(Press-News.org) AMHERST, Mass. – University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Department of Mathematics and Statistics is offering 30 three-year scholarships to a diverse cohort of students majoring in mathematics and statistics, thanks to a $1.5 million dollar grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF).
The six-year project, called Enhancing Underrepresented Participation in Mathematics & Statistics: Mentoring from Junior to Master’s, will welcome its first cohort in the Fall of 2023, and will support each student for their junior and senior years, as well as through a one-year master’s program. The program will accept applications for the 2023 cohort until April 1.
“I am deeply invested in trying to increase diversity in the fields of math and statistics,” says Maryclare Griffin, an assistant professor of mathematics and statistics. “The big question is how.” Griffin points to national statistics—in 2020, for instance, only 30 out of 2,031 Ph.Ds granted to U.S. citizens and permanent residents went to black scholars, according to the NSF—to underscore how persistent the lack of diversity in her field is. “I decided to focus in at home, to look at what might be contributing to a lack of student engagement, enrollment and success.” Griffin discovered that one of the biggest barriers is financial: “students of color borrow more, at higher rates,” she says. “If you look at who gets math and stats degrees, they tend to be people who don’t have to borrow as much.”
To begin to address this problem, Griffin has teamed up with four co-investigators at UMass Amherst: Adena Calden, senior lecturer of mathematics and statistics; Nathaniel Whitaker, interim dean of the College of Natural Sciences; Farshid Hajir, senior vice provost and dean of undergraduate education and Inanc Baykur, professor of mathematics and statistics. Together, and in collaboration with many other professors in the department of mathematics and statistics, they designed a program that will award scholarships of $10,000 per year to academically qualified students who can demonstrate financial need.
To introduce the students to cutting-edge research in the field, each will also receive $4,000 per summer for two summers of additional research. Finally, the team will bring in experts from the Center for Minorities in the Mathematical Sciences to train UMass faculty in how best to support the success of historically underrepresented student populations.
Students will apply for the scholarship in their sophomore year and will be supported through their final two years of undergraduate study as well as though their pursuit of a master’s degree in math. “What we’re expecting,” says Griffin, “is that students will hear about this early—even in high school.” Griffin and her colleagues are working to recruit students from UMass as well as from area community colleges. Since the Bureau of Labor Statistics expects employment in math-related fields to grow by 27% by 2029, Griffin’s project blazes a path not only for diversifying the student body, but the wider profession as well.
“The Department of Mathematics and Statistics is striving to create an abundant, supportive and diverse community,” Whitaker says. “I’m delighted to bring this opportunity to UMass students. Diversity, equity and inclusion are important priorities for me; we must ensure that students feel like they belong and clear the barriers to success wherever possible. The S-STEM program is a critical step in making the mathematics and statistics field more accessible and diverse.”
For more information as well as a link to the 2023 application, visit the S-STEM Scholars Program in Mathematics and Statistics at UMass Amherst website.
Contacts: Maryclare Griffin, maryclaregri@umass.edu
Daegan Miller, drmiller@umass.edu
END
UMass Amherst providing 30 three-year scholarships to boost diversity in mathematics and statistics
Federal grant will provide $10,000 per year to help lower educational barriers for underrepresented college students; application window open until April 1
2023-03-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Carbon nanotube films as ultrasensitive photodetectors: progress and challenges
2023-03-17
Semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (s-SWCNTs) are being used to develop a third generation of optimized shortwave infrared photodetectors that will improve pixel size, weight, power consumption, performance and cost over photodetectors made from traditional materials.
Ultrasensitive shortwave infrared photodetectors, which detect a subset of shortwave infrared light wavelengths outside of the visual spectrum, have many potential applications, including night surveillance, navigation during poor weather conditions, fiber optic communications and semiconductor quality control. Shortwave ...
Mountain forests are being lost at an accelerating rate, putting biodiversity at risk
2023-03-17
More than 85% of the world’s bird, mammal, and amphibian species live in mountains, particularly in forest habitats, but researchers report in the journal One Earth on March 17 that these forests are disappearing at an accelerating rate. Globally, we have lost 78.1 million hectares (7.1%) of mountain forest since 2000—an area larger than the size of Texas. Much of the loss occurred in tropical biodiversity hotspots, putting increasing pressure on threatened species.
Though their rugged location once protected mountain forests from deforestation, they have been increasingly exploited since the turn of ...
River deltas: Valuable and under threat
2023-03-17
The livelihoods of millions of people who live in river deltas, among the world’s most productive lands, are at risk. Created where large rivers meet the ocean and deposit their natural sediment load, river deltas are often just a few meters above sea level. And while they make up less than 0.5 % of the world’s land area, river deltas contribute more than 4 % of the global GDP, 3% of global crop production, and are home to 5.5 % of the world’s population. All of these values are highly vulnerable to imminent global environmental change, according to a new Stanford University-led study.
“It is often not rising seas, but sinking land due to human activities that ...
Few Medicaid-participating primary care physicians providing longer-acting birth control methods
2023-03-17
WASHINGTON (March 17, 2023)— Medicaid beneficiaries face barriers in accessing medical care – and that includes contraceptive care. A new study finds that despite birth control being an essential health service, all primary care physicians that see them may not be offering Medicaid patients some of the most effective, longer-acting birth control methods. While nearly half (48%) of primary care physicians who treat Medicaid patients provided prescription contraception like the birth control pill, only 10% provided longer-acting methods like IUDs ...
