Duration
14h Th, 2h Mon. WS
Number of credits
| Doctoral training in veterinary sciences | 3 crédits |
Lecturer
Language(s) of instruction
French language
Organisation and examination
All year long
Schedule
Units courses prerequisite and corequisite
Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program
Learning unit contents
The end purpose of the doctoral training is the acquisition of specialist knowledge and skills that are required in veterinary medical research. To do so, it is absolutely necessary to master literacy research and scientific communication principles. The course aims to (i) render young researchers autonomous in their information search (literacy research methodology, selection of relevant data, and critical appraisal) and (ii) enable them to master scientific communication principles. It is important to note here that neither the analysis of statistical data nor the presentation of findings is taught in the course.
Learning outcomes of the learning unit
At the end of the training, students will be able to:
- carry out information search in an autonomous way (formulation of the request, choice and use of the appropriate search tools, access to primary documents);
- select relevant data through the analysis of information as it is advocated in the evidence-based medicine approach;
- apprehend scientific communication: process and stakes of scientific publishing, ethics, principles of scientific writing and oral scientific communication;
- synthesize and organize the information obtained ; understand and apply the rules of citations and bibliographical references in scientific writing.
Prerequisite knowledge and skills
There are no prerequisites, but a fairly good knowledge of scientific English and computer literacy are advantages.
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
The in-class course (14 hours) is organized in such a way that everybody can participate actively. Two hours of tutorials are organized at the end of the training to give students the opportunity to conduct specific research pertaining to their fields of research.
Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)
The course, depending on the evolution of the COVID-19 sanitary situation, starts in the first quarter (October 2020).
See « Learning Activities and Teaching Methods » section.
Organisational adjustments related to the current health context
Recommended or required readings
The course notes (Power Point slideshows of the theoretical course) are available on eCampus.
The reference books mentioned in the course notes are available in the Life Sciences library.
Assessment methods and criteria
Below you will find information on the evaluation methods planned for in-person and remote exams as well as those planned for hybrid sessions. Depending on how the health crisis evolves, the chosen method will be communicated to you no later than one month before the start of the exam session.
The assessment of the course is based on a written paper that is defended orally by the student on the date of his or her choice provided it is accepted by the course lecturer and in accordance with the academic calendar. The topic of the assignment is chosen freely but a template is imposed for the examination.
The purposes of the assignment are essentially to assess the student's ability to:
- make an information literacy instruction request in accordance with available tools;
- make references within a text and bibliographical references at the end of a paper following the instructions to authors of a given journal.
Work placement(s)
Organizational remarks
The course starts in October 2020.
Contacts
Sandrine Vandenput, DVM, PhD
ULiège Library | Health Sciences
Email : S.Vandenput@uliege.be
Please always use your ULiège email address when sending emails and mention the course code (VDOC0049) in the email object field.