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PRESS RELEASE - June 17, 2018

BUILD EXITO Students in Portland
Three ASCC students and their faculty mentors attend the orientation in Portland, Oregon for BUILD EXITO, a program to promote careers for students interested in the field of research, particularly medical research. Standing are ASCC-ACNR faculity member Pauline McFall, current ASCC students Sherlean Amato, Chloe Tuaua, and Darius Shimasaki-Vaofanua, and ASCC faculty member Derek Helsham. In the foreground are Yean Ji Jung and Motutama Sipelii, two former ASCC students currently attending Portland State University as researchers. (Courtesy Photo)

ASCC Students in Portland
Three ASCC students and their faculty mentors attend the orientation in Portland, Oregon for BUILD EXITO, a program to promote careers for students interested in the field of research, particularly medical research. Standing are ASCC-ACNR faculity member Pauline McFall, current ASCC students Sherlean Amato, Chloe Tuaua, and Darius Shimasaki-Vaofanua, and ASCC faculty member Derek Helsham. In the foreground are Yean Ji Jung and Motutama Sipelii, two former ASCC students currently attending Portland State University as researchers. (Courtesy Photo)

Three ASCC Students Attend BUILD EXITO Orientation

June 17, 2018

By James Kneubuhl, ASCC Press Officer

Three American Samoa Community College (ASCC) students returned recently from a week-long orientation in Portland, Oregon for BUILD EXITO, a program designed to support undergraduate students interested in pursuing research careers in the biomedical, behavioral, clinical, health, and social sciences. The program is funded by the National Institute of Health (NIH). Students accepted to BUILD EXITO receive scholarships, stipends, mentoring, summer seminars, paid job experience engaging in hands-on research, and dedicated academic and financial aid advising, with these incentives increasing the longer they remain in the program.

Darius Maua Shimasaki-Vaofanua, Sherlean Amato, and Chloe Tuaua , the fourth BUILD EXITO cohort from ASCC, traveled to Portland with all expenses paid to attend the orientation.  Either in the coming fall 2018 semester or in spring 2019, the three will take an introduction to biomedical research class referred to as a "gateway course," designed to introduce beginning students to what a biomedical research career requires. Course learning outcomes include the values, skills, and attitude that a biomedical researcher should possess or develop.

The NIH BUILD initiative, funded through a $23.7 million research and training grant from the NIH, is part of a broad national strategy to develop new approaches that engage researchers, including those from backgrounds underrepresented in biomedical sciences, and prepare them to thrive in the NIH-funded workforce. Through the NIH funding, Portland State University (PSU) established the Enhancing Cross-disciplinary Infrastructure Training at Oregon (BUILD EXITO) program. PSU and Oregon Health & Science University serve as centers of innovation for creating biomedical research career pathways for undergraduates, and (in partnership) are one of ten national consortiums working to develop, implement, and evaluate approaches to encourage them.

After the summer orientation and during their gateway course, each selected student will be mentored by a third-year BUILD EXITO peer mentor from one of the four partner universities, which are PSU; the University of Alaska, Anchorage; the University of Hawaii at Manoa; or the University of Guam. Their mentor will guide them through the following year with any concerns they may have about the program. In addition, each student will also be paired with a paid career mentor from each partner institution in helping and advising each student on the path of a biomedical research career.

The goal of the program is that each student selected for BUILD EXITO from its partner institutions, including ASCC, will continue their interest in biomedical research and eventually transfer to one of the four partner universities listed above to pursue a biomedical research career. If they do, financial assistance and training that will be provided to them along the way may include a paid ($1200 stipend) one-month summer research intensive at PSU or one of the other three partner universities; in-state tuition at PSU discounted up to 60%; continued mentorship; a paid part-time biomedical research project; access to research grant funding, and other benefits.

ASCC began its partnership in the BUILD EXITO program in 2014, and since its implementation, a number of students from previous cohorts have continued on the path towards biomedical research careers. For more information on BUILD EXITO at ASCC, contact Health and Human Services Division instructor Mr. Derek Helsham by emailing d.helsham@amsamoa.edu.