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MSc students gain experience in scientific writing by co-authoring a paper on SARS-CoV-2

Press/Media: Newspaper Article

Description

Lancaster students studying in the Division of Biomedical and Life Sciences have had their work on SARS-CoV-2 published in a scientific journal.

Postgraduate students on the MSc Biomedicine and final year undergraduate students on the integrated MSci course co-authored the paper with their teacher Dr Muhammad Munir.

Dr Munir is the Module Organizer for Biol435 (Microbes and Disease) which is part of the MSc and MSci programmes. As part of the course, he divided the class into groups and each group was given an assignment. The work carried out by all students was then combined to produce the data for publication.

The resulting paper entitled “Structural Bases of Zoonotic and Zoo anthroponotic Transmission of SARS-CoV-2”is published in a special issue Emerging Zoonotic Viral Diseases of Viruses which has a 5.0+ impact factor (a matrix to assess the value of the work in the scientific community). 

Dr Munir said: “This scientific paper exemplifies research-led teaching in biomedicine and is a case study to demonstrate that research conducted by graduate students advances our understanding of how SARS-CoV-2 can jump from animal to human and human to animals. These finding are very valuable especially when SARS-CoV-2 is infecting many animal species and where it can persist even if it is eradicated from the human population.

“All the students are co-authors so this would add value to their CVs and job applications, and this is also timely due to its direct relevance to COVID-19.”

Period30/03/2022

Lancaster students studying in the Division of Biomedical and Life Sciences have had their work on SARS-CoV-2 published in a scientific journal.

Postgraduate students on the MSc Biomedicine and final year undergraduate students on the integrated MSci course co-authored the paper with their teacher Dr Muhammad Munir.

Dr Munir is the Module Organizer for Biol435 (Microbes and Disease) which is part of the MSc and MSci programmes. As part of the course, he divided the class into groups and each group was given an assignment. The work carried out by all students was then combined to produce the data for publication.

The resulting paper entitled “Structural Bases of Zoonotic and Zoo anthroponotic Transmission of SARS-CoV-2”is published in a special issue Emerging Zoonotic Viral Diseases of Viruses which has a 5.0+ impact factor (a matrix to assess the value of the work in the scientific community). 

Dr Munir said: “This scientific paper exemplifies research-led teaching in biomedicine and is a case study to demonstrate that research conducted by graduate students advances our understanding of how SARS-CoV-2 can jump from animal to human and human to animals. These finding are very valuable especially when SARS-CoV-2 is infecting many animal species and where it can persist even if it is eradicated from the human population.

“All the students are co-authors so this would add value to their CVs and job applications, and this is also timely due to its direct relevance to COVID-19.”

References

TitleMSc students gain experience in scientific writing by co-authoring a paper on SARS-CoV-2
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
Date30/03/22
DescriptionLancaster students studying in the Division of Biomedical and Life Sciences have had their work on SARS-CoV-2 published in a scientific journal.

Postgraduate students on the MSc Biomedicine and final year undergraduate students on the integrated MSci course co-authored the paper with their teacher Dr Muhammad Munir.

Dr Munir is the Module Organizer for Biol435 (Microbes and Disease) which is part of the MSc and MSci programmes. As part of the course, he divided the class into groups and each group was given an assignment. The work carried out by all students was then combined to produce the data for publication.

The resulting paper entitled “Structural Bases of Zoonotic and Zoo anthroponotic Transmission of SARS-CoV-2”is published in a special issue Emerging Zoonotic Viral Diseases of Viruses which has a 5.0+ impact factor (a matrix to assess the value of the work in the scientific community).
PersonsMuhammad Munir