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Uplink

KU Medical Center Helps Develop
the Next Generation of Medical
and Research Professionals

Words • Nancy Parks

The University of Kansas Medical Center is home to more than 2,500 staff members, including 273 research scientists in the new Kansas Life Sciences Innovation Center alone. But as KUMC’s reputation as a leading medical research, education and patient care center grows, so will the need for securing talented, well-educated professionals.

KU Medical Center participates in a number of programs that emphasize the importance of math, engineering, technology and science (METS) education. One of the newest initiatives is called Uplink, which is sponsored by the school-based mentoring program YouthFriends. Uplink places students in internships, business mentors in classrooms and teachers into paid summer jobs related to their education field.

One component of Uplink is TeacherTech, which places teachers in METS-related summer jobs with area employers. Raytown South High School science teacher Jenn Dolson spent her summer at KU Medical Center, working with KUMC doctors and researchers. She says she joined the Uplink program because she wanted to find ways to be a more effective biology teacher.

“If I couldn’t come up with new ways to teach and give my students the best science education possible, then I wouldn’t want to continue to be a teacher,” Dolson says. After spending her summer in a non-high school environment, she will be able to deal more authoritatively with the frequent “why do we have to