Grants Database

The Foundation awards approximately 200 grants per year (excluding the Sloan Research Fellowships), totaling roughly $80 million dollars in annual commitments in support of research and education in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and economics. This database contains grants for currently operating programs going back to 2008. For grants from prior years and for now-completed programs, see the annual reports section of this website.

Grants Database

Grantee
Amount
City
Year
  • grantee: St. Olaf College
    amount: $19,500
    city: Northfield, MN
    year: 2011

    To develop a new community of practice on evidenced? based design for the planning of undergraduate learning spaces

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Jeanne Narum

    To develop a new community of practice on evidenced? based design for the planning of undergraduate learning spaces

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  • grantee: Wellesley College
    amount: $39,828
    city: Wellesley, MA
    year: 2011

    To improve recruitment and retention of students in STEM fields and produce graduates who understand the role of science in society

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Adele Wolfson

    To improve recruitment and retention of students in STEM fields and produce graduates who understand the role of science in society

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  • grantee: Drexel University
    amount: $100,591
    city: Philadelphia, PA
    year: 2011

    To establish an evaluation infrastructure that will serve as a model for research and practice in institutional, national, and international leadership development programs, particularly those focusing on women faculty in engineering, technology, and scie

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Diane Magrane

    To establish an evaluation infrastructure that will serve as a model for research and practice in institutional, national, and international leadership development programs, particularly those focusing on women faculty in engineering, technology, and scie

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  • grantee: Business-Higher Education Forum
    amount: $56,000
    city: Washington, DC
    year: 2011

    To develop a plan for piloting strategies to increase enrollment, persistence, and successful graduation of undergraduate students, particularly among women and underrepresented minorities (URMs), in the STEM disciplines in Maryland

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Stephen Barkanic

    To develop a plan for piloting strategies to increase enrollment, persistence, and successful graduation of undergraduate students, particularly among women and underrepresented minorities (URMs), in the STEM disciplines in Maryland

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  • grantee: University of South Florida
    amount: $125,000
    city: Tampa, FL
    year: 2011

    To institutionalize in the Graduate School efforts to increase the number of and enhance the success of underrepresented minority STEM graduate students at the Univeristy of South Florida

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Peter Harries

    To institutionalize in the Graduate School efforts to increase the number of and enhance the success of underrepresented minority STEM graduate students at the Univeristy of South Florida

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  • grantee: American Society for Engineering Education
    amount: $397,371
    city: Washington, DC
    year: 2011

    To enable the American Society for Engineering Education to launch a program to routinely collect and report data on undergraduate engineering completion rates and time-to-degree

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Brian Yoder

    One of the objectives of our small program focusing on student retention in STEM disciplines at the undergraduate and graduate levels is to encourage universities to obtain and pay attention to data on the migration of their own students into and out of STEM disciplines. In the absence of such data, which most universities do not have, many campuses are either unaware of or ignore high net out-migration of students from their STEM departments. The result is wasted resources, underutilized faculty and facilities, and, depending on why students leave these disciplines, disappointed educational aspirations. Funds from this grant support a project by the American Society for Engineering Education to collect and report data on completion rates and time-to-degree in undergraduate engineering programs. Initial data collection will begin in the summer of 2012 with ASEE inviting all 380 U.S. engineering schools to participate. Data will be published in aggregate form, reporting separately on public and private institutions; schools that accept students as freshmen, sophomores, or juniors; and transfer and non-transfer students. The collected information will provide a rich dataset for scholarly analysis of student flows into and out of engineering.

    To enable the American Society for Engineering Education to launch a program to routinely collect and report data on undergraduate engineering completion rates and time-to-degree

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  • grantee: National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc.
    amount: $557,600
    city: White Plains, NY
    year: 2011

    To enable the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering to continue administering the Sloan Minority Ph.D. program and Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership program for an additional three years

    • Program Higher Education
    • Initiative Minority Ph.D.
    • Investigator Aileen Walter

    The National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering (NACME) acts as the Foundation's agent in administering the Sloan Minority Ph.D. program and the Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership. NACME receives applications from eligible students, awards Sloan scholarships, sends checks to students, receives and monitors students' reports on their spending and their academic progress, interacts regularly with the faculty who are key to our programs' success, disburses funds to participating university campuses and departments to help them with recruitment and retention activities, monitors the spending of these funds, maintains the database for these Foundation programs, and performs analysis of these data. This grant to NACME funds the administrative costs associated with these activities for the next three years.

    To enable the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering to continue administering the Sloan Minority Ph.D. program and Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership program for an additional three years

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  • grantee: American Indian College Fund
    amount: $300,000
    city: Denver, CO
    year: 2011

    To increase the number of faculty who possess graduate degrees in mathematics, natural science, and engineering at tribal colleges and universities

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Dennis Carder

    A large fraction of American Indian students begin their college careers at one of the thirty-three accredited Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs). These institutions, most of which are associated with a particular tribe or set of tribes, are relatively new. Although most still provide only two-year degrees and certificates, others now offer a growing variety of four-year degrees and some offer master's degrees. Because of the important role of the TCUs in the education of Indian students, including those who major in STEM disciplines and go on to graduate work, it is important that these institutions' STEM faculty be capable of excellent teaching and guiding student research. Currently, approximately 28% of the 152 STEM faculty at TCUs have bachelor's degrees, 40% have master's degrees or are Ph.D. candidates, and 22% have doctorate degrees. An ongoing program funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation provides scholarships to TCU faculty who are within one year of finishing their Ph.D. degrees with the understanding that these faculty would remain at their TCU institution for at least two years after earning their degree. Though the Mellon program has been successful in encouraging TCU faculty to finish graduate work (18 of 20 supported students have completed their Ph.D.) the supported faculty have largely come from fields outside science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, with only two of the twenty supported fellows coming from STEM fields. Funds from this grant will provide monies to expand and supplement Mellon's successful program, administered by the American Indian College Fund, to more aggressively recruit and support faculty from STEM disciplines.

    To increase the number of faculty who possess graduate degrees in mathematics, natural science, and engineering at tribal colleges and universities

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  • grantee: MentorNet
    amount: $60,000
    city: Sunnyvale, CA
    year: 2011

    To develop and launch a campaign on web-based social channels to recruit students directly into MentorNet's mentoring program

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator David Porush

    To develop and launch a campaign on web-based social channels to recruit students directly into MentorNet's mentoring program

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  • grantee: University of Washington
    amount: $671,781
    city: Seattle, WA
    year: 2011

    To assess improvements resulting from and analyzing data collected by the Project to Assess Climate in Engineering (PACE)

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Suzanne Brainard

    In October 2006, the Foundation approved a five-year grant to the University of Washington to enable Suzanne Brainard and her colleagues to assess the climate for women and underrepresented minority undergraduates in engineering schools across the country. Twenty-one engineering schools fully participated in the climate assessment-the Project to Assess Climate in Engineering (PACE)- 16 at public universities and 5 at private universities, accounting for 18 percent of the full-time engineering enrollments nationwide. Of these, 15 created and implemented action plans to make improvements based on the recommendations of the study. Funds from this grant will support the continuation PACE for three purposes: 1. Resurvey students in the 21 schools, compare the new responses to the pre-intervention responses, and analyze the results in light of the particular interventions made by each school. 2. Conduct focus groups involving approximately 40 students on each campus that administers the resurvey. 3. Code and analyze rich transcripts of student interviews that were conducted during the PACE project.

    To assess improvements resulting from and analyzing data collected by the Project to Assess Climate in Engineering (PACE)

    More
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