NSF Grants Aim To Increase K-12 Science and Math Teachers

##AUTHORSPLIT##<-->

The National Science Foundation this week awarded nine grants aimed at expanding the number of undergraduates pursuing teaching careers in science and math. This week's grants, administered through the Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program, range from $500,000 to $750,000. Thirty such grants have been awarded this year so far. Sixteen were awarded in 2007.

The goal of the Noyce program is to expand the number of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) majors pursuing roles as K-12 science and math teachers. The grant supports scholarships and other programs for undergraduate students "who commit to teaching in high-need K-12 school districts," according to NSF.

This week's recipients include California State University, Dominguez Hills ($750,000); the University of Texas at Dallas ($$749,255); City University of New York Herbert H Lehman College ($749,900); California State University East Bay Foundation ($750,000); University of Washington ($749,881); University of Wisconsin Oshkosh ($599,817); University of North Carolina at Greensboro ($746,300); California State University Long Beach Foundation ($500,000); and Santa Clara University ($750,000).

In the case of Santa Clara U, the grants will go toward 24 scholarships of $25,000 apiece. In exchange for receiving the scholarships, the university's undergraduates pledge to teach at least two years at the middle school or high school level in one of two designated "high need" local school districts.

Said Santa Clara U's Dennis Smithenry, an assistant professor of education and the grant’s principal investigator: "This grant responds to a critical need for highly qualified science and mathematics teachers, particularly in high-need school districts. It provides significant financial incentives to SCU undergraduates who decide to pursue a career as a science or mathematics teacher. It also allows SCU to strengthen and deepen the links between our undergraduate programs, our fifth-year teacher credential program, and our local school districts."

Santa Clara U reported that it expects the grants to double the number of graduates pursuing math and science teaching careers each year.

Further information about the grants, including abstracts from all recipients, can be found here.

Get daily K-12 technology news via RSS


About the author:David Nagel is the executive editor for 1105 Media's online education technology publications, including THE Journal and Campus Technology. He can be reached at [email protected].

Proposals for articles and tips for news stories, as well as questions and comments about this publication, should be submitted to David Nagel, executive editor, at [email protected].

About the Author

David Nagel is the former editorial director of 1105 Media's Education Group and editor-in-chief of THE Journal, STEAM Universe, and Spaces4Learning. A 30-year publishing veteran, Nagel has led or contributed to dozens of technology, art, marketing, media, and business publications.

He can be reached at [email protected]. You can also connect with him on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrnagel/ .


Featured

  • cloud icon with a padlock overlay set against a digital background featuring binary code and network nodes

    Cloud Security Auditing Tool Uses AI to Validate Providers' Security Assessments

    The Cloud Security Alliance has unveiled a new artificial intelligence-powered system that automates the validation of cloud service providers' (CSPs) security assessments, aiming to improve transparency and trust across the cloud computing landscape.

  • stack of gold coins disintegrates into digital particles against a dark circuit-board background with glowing AI imagery

    Report: Most Organizations See No Business Return on Gen AI Investments

    Despite $30-40 billion in enterprise spending on generative AI, 95% of organizations are seeing no business return, according to a recent report out of the MIT Media Lab.

  • stylized illustration of a desktop, laptop, tablet, and smartphone all displaying an orange AI icon

    Survey: AI Shifting from Cloud to PCs

    A recent Intel-commissioned report identifies a significant shift in AI adoption, moving away from the cloud and closer to the user. Businesses are increasingly turning to the specialized hardware of AI PCs, the survey found, recognizing their potential not just for productivity gains, but for revolutionizing IT efficiency, fortifying data security, and delivering a compelling return on investment by bringing AI capabilities directly to the edge.

  • student holding a smartphone with thumbs-up and thumbs-down icons, surrounded by abstract digital media symbols and interface elements

    Teaching Media Literacy? Start by Teaching Decision-Making

    Decision-making is a skill that must be developed — not assumed. Students need opportunities to learn the tools and practices of effective decision-making so they can apply what they know in meaningful, real-world contexts.