UCF named co-lead on multi-million dollar department of defense grant for STEM education
As part of the Alliance of Hispanic-Serving Research Universities, UCF joins the University of Texas at El Paso on a $9.3 million project to accelerate STEM education and research
2024-12-13
(Press-News.org) The Alliance of Hispanic-Serving Research Universities (HSRU) will lead a project to increase the number of doctoral graduates in technical fields from its 22 institutions from across the nation. The initiative is supported by a new $9.3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD). UCF’s portion of the funding totals approximately $4.8 million.
The effort, titled Hispanic Serving Research Institutions Research and STEM Education (HSI-RSE) Project, is co-led by UCF and the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP).
The project aims to address the critical need for high-quality STEM talent for national defense by accelerating advanced research, enhancing collaboration on best practices and expanding access to STEM education and research. In addition to funding defense-related research projects, the effort will identify and mentor highly qualified undergraduate students through applications to graduate school at all 22 Alliance institutions.
Established in 2022, HSRU is a voluntary association of the 22 Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) that are also in the top 5% of universities in the United States for research as determined by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. HSIs are defined by Title V of the Higher Education Act, where at least 25% of their undergraduate student enrollment is Hispanic.
Azuri L. Gonzalez, executive director of HSRU and director of partnerships and operations at the Diana Natalicio Institute for Hispanic Student Success at UTEP, serves as the project’s principal investigator.
“We are excited to lead this transformative project that directly supports our mission of increasing access to STEM education for underrepresented groups,” says Gonzalez. “This grant provides a unique opportunity to shape the future of STEM fields as a multi-institutional consortium.”
Co-principal investigators include Grace Bochenek, executive director of UCF’s newly forming Pegasus Research Institute and director of the Institute for Simulation and Training, and Shery Welsh, executive director of the Aerospace Center at UTEP.
“We are extremely proud to be part of this collaboration that has far-reaching impact for our national security and advances STEM outreach and research opportunities for our students,” says Bochenek. “We look forward to refining and improving this program in the future and to working with HSRU and the University of Texas El Paso and other universities who share our passion in this area.”
Key components of the initiative include cohort-based fellowship advising for graduate students, fellowships, and competitive research opportunities focused on DOD technical priorities and leadership programs for both faculty and students.
“By leveraging the strengths of institutions across the Alliance, we aim to build robust pathways for talented STEM students ready to contribute to national security and innovation,” says Cynthia Larive, Ph.D., chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz, and chair of the HSRU Alliance. “This is a critical step toward ensuring that the U.S. remains at the forefront of global scientific and technological advancement.”
“We have worked very closely with the Department of Defense to set up a program that does exceptional research in areas important to national security and supports more graduate students,” says Heather Wilson, UTEP president and inaugural HSRU chair. “I’m particularly pleased that the graduate fellowship model that has been successful at UTEP will be extended across the Alliance so that more exceptional students can find their way into the nation’s advanced engineering and scientific workforce.”
The grant will run through 2029. HSRU officials will seek to expand this cooperative model to include partnerships with other federal agencies in the future.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2024-12-13
Multinational enterprises (MNEs) are not just falling short of global sustainability targets but are actively contributing to the very problems they claim to address, according to a new study from the University of Surrey. This study argues that there is an urgent need for MNEs to reassess their innovation strategies to align with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The research team found that many MNEs are prioritising profit over sustainable practices. The study highlights how MNEs often adopt superficial compliance measures rather than engaging in meaningful, sustainable innovations by analysing case studies from various countries, including both advanced ...
2024-12-13
Australian-led research is unlocking new ways for immunotherapy to better target cancer.
Cancer immunotherapy has revolutionised treatment for patients, whereby the body’s own immune system is harnessed to destroy cancer cells.
Typically, several molecules restrain the ability of T cells to target cancer cells and developing approaches to limit this restraining effect can lead to improved effectiveness of cancer immunotherapy.
Research published in Science Immunology has determined the structure of how an inhibitory molecule, LAG3, interacts with its main ligand and provides a new targeted approach to ...
