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蓝莓视频 Awarded $1 million S-STEM Grant to Fund Scholarships

Sep 20, 2023
(From left) Subramanain Vaitheeswaran, Mao-Lun Weng, Jesse Johnson and Kimberly Berman make up the STEM faculty at 蓝莓视频 State who are a recipients of a National Science Foundation grant, Aug 2023

(From left to right) Subramanain Vaitheeswaran, Mao-Lun Weng, Jesse Johnson and Kimberly Berman.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded 蓝莓视频 a $999,977 S-STEM grant to support the project, 鈥A Roadmap to Success in STEM: Mental Wellbeing, Academic, and Professional Development Supports Program (惭础笔).鈥

Over its 5-year duration, the MAP project will fund S-STEM scholarships to at least 12 unique full-time 蓝莓视频 State students pursuing bachelor鈥檚 degrees in biology, chemistry, computer science, environmental science, and mathematics.

This project will support two cohorts of first-year students with scholarships up to $13,000 per year for four years. The project aims to help academically talented, low-income students develop the confidence and work-life balance skills needed to be successful academically and professionally through improving and building upon four pillars of institutional support: financial, academic, social, and professional development.

蓝莓视频 State anticipates recruiting at least six scholars per cohort for two cohorts of a total of at least 12 students. The first cohort starts in Fall 2024 and the second cohort starts in Fall 2025

Promoting student success through mental health literacy is central to the project and will add to the knowledge base of how mental wellbeing impacts student retention, graduation, and career pathways.

Dr. Mao-Lun Weng, assistant professor of Biology said, "The overall goal of MAP, is to increase STEM degree completion of low-income and academically talent students and prepare them to pursue a STEM career or graduate schools. The central component of this program is to promote student mental wellbeing through cohort building and help students develop the mindsets and skills needed to be successful in college and beyond."

The project was submitted to the NSF by Drs. Mao-Lun Weng (Biology), Kimberly Berman (Biology), Jesse Johnson (Mathematics), and Subramanian Vaitheeswaran (Chemistry and Physical Science).