PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Increasing the diversity of cancer researchers and clinicians is a key strategy for finding innovative cancer
control solutions and reducing cancer disparities. This Youth Enjoy Science Research Education (YES)
Program will increase the diversity of University of California San Diego (UCSD) graduates who are pursuing
graduate/professional training in the sciences. This YES Program is grounded on the Transformative Learning
Theory and UCSD's 16 years of experience conducting UCSD's successful CURE Program. This YES
Program will increase the number of women and underrepresented students from diverse scientific disciplines
who are prepared for graduate school admission, with a focus on addressing cancer and cancer disparities.
Specifically, YES students participate in classroom and laboratory learning activities that raise their
understanding of cancer and the nation's and the world's cancer disparities. Thus, cancer disparities and how
they are identified and resolved become the common theme that interconnects this YES Program's various
learning activities. Students approach the issues related to cancer disparities, from the perspective of their
individual laboratory training, classes and workshops, their own cultural backgrounds, community outreach
events they deploy, and their chosen academic and professional pathways. San Diego's three NCI-designated
cancer centers (UCSD, Salk Institute for Biological Studies, and Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery
Institute) invite the YES students to work and learn in the basic, behavioral, clinical and translational cancer
research labs of their top cancer researchers. In their labs and classrooms, the YES students gain a solid
understanding of cancer and the many bio-behavioral issues related to the development and exacerbation of
cancer disparities and the possible resolutions. With this information and their literature review, students learn
how to work on multidisciplinary teams as they develop programs to help reduce their community's cancer
morbidity and mortality rates. Through these activities, students learn that, throughout their lives, they can play
a role in reducing cancer disparities. To help YES students' reach their full academic, personal, and
professional potential, they are also offered supplementary learning experiences, e.g., public speaking, goal
setting and time management, writing, conducting literature search and synthesis skills, and experiences
presenting and discussing their research work with professional and lay audiences. Students also prepare and
submit abstracts to present their research findings at research symposia and national scientific meetings.
Mentoring of the YES Program students, continues throughout their time at UCSD and on to graduate school.
Thus, the premise of this YES program is that this learning opportunity will give the students hands-on
research experiences and skills that will help them to secure admission to graduate level STEM programs and
careers in cancer control research, always with a focus on reducing cancer disparities.