2024-12-13
A new twist: the molecular machines that loop our chromosomes also twist DNA
Scientists from the Kavli Institute of Delft University of Technology and the IMP Vienna Biocenter discovered a new property of the molecular motors that shape our chromosomes. While six years ago they found that these so-called SMC motor proteins make long loops in our DNA, they now discovered that these motors also put significant twists into the loops that they form. These findings help us better understand the structure and function of our chromosomes. They also provide insight into how disruption of twisted DNA looping can affect health—for instance, in developmental ...
2024-12-13
The air around us contains a powerful solution for making agriculture more sustainable. Researchers at Stanford University and King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in Saudi Arabia have developed a prototype device that can produce ammonia – a key fertilizer ingredient – using wind energy to draw air through a mesh. The approach they developed, if perfected, might eliminate the need for a century-old method that produces ammonia by combining nitrogen and hydrogen at high pressures and temperatures. The older method consumes 2% of global energy and contributes 1% of annual carbon dioxide emissions from its ...
2024-12-13
An international team of researchers, including a glaciologist at Newcastle University, UK, has discovered remarkably well-preserved glacial landforms buried almost 1 km beneath the North Sea.
The team used sound wave, known as seismic, data to reveal Ice Age landforms buried beneath almost 1 km of mud in the North Sea. The results, reported in the journal Science Advances, suggest that the landforms were produced about 1 million years ago, when an ice sheet centred over Norway extended towards the British Isles.
This is important because the timing of this ice advance corresponds to a period of global cooling called the Mid-Pleistocene Transition.
Glacial ...
2024-12-13
About The Study: Among patients with early or locally advanced triple-negative breast cancer, the addition of camrelizumab, an anti–PD-1 antibody, to neoadjuvant chemotherapy significantly improved pathological complete response.
Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Zhi-Ming Shao, MD (zhiminshao@fudan.edu.cn) and Lei Fan, MD (teddyfl@163.com).
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jama.2024.23560)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including ...
2024-12-13
Intermittent fasting has proven benefits for metabolic health, but a new study shows that it could slow hair growth—at least in mice. Researchers report December 13 in the Cell Press journal Cell that mice subjected to intermittent fasting regimes showed improved metabolic health but slower hair regeneration compared to mice with 24/7 access to food. A similar process might occur in humans, based on a small clinical trial that the team also conducted, but it’s likely to be less severe since humans have a much slower metabolic rate and different hair growth patterns compared to mice.
“We don't want to scare people away ...
2024-12-13
About The Study: The findings of this study suggest that body mass index and obesity prevalence in the U.S. decreased in 2023 for the first time in more than a decade. The most notable decrease was in the South, which had the highest observed per capita glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) dispensing rate. However, dispensing does not necessarily mean uptake, and the South also experienced disproportionately high COVID-19 mortality among individuals with obesity.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Benjamin Rader, PhD, MPH, email benjamin.rader@childrens.harvard.edu.
To ...
2024-12-13
About The Study: In 2023, among 29,522 respondents to the National Health Interview Survey, a nationally representative household survey, 8.4% of adults in the U.S. reported they ever had post–COVID-19 condition (PCC; also known as long COVID), 3.6% currently had PCC, and 2.3% currently had activity-limiting PCC. Significant differences across all 3 outcomes were observed by sex, sexual orientation, age, race and Hispanic origin, family income, and urbanization.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Anjel Vahratian, PhD, MPH, email avahratian@cdc.gov.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website ...
2024-12-13
A recent study has reported a novel breeding strategy to rapidly create climate-smart crops that show higher yield under normal conditions and greatly rescue yield losses under heat stress both in staple grain and vegetable crops.
The study, which was published in Cell on 13 December, was conducted by Prof. XU Cao’s team from the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology (IGDB) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
The year 2050 is fast approaching and farm productivity must increase by 60% in order to feed a projected global population of 10 billion. However, current crop production is insufficient and is expected to worsen due to the abiotic-stress burden ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] UCF named co-lead on multi-million dollar department of defense grant for STEM education
As part of the Alliance of Hispanic-Serving Research Universities, UCF joins the University of Texas at El Paso on a $9.3 million project to accelerate STEM education and research