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- Training Program
- SEFMD
- (updated 8/04)
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- A committee of specific composition at an affiliated fair, high school
or institution that reviews research plans involving human subjects to
determine potential physical and/or psychological risk.
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- Required by federal law
- Required by the International Science and Engineering Fair Rules
- Required to evaluate potential physical or psychological risk of
research involving human subjects
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- Minimum of 3 members
- Must include:
- a science teacher;
- a school administrator;
- a psychologist, psychiatrist,
medical doctor, physician’s assistant, registered nurse, or
licensed social worker
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- Additional members are recommended.
- If the project is behavioral, one of the members must be a psychologist,
psychiatrist, or someone with human behavioral training.
- Neither the Adult Sponsor, the Qualified Scientist, nor the Designated
Supervisor who oversees a specific project is permitted to serve on the
IRB reviewing that project.
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- The IRB reviews and approves ALL research involving human subjects
BEFORE experimentation begins.
(This includes surveys, professional tests, questionnaires, and studies in which the researcher is
the subject of his/her own research.)
- The IRB determines the level of RISK involved in the project.
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- Research Plan (1A), including the Research Plan Attachment
- Approval Form (1B)
- Checklist for Adult Sponsor
- Copy of surveys, tests, etc., if applicable
- Human Subjects Form (4)
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- If more than minimal risk is involved, the student also needs the Qualified Scientist
Form (2), the Designated Supervisor Form (3), and consent from all
parti-cipants. (Form 4)
- If minimal risk is involved, consent from all parti-cipants (Form 4) is
“recommended, but not required.”
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- If research was conducted or equipment used in an institutional or
industrial setting at any time during the current project year,
Registered Research Institutional/Industrial Setting Form (1C) must be
completed.
- IRBs exist at federally registered institutions, including prisons, and
that institutional IRB must initially review and approve the research.
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- Exercise other than ordinarily encountered in daily life
- Emotional stress to questioning or activity or stress resulting from an
invasion of privacy
- Ingestion of and/or physical contact with any substance
- Any student 21 or under doing experimentation with toxic chemicals,
radiation, or known pathogens and carcinogens
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- Any member of a risk group (e.g., anyone with a disease, cardiac
disorder, pregnant women, etc.)
- Any member of special groups covered by federal regulations (e.g.,
Native Americans, prisoners, special needs persons, including the
disabled and gifted, children, economically or educationally
disadvantaged persons)
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- No more than minimal risk exists when the probability and magnitude of
harm or discomfort anticipated in the research are not greater (in and
of themselves) than those ordinarily encountered in DAILY LIFE or during
performance of routine physical or psychological examinations or tests.
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- Research conducted in established settings:
- Involving normal educational practices;
- Research on individual or group behavior or characteristics of
individuals, such as studies of perception, cognition, game theory, or
test development, where the investigator does not manipulate subjects’
behavior and the research will not involve stress to subject.
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- Research involving observation of legal public behavior.
- Research involving collection or study of existing publicly available
data.
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- IRB reads through all submitted paperwork
- IRB decides level of risk and checks appropriate box (Form 4)
- IRB states justification of waiver of informed consent, if applicable
- All IRB members sign and date Form 4 and return paperwork to student
- STUDENT MAY BEGIN PROJECT
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- Can a student use a different form for “informed consent”?
- NO. The only acceptable
alternative forms to the Human Subjects Form (4) are those provided by a
registered research institution.
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- If the student researcher anticipates more than “minimal risk”, can
he/she submit the additional required forms to the IRB prior to
approval?
- YES!
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- If a student changes his/her project after it has been approved by the
IRB, does it need to be approved again?
- YES! Any proposed changes must
have subsequent IRB approval before such changes are made and before
experimentation resumes.
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- Sept/Oct – establish the school IRB committee
- Oct/Nov – students submit paperwork to the school IRB for approval;
student begins actual work on project
- Dec – students submit paperwork to the SEFMD SRC by SRC deadline for
verification of approval
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