
2000 From: Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Howard Hughes Medical Institute awards $50.3 million to enrich undergraduate biological sciences educationCHEVY CHASE, Md., July 6, 2000-Fifty-three colleges and universities in 22 states and Puerto Rico will receive $50.3 million in awards for undergraduate biological sciences education. The four-year grants come from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), the nation's largest private supporter of science education from elementary school through postdoctoral studies. Ranging from $700,000 to $1.7 million, the new undergraduate awards are designed to help institutions that grant bachelor's and master's degrees respond to a recent surge in enrollments in the biological sciences, as well as to the rapid advances in molecular biology, genetics and related life sciences. HHMI grants will enable colleges to expand and update laboratories, recruit new faculty members and provide research opportunities for undergraduates, including women and members of minority groups underrepresented in science. The awards support education programs that reflect the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of science and research, the central role that computers will play in post-genomic biology, and the growing need for biology majors to consider careers other than research, such as teaching science at the elementary or high school level. The grants will help colleges develop educational programs in the "new biology," which includes increased use of computers, sophisticated data analysis and the integration of biology and mathematics for studying molecular and cellular processes. Many colleges also will use their awards to create interdisciplinary programs linking biology and chemistry, physics and other fields of increasing importance to biologists. For example: - Canisius, Harvey Mudd, Haverford, Kenyon and Occidental Colleges are developing new courses and hiring new faculty to add bioinformatics , bioengineering or computational biology to the undergraduate life sciences curriculum.
- Bates College, City University of New York Hunter College, Morehouse College and the University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez Campus will focus on attracting biology majors to science teaching and upgrading the knowledge and laboratory skills of existing teachers through outreach programs to their communities.
- Murray State University, Santa Clara University, Spelman College and Williams College will provide a variety of research opportunities for undergraduates, both on and off campus.
"The colleges and universities receiving these grants contribute greatly to the education of both scientists and nonscientists," said HHMI President Thomas R. Cech. "These grants will help them do what they do best-providing undergraduate research opportunities and building bridges between the sciences and the humanities. I expect that these programs will serve as models for other undergraduate institutions." HHMI invited 224 colleges and universities to submit proposals. An external panel of distinguished scientists and educators reviewed the 204 proposals received. This is the fifth time that HHMI has awarded undergraduate science education grants to baccalaureate and master's degree-granting institutions. Four other competitions have made awards to research and doctoral-level universities to strengthen their undergraduate biological sciences programs. The latest round of grants brings to $476 million the total awarded to 232 colleges and universities in 47 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico since HHMI's Undergraduate Biological Sciences Education Program began in 1988. The undergraduate program is the largest of HHMI's grants initiatives. Among its accomplishments: - Approximately 40,000 students have received Institute support for undergraduate research.
- Roughly 52,000 precollege teachers and 140,000 elementary and secondary school students have participated in science outreach programs supported by undergraduate grants.
- More than 6,700 new science courses have been developed.
- Over 270 new faculty in a variety of science disciplines have been appointed.
- Many colleges and universities have been helped to broaden access to science for women and minorities who are underrepresented in the sciences.
"Biology and technology are moving forward at an incredible rate," said Joseph G. Perpich, HHMI vice president for grants and special programs. "These grants build on previous HHMI awards to help ensure that the coming generation of scientists and educators will be able to tap the enormous potential of the Web, genomic databases, and other technological advances in biological research and teaching. These grants will help bring the extraordinary excitement of today's biology to undergraduates."
Institution City, State Award Amount Amherst College Amherst, MA $ 700,000 Barnard College New York, NY $ 1,100,000 Bates College Lewiston, ME $ 1,300,000 Beloit College Beloit, WI $ 1,000,000 Benedictine University Lisle, IL $ 900,000 Bowdoin College Brunswick, ME $ 800,000 California State University Long Beach Long Beach, CA $ 1,600,000 Calvin College Grand Rapids, MI $ 700,000 Canisius College Buffalo, NY $ 900,000 Carleton College Northfield, MN $ 900,000 City University of New York Hunter College New York, NY $ 1,300,000 Colby College Waterville, ME $ 800,000 Colgate University Hamilton, NY $ 700,000 Colorado College Colorado Springs, CO $ 1,000,000 Connecticut College New London, CT $ 1,100,000 Denison University Granville, OH $ 700,000 Dickinson College Carlisle, PA $ 900,000 Earlham College Richmond, IN $ 1,100,000 East Tennessee State University Johnson City, TN $ 700,000 Florida A & M University Tallahassee, FL $ 700,000 Franklin and Marshall College Lancaster, PA $ 700,000 Grinnell College Grinnell, IA $ 900,000 Hampshire College Amherst, MA $ 1,000,000 Harvey Mudd College Claremont, CA $ 1,500,000 Haverford College Haverford, PA $ 1,700,000 Humboldt State University Arcata, CA $ 700,000 Kalamazoo College Kalamazoo, MI $ 800,000 Kenyon College Gambier, OH $ 700,000 Macalester College St. Paul, MN $ 800,000 Manhattan College Bronx, NY $ 900,000 Morehouse College Atlanta, GA $ 700,000 Mount Holyoke College South Hadley, MA $ 1,000,000 Murray State University Murray, KY $ 1,500,000 Nebraska Wesleyan University Lincoln, NE $ 1,100,000 Occidental College Los Angeles, CA $ 900,000 Institution Reed College City, State Portland, OR Award Amount $ 1,000,000 Saint Olaf College Northfield, MN $ 700,000 Santa Clara University Santa Clara, CA $ 800,000 Smith College Northampton, MA $ 800,000 Spelman College Atlanta, GA $ 1,000,000 St. Johns College Annapolis, MD $ 800,000 Swarthmore College Swarthmore, PA $ 700,000 Tuskegee University Tuskegee, AL $ 700,000 University of Louisiana at Monroe Monroe, LA $ 1,500,000 University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez Campus Mayaguez, PR $ 900,000 University of the South Sewanee, TN $ 700,000 Ursinus College Collegeville, PA $ 800,000 Vassar College Poughkeepsie, NY $ 1,300,000 Washington and Jefferson College Washington, PA $ 700,000 Wellesley College Wellesley, MA $ 900,000 Wesleyan University Middletown, CT $ 900,000 Williams College Williamstown, MA $ 800,000 Xavier University of Louisiana New Orleans, LA $ 1,500,000 Total $ 50,300,000 HHMI's grants program supports science education in the United States and a select group of researchers in other countries, complementing its principal mission: the conduct of research in cell biology, computational biology, genetics, immunology, neuroscience and structural biology with its own scientific teams. About 350 investigators are employed in HHMI laboratories at 72 academic medical centers and research institutions across the United States. Altogether, the Institute has awarded more than $850 million in grants, primarily to enhance science education from preschool through postdoctoral studies. Additional information is available at http://www.hhmi.org .
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