Abstract
BackgroundGrant funding often drives innovative programming in efforts to enhance diversity in biomedical fields, yet strategies for sustainability of grant-funded biomedical intervention are not well understood. Additionally, as funding agencies shift toward supporting institutional change to biomedical training, less is known about the extent to which sustainability strategies can support long-term institutionalization of the original goals of the grant-funded initiative. The purpose of this study is twofold: to identify strategies used by grant-funded programs for promoting sustainability, and to examine the interrelations between the concepts of sustainability and institutionalization during early stages of grant-funded biomedical career training efforts.MethodsWe employed a multiple case study design and cross-case analysis using interviews of program administrators and participants from 10 undergraduate institutions that received Building Infrastructure Leading to Diversity (BUILD) awards funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).ResultsBUILD sites engaged in the following strategies to develop program sustainability: 1) scaling and adapting to expand programmatic impact, 2) identifying additional funding and cost-cutting measures, 3) developing and maintaining infrastructure and structural operations, 4) leveraging relationships and with intra-and inter-institutional partners, and 5) and addressing hiring, policies, and reward systems at the institution. Senior administrative support supported program sustainability and early institutionalization, although we also identified situations where participants felt that they were on track for sustainable changes without administrative support or institutional change. Of the strategies identified, those that involve organizational and infrastructural changes contribute to early stages of institutionalization.ConclusionsThis study contributes to literature on organizational change by providing evidence of distinctions and interrelations between program sustainability efforts and institutionalization of change efforts in that some sustainability strategies can overlap with strategies to move toward institutionalization. The findings indicate the importance of program administrators developing early sustainability plans that also lead to institutionalization, as well as an opportunity for funding agencies to develop technical assistance on sustainability, organizational change, and institutionalization as a resource to support program administrators’ efforts toward making lasting, structural change on their campuses.
Highlights
Grant funding often drives innovation in higher education, allowing initial project planning, pilot testing, and implementation of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) program interventions [1, 2]
We found that Building Infrastructure Leading to Diversity (BUILD) sites actively engaged in developing program sustainability by employing a combination of the following strategies 1) scaling and adapting to expand impact, 2) identifying additional funding and implementing cost-cutting measures, 3) developing and maintaining infrastructure and structural operations, 4) leveraging relationships with intra-and interinstitutional partners, and 5) addressing hiring, policies, and reward systems on campus
We captured a snapshot of the state of BUILD sites, during their third and fourth years of program implementation, prior to knowing whether or not they would receive a five-year renewal of National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding
Summary
Grant funding often drives innovation in higher education, allowing initial project planning, pilot testing, and implementation of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) program interventions [1, 2]. Grant funding often drives innovative programming in efforts to enhance diversity in biomedical fields, yet strategies for sustainability of grant-funded biomedical intervention are not well understood. As funding agencies shift toward supporting institutional change to biomedical training, less is known about the extent to which sustainability strategies can support long-term institutionalization of the original goals of the grantfunded initiative. The purpose of this study is twofold: to identify strategies used by grant-funded programs for promoting sustainability, and to examine the interrelations between the concepts of sustainability and institutionalization during early stages of grant-funded biomedical career training efforts
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