October 29, 2020

Hello Engineering Researchers,

Apologies – I botched the communication on this limited submission opportunity.

PLEASE NOTE: Only ONE applicant from the College of Engineering will be accepted by the Office of Research.

To that end, all faculty who wish to nominate a student (who “must be low-income, academically talented student with unmet financial need who is enrolled in an associate, baccalaureate or graduate degree program, with a major in an S-STEM eligible discipline” ) – please send the nomination (per instructions below –  1. a one-page letter of intent with a description of proposed aims and approach  and 2. CV – not NIH format – of the PI) to ME ( rrooney@uw.edu )  – by November 30th.

The panel of experts Jihui has selected will review and rank the nominations and decide which one will be forwarded to the Office of Research. We will let you know our decision no later than December 3rd. Again – the Deadline to me is November 30th –

If you have any further questions please let me know; sorry I dropped the ball on this the 1st time through.

–          Becky

REBECCA ROONEY / Director of Research, UW College of Engineering / 206.685.2522 / rrooney@uw.edu

HERE ARE THE OPPORTUNITY DETAILS:

Sponsor: NSF

Program: NSF Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (S-STEM)

www.nsf.gov/pubs/2020/nsf20526/nsf20526.htm

Program number: NSF 20-526

Number of applications UW can put forward: 1 from each constituent school or college that awards degrees in an S-STEM eligible discipline.

COE DEADLINE TO SEND NOMINATION TO BECKY: NOVEMBER 30th, 2020

OR internal deadline: is 12/3/20

OSP deadline: 3/22/21

Sponsor deadline: 3/31/21

Program Description

A well-educated science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workforce is a significant contributor to maintaining the competitiveness of the U.S. in the global economy. The National Science Foundation (NSF) Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (S-STEM) program addresses the need for a high quality STEM workforce in STEM disciplines supported by the program and for the increased success of low-income academically talented students with demonstrated financial need who are pursuing associate, baccalaureate, or graduate degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM).

Recognizing that financial aid alone cannot increase retention and graduation in STEM, the program provides awards to Institutions of Higher Education (IHEs) to fund scholarships and to advance the adaptation, implementation, and study of effective evidence-based curricular and co-curricular activities that support recruitment, retention, transfer (if appropriate), student success, academic/career pathways, and graduation in STEM. The S-STEM program encourages collaborations among different types of participating groups, including but not limited to partnerships among different types of institutions; collaborations of STEM faculty and institutional, educational, and social science researchers; and partnerships among institutions of higher education and business, industry, local community organizations, national labs, or other federal or state government organizations, if appropriate.

The program seeks to 1) increase the number of low-income academically talented students with demonstrated financial need obtaining degrees in S-STEM eligible disciplines and entering the workforce or graduate programs in STEM; 2) improve the education of future scientists, engineers, and technicians, with a focus on low-income academically talented students with demonstrated financial need; and 3) generate knowledge to advance understanding of how interventions or evidence-based curricular and co-curricular activities affect the success, retention, transfer, academic/career pathways, and graduation of low-income students in STEM.

Scholars must be low-income, academically talented students with unmet financial need who are enrolled in an associate, baccalaureate or graduate degree program, with a major in an S-STEM eligible discipline.

Pre-proposal instructions

Please submit:

  1. a one-page letter of intent with a description of proposed aims and approach
  2. CV (not NIH format)  of the PI

to research@uw.edu by 5:00 PM Thursday, December 3, 2020. Proposals are due to the 3/31/21, so you will need to have your materials in to the Office of Sponsored Programs by 3/22/21 for processing, if given the go ahead by the Proposal Review Committee. Other open limited submissions opportunities, as well as the internal proposal review committee review and selection process outline, are here: www.uw.edu/research/funding/limited-submissions/.  Please feel free to email us at research@uw.edu with questions or information on any limited submission opportunities that should be but are not already listed on that page.