Sign up here!
How do I sign up?
You must sign up for each individual session by clicking the links under each session below and then choose “Going in Person. The full detailed schedule of sessions is listed below, including case studies to be discussed.
Who can earn the microcredential?
Open to all faculty, staff, undergraduate, and graduate students. While required of any individual receiving funding from NIH, anyone (faculty, staff, undergraduate or graduate student, postdoctoral research associate) can attend the in-person workshops and earn the microcredentials.
These in-person discussion-based workshops are required for any individual receiving funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including undergraduate students, graduate students, staff, postdocs, and faculty (see NIH guidance here). In order to meet NIH’s requirements for in-person RCR training, these workshops have been established as a series of microcredentials (also called “badges”) that lead to an overarching RCR “mega” credential. It should be noted that UMBC requires all graduate students completing a master’s thesis or doctoral degree, along with all postdoctoral research associates, to complete RCR training through either CITI or this new in-person RCR Microcredential Series. Undergraduates also have the option of earning Arts and Humanities credit by taking PHIL 359: Ethics, Integrity, and Scientific Research, which is offered every spring semester. Students enrolled in the class also have the option of earning the microcredentials.
How do I earn the microcredential?
Each workshop session below is associated with a topic-specific RCR microcredential, so participants earn a “badge” for each session attended. After attending all required sessions, an overarching RCR credential will be awarded. Attendance and active participation are required to receive a microcredential for each workshop (participants must scan the QR code provided at the end of the workshop using their phone). This process ensures full participation. After completing a workshop, participants will receive their microcredential/badge specific to that session. Once all workshops in the series have been completed, participants will be awarded certification of completion of RCR training, a “mega” credential signifying that they have fully met the NIH’s RCR training requirements.