The student opportunities for AIDS/HIV research program: promoting public health leadership and transformation for undergraduate students through a principles-driven, cohort-based model
Gabriel Lee Johnson, Leah C. Neubauer, Heidi Bennett, Andrea Bolivar, Anna R. Kirkland, Gary W. Harper

TL;DR
The SOAR program trains underrepresented undergraduates in HIV research and leadership using a feminist, cohort-based model, leading to high success rates in advanced education and public health careers.
Contribution
A novel cohort-based, feminist model for training underrepresented undergraduates in HIV research and public health leadership.
Findings
90% of SOAR graduates matriculate into advanced degree programs.
SOAR scholars have co-authored 32 peer-reviewed articles and delivered over 80 conference presentations.
The program is grounded in critical feminist values and transformative education principles.
Abstract
Undergraduate public health degrees have grown over 1,100% over the past 20 years, not including interdisciplinary scholars who are interested and do not major in the field, marking an opportunity for proactive public health leadership in this burgeoning group of people with potential futures as public health leaders. The Students Opportunities for AIDS/HIV Research Program (SOAR) is a 2-year program funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), providing research training and leadership development to historically underrepresented college undergraduates as formerly defined by NIMH. SOAR prepares students for a future as interdisciplinary HIV researchers and leaders in diverse disciplines, including public health. Rooted in critical feminist values and utilizing a cohort model, a high impact practice (HIP; Opacich), SOAR demonstrates tremendous potential for developing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCareer Development and Diversity · Youth Education and Societal Dynamics · Mentoring and Academic Development
