June 18, 2014

NIH Commons accounts required for students and post docs

The following are excerpts from then June 18, 2014 NIH eRA Items of Interest:

Undergraduate & Graduate Accounts in Commons

Is everyone getting younger?  Or am I just getting older?  Having passed the half century mark, I have become keenly aware that… I see young people.  And as eRA Commons has gotten older, it can be said that it, too, is starting to see young people.

Since August 15, 2013, the functionality to create accounts for students has been available.  However, as part of the NIH effort to improve data on the biomedical workforce (BMW), undergraduate and graduate students who participate in NIH-supported projects for at least one person-month of full-time work will eventually be required to have an eRA Commons account for reporti

Back in November of 2013, both the PHS 2590 Non-Competing Continuation Progress Report and Research Performance Progress Report (RPPR) started checking to see if graduate and undergraduate students' Commons User IDs were included in the report.  They aren’t quite mandatory at this point.  You will get a warning from the electronically submitted RPPR for students listed on the report, but who do not have a Commons name.

Starting in October 2014, Commons User IDs will be required for these students. NIH will not accept RPPRs or PHS 2590s that do not have this information.

For more information on Commons User IDs for students, read the August 2, 2013, Guide Notice and the Extramural Nexus article. As Dr. Rockey points out in her Nexus article, it will be critical for all students to create their personal profile in Commons as this information will eventually “reduce burden in the long run by pre-populating some reporting fields and forms.”  For more information on the Personal Profile, you can watch the Personal Profile Overview video.

I hope I get over this “seeing” thing soon, because every time I see the couple that lives a few doors down from me, I find it hard to believe they’re married… looks more like they should be getting ready for prom… junior prom (sigh).

 

Choose Carefully, IamDaBomb

Related to the article above, please remind undergraduate and graduate students that eRA Commons User IDs are for the life of their scientific career.  So while “IamDaBomb,” “WillDoubleHelix4U,” or “2MoreResearch” seem clever and witty now, in 5, 10, or 30 years it will create a kind of “face-palm” moment.

A Commons User ID should not be specific to their current institution, as in don’t use the student’s institution email address or have the institution initials as part of the ID.  Principle Investigators (PI) may be affiliated with multiple institutions over their career and having a user ID related to an institution they are no longer associated with can be confusing. Undergraduate and graduate students should work together with their Signing Official or Account Administrator (AA) to create a Commons User ID that will be professional, appropriate and can be saved for future reference.

Signing off, from “1B2B3” (and if you get that reference… well, you’re awesome!)

Joe Schumaker

eRA Communications

Division of Communications and Outreach

NIH Office of Extramural Research

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