Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019

The American Society for Microbiology (ASM) national conference, Microbe, is the flagship meeting for microbiologists across the globe. The presence of roughly 10,000 attendees provides enormous opportunities for networking and learning. However, such a large meeting can be intimidating to many, esp...

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Main Authors: Joseph B. James, Amanda L. Gunn, Denise M. Akob
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2020-01-01
Series:mSphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00643-19
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spelling doaj-51505040b84a417ab34af95bdb7439d62020-11-25T02:02:36ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSphere2379-50422020-01-0151e00643-1910.1128/mSphere.00643-19Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019Joseph B. JamesAmanda L. GunnDenise M. AkobThe American Society for Microbiology (ASM) national conference, Microbe, is the flagship meeting for microbiologists across the globe. The presence of roughly 10,000 attendees provides enormous opportunities for networking and learning. However, such a large meeting can be intimidating to many, especially early career scientists, students, those attending alone, and those from historically underrepresented groups.The American Society for Microbiology (ASM) national conference, Microbe, is the flagship meeting for microbiologists across the globe. The presence of roughly 10,000 attendees provides enormous opportunities for networking and learning. However, such a large meeting can be intimidating to many, especially early career scientists, students, those attending alone, and those from historically underrepresented groups. While mentorship is widely valued by ASM and its members, finding concrete ways to develop new and diverse mentoring opportunities can be a challenge. We recognized the need for an initiative aimed at expanding peer-to-peer mentoring, facilitating networking, and providing support for Microbe attendees; therefore, we created the program Binning Singletons for ASM Microbe 2019. The program consisted of five steps named after tools or phenomena in the profession of microbiology: (i) Identify the Singletons (e.g., individuals attending alone), (ii) Bin the Singletons, (iii) Horizontal Transfer, (iv) Quorum Sensing, and (v) Exponential Growth. These steps resulted in the matching of participants unsure of how to get the most out of their conference experience (e.g., singletons) with mentors who assisted with meeting planning, networking, and/or impostor syndrome. Started on social media only a month before ASM Microbe 2019, the program successfully launched despite limited time and resources. Binning Singletons improved inclusivity and networking opportunities for participants at the conference. Here, we discuss what worked, and what can be improved, with an eye toward development of the Binning Singletons model for future conferences to provide opportunities to increase inclusivity, networking, and accessibility for singletons and build a stronger scientific community.https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00643-19microbementoringnetworking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph B. James
Amanda L. Gunn
Denise M. Akob
spellingShingle Joseph B. James
Amanda L. Gunn
Denise M. Akob
Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019
mSphere
microbe
mentoring
networking
author_facet Joseph B. James
Amanda L. Gunn
Denise M. Akob
author_sort Joseph B. James
title Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019
title_short Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019
title_full Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019
title_fullStr Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019
title_full_unstemmed Binning Singletons: Mentoring through Networking at ASM Microbe 2019
title_sort binning singletons: mentoring through networking at asm microbe 2019
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSphere
issn 2379-5042
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The American Society for Microbiology (ASM) national conference, Microbe, is the flagship meeting for microbiologists across the globe. The presence of roughly 10,000 attendees provides enormous opportunities for networking and learning. However, such a large meeting can be intimidating to many, especially early career scientists, students, those attending alone, and those from historically underrepresented groups.The American Society for Microbiology (ASM) national conference, Microbe, is the flagship meeting for microbiologists across the globe. The presence of roughly 10,000 attendees provides enormous opportunities for networking and learning. However, such a large meeting can be intimidating to many, especially early career scientists, students, those attending alone, and those from historically underrepresented groups. While mentorship is widely valued by ASM and its members, finding concrete ways to develop new and diverse mentoring opportunities can be a challenge. We recognized the need for an initiative aimed at expanding peer-to-peer mentoring, facilitating networking, and providing support for Microbe attendees; therefore, we created the program Binning Singletons for ASM Microbe 2019. The program consisted of five steps named after tools or phenomena in the profession of microbiology: (i) Identify the Singletons (e.g., individuals attending alone), (ii) Bin the Singletons, (iii) Horizontal Transfer, (iv) Quorum Sensing, and (v) Exponential Growth. These steps resulted in the matching of participants unsure of how to get the most out of their conference experience (e.g., singletons) with mentors who assisted with meeting planning, networking, and/or impostor syndrome. Started on social media only a month before ASM Microbe 2019, the program successfully launched despite limited time and resources. Binning Singletons improved inclusivity and networking opportunities for participants at the conference. Here, we discuss what worked, and what can be improved, with an eye toward development of the Binning Singletons model for future conferences to provide opportunities to increase inclusivity, networking, and accessibility for singletons and build a stronger scientific community.
topic microbe
mentoring
networking
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00643-19
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