Association of household opioid availability with opioid overdose
2023-03-17
About The Study: In this study of Oregon residents in households of at least two members, the findings suggest that household prescription availability is associated with increased odds of opioid overdose for others in the household, even if they do not have their own opioid prescription. These findings underscore the importance of educating patients about proper opioid disposal and the risks of household opioids.
Authors: Michelle A. Hendricks, Ph.D., of Comagine Health in Portland, Oregon, is the corresponding ...
Association of warm or cold air temperatures with lung function in young infants
2023-03-17
About The Study: Long-term heat and cold exposure from the second trimester until four weeks after birth was associated with newborn lung volumes, especially among female newborns, in this study of 343 mother-child pairs. The findings suggest an association between ambient temperature and newborns’ respiratory systems and underlines the vulnerability of pregnant women and their future children to climate change.
Authors: Ariane Guilbert, M.Sc., and Johanna Lepeule, Ph.D., of Universite Grenoble Alpes in La Tronche, France, are the corresponding authors.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.3376)
Editor’s ...
Another crystalline layer on crystal surface as a precursor of crystal-to-crystal transition
2023-03-17
Ice surfaces have a thin layer of water below its melting temperature of 0℃. Such premelting phenomenon is important for skating and snowflake growth. Similarly, liquid often crystallizes into a thin layer of crystal on a flat substrate before reaching its freezing temperature, i.e. prefreezing. The thickness of the surface layer usually increases and diverges as approaching the phase transition (such as melting and freezing) temperature. Besides premelting and prefreezing, whether similar surface phenomenon ...
Team discovers how TKI cancer drugs cause inflammatory side effects
2023-03-17
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors are a type of targeted cancer medicine that can attack specific types of cancer cells and prevent them from multiplying. Although these inhibitors, called TKIs, can be very useful in fighting certain cancers, they also cause serious inflammatory side effects that limit their use. A Japanese research team has discovered the underlying mechanism that causes this inflammation.
"This study revealed the underlying mechanism by which the TKIs cause inflammation, and therefore provides the molecular basis that is essential to overcome the inflammatory-based ...
Numerical simulation of materials-oriented ultra-precision diamond cutting: Review and outlook
2023-03-17
Publishing in the International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing (IJEM), researchers from Harbin Institute of Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Guizhou University and Ruhr-University Bochum present a brief review on the application of numerical simulations in addressing the impact of properties and microstructures of workpiece materials on the diamond cutting mechanisms of different types of workpiece materials, such as metallic, hard brittle materials and composite materials. In addition, the effect of applying an external energy field to the diamond cutting of difficult-to-cut materials is also discussed.
The anisotropic deformation ...
Better simulations of neutron scattering
2023-03-17
A new simulation approach named eTLE aims to improve the precision of a primary tool for estimating neutron behaviours in 3D space. This study examines the approach in detail – validating its reliability in predicting the scattering of neutrons in crystalline media.
Tripoli-4® is a tool used by researchers to simulate the behaviours of interacting neutrons in 3D space. Recently, researchers developed a new ‘next-event estimator’ (NEE) for Tripoli-4®. Named eTLE, this approach aims to increase Tripoli-4®’s precision using Monte ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Two fundamental coordination patterns in underwater dolphin kick identified
Dynamic tuning of Bloch modes in anisotropic phonon polaritonic crystals
Dr. Ben Thacker named SwRI chief operating officer
Korea University’s College of Medicine held the 2025 Joint Forum with Yale University
Wetlands do not need to be flooded to provide the greatest climate benefit
Bat virome evolution in Indochina Peninsula reveals cross-species origins of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus and regional surveillance gaps
How a fridge could unlock modern dairy cattle breeding in the developing world
CHEST® Critical Care added to Web of Science Emerging Sources Citation Index
Scientists unravel vines’ parasitic nature
57.5% of commercially insured patients had at least one chronic condition in 2024, according to Fair Health report
One-third of young people are violent toward their parents
New SEOULTECH study reveals transparent windows that shield buildings from powerful electromagnetic pulses
Randomized trial finds drug therapy reduces hot flashes during prostate cancer treatment
Reshaping gold leads to new electronic and optical properties
Tracker to help manage Long COVID energy levels created by researchers
Using generative AI to help scientists synthesize complex materials
Unexpected feedback in the climate system
Fresh insights show how cancer gene mutations drive tumor growth
Unexpected climate feedback links Antarctic ice sheet with reduced carbon uptake
Psychosis rates increasing in more recent generations
Tiny new dinosaur Foskeia pelendonum reshapes the dinosaur family tree
New discovery sheds light on evolutionary crossroads of vertebrates
Aortic hemiarch reconstruction safely matches complex aortic arch reconstruction for acute dissection in older adults
Destination Earth digital twin to improve AI climate and weather predictions
Late-breaking study finds comparable long-term survival between two leading multi-arterial CABG strategies
Lymph node examination should be expanded to accurately assess cancer spread in patients with lung cancer
Study examines prediction of surgical risk in growing population of adults with congenital heart disease
Novel radiation therapy QA method: Monte Carlo simulation meets deep learning for fast, accurate epid transmission dose generation
A 100-fold leap into the unknown: a new search for muonium conversion into antimuonium
A new approach to chiral α-amino acid synthesis - photo-driven nitrogen heterocyclic carbene catalyzed highly enantioselective radical α-amino esterification
[Press-News.org] UMass Amherst providing 30 three-year scholarships to boost diversity in mathematics and statisticsFederal grant will provide $10,000 per year to help lower educational barriers for underrepresented college students; application window open until April 1





