Thursday, August 21, 2014

NSF Announces $18M in Funding for ThreeRegional Science and Engineering Partnerships


The National Science Foundation (NSF) recently announced funding for three science and engineering research groups that will build regional partnerships in Nebraska-Kansas, Arkansas-Missouri, and Louisiana-Mississippi.  Each of these partnerships will receive Research Infrastructure Improvement (RII) Track-2 awards of up to $6 million through NSF's Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR). This program establishes regional partnerships with government, higher education, and industry to improve state and regional research infrastructure, and research and development capacity, as well as academic competitiveness. Adult education providers, including community colleges, the workforce community, ED’s federal partners, and others may wish to explore these partnership activities for potential application to their own work.
According to the announcement, these awards will fund researchers from 20 universities over a three-year period to undertake nationally significant scientific challenges. Each group will implement region-specific activities “for developing a scientifically literate workforce and broadening participation of underrepresented groups in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).” According to Denise Barnes, head of EPSCoR, “These consortia will spur technological innovations that drive economic growth and develop a diverse STEM-enabled workforce." 
Following are brief descriptions of the work that the three teams will be doing:
Nebraska-Kansas: Areas of study for this consortium will be laser technology and atomic, molecular, and optical research. Education, outreach, and workforce development activities will involve partnerships with small colleges in those states, summer workshops for high school physics teachers, and several student programs.
Louisiana-Mississippi: This group will focus on developing “new experimental and computational tools” to develop polymers for “medicine and material science.” It will work to strengthen regional economic competitiveness by building a diverse STEM workforce.
Arkansas-Missouri: This consortium “will promote STEM education and workforce development through training activities for teachers, undergraduate and graduate students, and faculty members.” Their research will focus on plant science for “food security and agricultural sustainability.”
Please visit NSF’s EPSCoR website for more detailed information on these funding partnerships as well as state team and NSF program contact information.

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