If you are interested in submitting a NSF 15-526 Improving Undergraduate STEM Education: Pathways into Geoscience (IUSE: GEOPATHS) proposal, please send an abstract of no more than three pages to esoto2@iit.edu by the internal deadline of Thursday, December 18 at noon. Please follow IIT’s guidelines for internal competitions available by clicking here.
- Institutional limit: 1
- Internal deadline: December 18 at noon
- Letter of Intent deadline (REQUIRED): January 5, 2015
- Full proposal deadline: Monday, March 16, 2015
SYNOPSIS OF PROGRAM
A well-prepared, innovative science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workforce is crucial to the nation’s health and economy. Indeed, recent policy actions and reports have drawn attention to the opportunities and challenges inherent in increasing the number of highly qualified STEM graduates, including STEM teachers. Priorities include educating students to be leaders and innovators in emerging and rapidly changing STEM fields as well as educating a scientifically literate populace. Both of these priorities depend on the nature and quality of the undergraduate education experience. In addressing these STEM challenges and priorities, the National Science Foundation invests in evidence-based and evidence-generating approaches to understanding STEM learning; to designing, testing, and studying instruction and curricular change; to widely disseminating and implementing best practices; and to broadening participation of individuals and institutions in STEM fields. The goals of these investments include increasing the number and diversity of STEM students, preparing students well to participate in science for tomorrow, and improving students’ STEM learning outcomes.
NSF’s Improving Undergraduate STEM Education (IUSE) initiative, launched in fiscal year 2014, supports a coherent set of investments to address immediate challenges and opportunities that are facing undergraduate STEM education, as well as those that anticipate new structures (e.g., organizational changes, new methods for certification or credentialing, course re-conception, cyberlearning, etc.) and new functions of the undergraduate learning and teaching enterprise. The NSF-wide IUSE initiative acknowledges the variety of discipline-specific challenges and opportunities facing STEM faculty as they strive to incorporate results from educational research into classroom practice and works with education research colleagues and social science learning scholars to advance our understanding of effective teaching and learning.
The Directorate for Geosciences (GEO) contributes to the IUSE initiative through the Improving Undergraduate STEM Education: Pathways into Geoscience (IUSE: GEOPATHS) funding opportunity. IUSE: GEOPATHS invites proposals that specifically address the current needs and opportunities related to undergraduate education within the geosciences community. The primary goal of the IUSE: GEOPATHS funding opportunity is to increase the number of undergraduate students interested in pursuing undergraduate degrees and/or post-graduate degrees in geoscience through the design and testing of novel approaches for engaging students in authentic, career-relevant experiences in geoscience. In order to broaden participation in the geosciences, engaging undergraduate students from traditionally underrepresented groups or from non-geoscience degree programs is a priority. The IUSE: GEOPATHS solicitation features two funding tracks: (1) engaging students in the geosciences through extra-curricular experiences and training activities (GEOPATHS-EXTRA), and (2) improving pathways into the geosciences through institutional collaborations and transfer (GEOPATHS-IMPACT).
*Per IIT policy, all grant applications (federal and non-federal) must be reviewed, signed, and submitted by the Office of Sponsored Research and Programs regardless of the amount of the request. Please contact osrp@iit.edu or call at 312.567.3035 for more information on submitting a proposal.