CVMBS FY20 Annual Report

Page 14

VETERINARY EDUCATION, RESEARCH, & OUTREACH (VERO) In 2009, the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVMBS) began discussions to form a partnership with West Texas A&M University (WT) to recruit and mentor young people in the region seeking careers in veterinary medicine and to serve the livestock industries and the veterinary profession through teaching, research, and outreach programs.

West Texas A&M University

Tarleton State In 2015, the Texas A&M University System (TAMUS) announced University partnerships to expand veterinary education, research, and outreach into several regions of the state through four TAMUS Texas A&M universities. These partnerships are between the CVMBS and University WT, Prairie View A&M University, Texas A&M University–Kingsville, and Tarleton State University. These partnerships provide the Prairie View A&M expertise, leadership, and resources to meet the demand for veterinarians University throughout our state, while serving rural and urban areas, protecting our food supply, doing research that matters, providing cost-effective educational Texas A&M Universityand clinical services, and supporting a strong Texas economy. Kingsville These TAMUS universities, all within one hour of underserved areas of veterinary medicine and each has a unique livestock focus. Memorandum of Agreement (MOAs) signed with all four universities to admit up to five students from each into the veterinary curriculum each year to enhance rural and livestock veterinary medicine and diversity. The partnership with WT is the first of these to be developed, and it’s already producing results. Through the WT pipeline program, 27 West Texas A&M University students have recently entered veterinary school. In addition, WT is one of the largest producers of veterinary students in Texas, apart from Texas A&M. The Texas A&M Food Animal Track is also producing results and transforming veterinary education by producing more rural veterinarians.

TAMUS has invested substantially in veterinary education. • TAMUS invested $120 million for a new 2016, state-of-the-art Veterinary & Biomedical Education Complex (VBEC) to accommodate the needs of Texas for years to come, to support the best, most modern veterinary education in the nation. • The $22-million, 34,000 square-foot Veterinary Education, Research & Outreach (VERO) facility on the WT campus is complete and the first 2+2 class is scheduled to start in the Fall 2021. • To date, approximately $90 million has been invested in the Texas Panhandle on the WT campus to support WT agriculture programs, CVMBS veterinary education, the livestock industries, the veterinary profession, local communities, and the economic well-being of the region.

WT and the Texas A&M VERO have received a four-year, $243,500 grant from the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). • Project director Dr. Dee Griffin and co-director Dr. Dan Posey, both CVMBS faculty, relocated to WT to serve as founding faculty for the partnership between the CVMBS and WT. This funding will be used to support seven veterinary-centered programs, including: • Developing fourth-year student rural clinical training externships; • Developing summer working internships for students finishing their first or second years; • Supporting food animal student mentoring for those interested in food animal practice; • Supporting an annual rural practice and livestock operations tour for selected third-year students; • Practicing sustainability workshops for Texas Panhandle & Plains (TPH&P) rural veterinarians, including training for mentoring veterinary students and improved community communication skills; • Aggressively recruiting qualified students with rural backgrounds; and • Recruiting outstanding rural students from 4-H and FFA programs to consider a veterinary career. Rural TPH&HP areas have significant, capturable veterinary opportunities. The organization and necessary collaborative partnerships are in place at WT through VERO to achieve funding objectives, and for several to become self-sustaining. 14 • 2020 CVMBS Annual Report


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FUNDING PRIORITIES

2min
page 58

CVMBS COMMUNICATIONS

2min
page 51

PARTNERSHIP FOR ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION & RURAL HEALTH

1min
page 52

EQUINE INITIATIVE

1min
page 55

TRANSLATIONAL IMAGING CENTER (TIC

1min
page 54

CENTER FOR EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGIES (CET

1min
page 50

SUPERFUND RESEARCH CENTER

2min
page 49

INTERDISCIPLINARY FACULTY OF TOXICOLOGY (IFT

4min
pages 47-48

VETERINARY EMERGENCY TEAM (VET

3min
pages 43-44

INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS & STUDY ABROAD

4min
pages 45-46

SMALL ANIMAL CLINICAL SCIENCES (VSCS

2min
page 38

SCHUBOT CENTER FOR AVIAN HEALTH

2min
page 42

LARGE ANIMAL CLINICAL SCIENCES (VLCS

3min
pages 36-37

VETERINARY PHYSIOLOGY & PHARMACOLOGY (VTPP

5min
pages 34-35

LEADING THE WAY IN GLOBAL ONE HEALTH

3min
pages 10-11

VETERINARY EDUCATION, RESEARCH, & OUTREACH (VERO

4min
pages 14-15

FACULTY

1min
page 28

COVID-19 AND THE TRANSITION TO ONLINE LEARNING

11min
pages 4-7

LEADING THE WAY IN VETERINARY INNOVATION

5min
pages 12-13

FROM THE DEAN

2min
page 3

VETERINARY PATHOBIOLOGY (VTPB

1min
page 33

VETERINARY INTEGRATIVE BIOSCIENCES (VIBS

2min
page 32
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