State

Institution

Amount (est)

Project Leader (PI)

Arizona

Arizona State University, Tempe

$1,397,825-3 yrs

B. Ramakrishna

California

San Francisco State Univ.

$1,500,000-3 yrs

John Stubbs

Colorado

U of Northern Colorado, Greeley

$1,409,010-3 yrs

John Moore

Georgia (2)

GA Tech Res Corp-GIT

$1,496,635-3 yrs

Donna Llewellyn

GA State U Res Fdn, Inc.

$1,187,565-3 yrs

Barbara Baumstark

Illinois (2)

Illinois State University, Norman

$1,343,560-3 yrs

Cynthia Moore

Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

$1,499,768-3 yrs

Eric Jakobsson

Maine

Univ. of Southern Maine, Portland

$805,170-3 yrs

Samuel Duboise

Maryland

Univ. of MD, College Park

$927,086-3 yrs

Ellen Williams

Massachusetts

Harvard University

$1,140,000-3 yrs

John Hutchinson

Missouri

Southwest Missouri State U

$961,721-3 yrs

Tamera Jahnke

Nebraska

Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln

$1,442,817-3 yrs

Diandra Leslie-Pelecky

New Jersey

Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick

$952,908-3 yrs

Jeffrey Kidder

New York (2)

SUNY Binghamton

$1,161,486-3 yrs

Nancy Stamp

Columbia University

$1,434,272-3 yrs

Jack McGourty

North Dakota

North Dakota State Univ. Fargo

$971,556-3 yrs

Dogan Comez

Ohio

University of Akron

$1,169,324-3 yrs

Peter Niewiarowski

Oklahoma (2)

U of Oklahoma, Norman

$1,490,010-3 yrs

Anant Kukreti

U of Oklahoma, Norman

$1,102,538-3 yrs

Michael Mooney

Puerto Rico

U of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez

$1,465,956-3 yrs

Juan Lopez-Garriga

South Carolina (2)

Clemson University

$1,275,043-3 yrs

John Leudeman

Univ. of SC, Columbia

$1,099,192-3 yrs

Jed Lyons

Texas

Baylor College of Medicine

$624,815-3 yrs

Nancy Moreno

Virginia

Virginia Commonwealth Univ.

$1,499,999-3 yrs

William Haver

Washington

Univ. of Washington, Seattle

$1,476,702-3 yrs

Loyce Adams


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New Wave of Graduate Students to Enrich K-12 Classrooms

A second wave of partnerships between universities and local K-12 school districts will form as graduate and advanced undergraduate students enter the classroom to teach their younger peers.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded $30 million in 25 new grants under an innovative educational program enabling approximately 300 talented graduate and advanced undergraduate students in science, mathematics, engineering and technology to serve as teaching fellows in K-12 schools. The grants, from NSF's Graduate Teaching Fellows in K-12 Education (GK-12) program, will go to institutions in 19 states from Maine to California, as well as Puerto Rico.

"Researchers need to bring their expertise and enthusiasm out of the laboratory and into the classroom," says Rita Colwell, NSF director. "The GK-12 program creates partnerships across the academic community that benefit research and education at every level."

The second round of multi-year awards was made after reviewing 90 proposals from institutions nationwide. Planned as a pilot effort in 1999, the GK-12 program received positive responses from colleges and universities, as well as from elementary and secondary schools. These new awards will significantly expand the program nationwide.

"The GK-12 program has been a springboard for learning opportunities throughout San Diego County," says Nancy Taylor, director of the PISCES Project--established in the first wave of the awards. "Our elementary students want to know if their scientist is coming again today, our teachers are improving practice and gaining content knowledge, and our GK-12 fellows are becoming better communicators. Parents are especially enthusiastic about the science learning that their children are experiencing."

Under GK-12, institutions are responsible for recruiting the teaching fellows from their campus science, mathematics and engineering departments. Graduate students in the program receive annual stipends of $18,000, plus a cost-of-education allowance. Undergraduate students will receive as much as $5,000 per academic year, plus up to an additional $5,000 for service during the summer.

Attachment: List of Year 2000 GK-12 awards

Attachment

GK-12 Awards For Teaching Fellows



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