analysis and integration strategies for mixed methods researchers. It follows on from the Mixed Methods Design course by introducing students to a range of mixed methods analysis approaches and techniques through seminar style presentations, hands on workshops and tutorials where students can work on their own mixed methods projects.