Press ReleaseEmbargoed until: 2:00 P.M., EDT NSF PR 99-48 - August 4, 1999This material is available primarily for archival purposes. Telephone numbers or other contact information may be out of date; please see current contact information at media contacts. NSF Generates "New Breed" of Scientist & EngineerNature does not align itself neatly into the pigeonholes of biology, chemistry, math, physics or engineering. Rather, the natural world crisscrosses disciplinary boundaries with complex abandon. And as our body of knowledge of this complexity increases, so does the requirement for a higher threshold of scientific competency and greater interdisciplinary skill among researchers and educators. Today, the National Science Foundation (NSF) announced Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) awards to 21 doctorategranting institutions, totaling $54.5 million over five years, specifically to stimulate and cultivate more well-rounded scientists and engineers with greater interdisciplinary competence. "NSF has long recognized the demand for a high level of crossdisciplinary knowledge and expertise and is cultivating a 'new breed' of scientist and engineer through the IGERT program," said NSF’s Assistant Director for Education and Human Resources, Luther S. Williams. This is the second year for these NSF training grants. Their intent is to produce scientists and engineers who are well-prepared for a broad spectrum of emerging career opportunities in industry, government and academe. IGERT allows students an in-depth, multidisciplinary education through coursework and research experience. A high priority is placed on students' communication and teamwork skills, international awareness, experience with modern instrumentation and responsible conduct of research. Rita Colwell, NSF director, says that the IGERT program is generating a culture change and new perspectives, for both students and faculty, on the role of researchers and their career opportunities. "The interdisciplinary programs, and student internships in industry, government and abroad, provide new opportunities for students, faculty and institutions," Colwell told IGERT grantees at a recent meeting at NSF. "By building on the strengths of different departments and institutions, we are making graduate education more useful to students and more responsive to national needs," she said. "IGERT is the first program to integrate education and research at the graduate level," Williams said. In 1998, the National Science Board recommended changes to the federal government-university partnership in graduate education, including tightening the integration of research and education, in part, to broaden the career options of graduates to extend beyond traditional academic positions. The National Academy of Science’s Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP), also recommended repairing the "misalignment" between how graduate students are trained and what employers seek. COSEPUP's 1995 report, Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers, also recommended that communication and teamwork skills, multidisciplinary and applied research experience, and adaptability, be essential elements in training. Graduate students supported under IGERT will be exposed to multidisciplinary graduate programsdeveloped by the awardee institutionsin emerging areas of science and engineering, areas that percolate through traditional boundaries and unite faculty from several departments or institutions. Supported projects are based upon a multidisciplinary research theme and are organized around a diverse group of investigators. The projects will also offer experiences relevant to both academic and nonacademic careers by linking graduate research with research in industry, national laboratories and other non-academic settings. All NSF directorates are participating in support of the IGERT program, as well as NSF's Office of Polar Programs and the EPSCoR (Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research) program office. Attachment: List of Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training Grants Editors: For more details about IGERT see: http://www.nsf.gov/igert/ Attachment Integrative Graduate Education & Research Training Grants (1999)This listing of the second round of IGERT awards includes award number, principal investigator, institution, and title. Abstracts can be accessed by award number on the world-wide web at: http://www.nsf.gov/verity/srchawdf.htm | NSF Award # | Investigator | Institution | 9972804
Nanostructural Materials and Devices
www.sci.ccny.cuny.edu/~casi/igert
(Media contact Charles DeCicco: 212-650-7577, [email protected])
City Univ. of New York
9972759
Biogeochemical Research Initiative for Education
www.essc.psu.edu/BRIE
(Media contact Andrea Messer: 814-865-9481, [email protected])
Pennsylvania State Univ.
Multidisciplinary Training Program in Computational Analysis of Social and Organizational Systems
www.ices.cmu.edu/casos
(Media contact Teresa Thomas: 412-268-3580, [email protected])Variable Speed Electromechanical Drive Systems
www.ece.umr.edu/~igert
(Media contact Andrew Careaga: 573-341-4183, [email protected])Molecularly Designed Electronic, Photonic, and Nanostructural Materials
www.umich.edu/~mater/igert.html
(Media contact Sally Pobojewski: 734-647-1844, [email protected])Education and Research Training in Structure and Function of Complex Biological Systems
www.cbs.montana.edu
(Media contact Annette Stevens: 406-994-5607, [email protected])Science and Engineering of Laser Interactions With Matter
www.virginia.edu/chem/IGERT/SELIM/
(Media contact Fariss Samarrai: 804-924-3778, [email protected])Quantitative Approaches to Neuroscience: From Molecules to Behavior
www.bio.brandeis.edu/IGERT
(Media contact Steve Bradt: 781-736-4203, [email protected])Nanophases in the Environment, Agriculture, and Technology
mri.ucdavis.edu/IGERT/igert.htm
(Media contact Sylvia Wright: 530-752-7704, [email protected])Program in Integrative Computer and Application Sciences
www.cs.princeton.edu/picasso
(Media contact Steve Schultz: 609-258-5729, [email protected])Training Program on Therapeutic and Diagnostic Devices
BME.www.ecn.purdue.edu/BME/PTDD/
(Media contact Emil Venere: 765-494-2096, [email protected])Integrative Education of the Next Generation of Environmental Scientists and Engineers
www.cmer.wsu.edu
(Media contact Nancy Hilliard: 509-335-5095, [email protected])Integrated Training in the Evolution of Development
evodevo.uoregon.edu
(Media contact Ross West: 541-346-2060, [email protected])Training Program in Neuro-mechanical Systems
(Media contact Susan Griffith: 216-368-1004, [email protected])Electronic Education, High Performance Miniaturized Electronic Devices
www.uark.edu/depts/microep
(Media contact Allison Hogge: 501-575-5555, [email protected])Problem-centered Research Training: Integrating Formal and Empirical Methods in the Cognitive Science of Language
www.cog.jhu.edu/IGERT
(Media contact Dennis O’Shea: 410-516-7109, [email protected])Biosphere-Atmosphere Research and Training
www.wmich.edu/bart
(Media contact Sally Pobojewski: 734-647-1844, [email protected])NeuroEngineering Training Program
www.medsch.ucla.edu/som/bri/neuroeng.htm
(Media contact Warren Robak: 310-794-2271, [email protected])Computational Molecular Biology Training Group
www.grad-college.iastate.edu/bioinformatics
(Media contact Skip Derra: 515-294-4917, [email protected])Freshwater Graduate Studies Integrating Ecology, Hydrology, and Geochemistry in Regions With Contrasting Climates
www.as.ua.edu/IGERT
(Media contact Cathy Andreen: 205-348-8322, [email protected])Training Program in Manufacturing Logistics
www.lehigh.edu/~inime/igert
(Media contact Kurt Pfitzer: 610-758-3017, [email protected])National Science Foundation
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