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Broadening Participation in the Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS)

Broadening Participation in the Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS). W. Lance Haworth Executive Officer Division of Materials Research lhaworth@nsf.gov AGEP Workshop, San Juan, PR – 27 January 2006. Assistant Director for Mathematical and Physical Sciences. Division of Chemistry.

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Broadening Participation in the Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS)

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  1. Broadening Participation in the Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS) W. Lance Haworth Executive Officer Division of Materials Research lhaworth@nsf.gov AGEP Workshop, San Juan, PR – 27 January 2006

  2. Assistant Director for Mathematical and Physical Sciences Division of Chemistry Division of Materials Research Division of Mathematical Sciences Division of Physics Division of Astronomical Sciences Office of Multidisciplinary Activities Directorate forMathematical and PhysicalSciences

  3. The Face of American Science Broadening Participation A Huge Challenge for MPS Science Is Not the Face of America

  4. Broadening Participation in MPS Science • Strategy • Robust MPS presence in NSF-wide activities • Research based and embedded throughout MPS • Build capacity through partnerships LA-STEM PREM LIGO Hampton • Every MPS program director can have an impact!

  5. NSF invests in the best ideas from the most capable people, determined by competitivemerit review Merit Review Criteria • What is the intellectual merit of the proposed activity? • how good is this stuff? • What are the broader impacts of the proposed activity? • so what? Reviewer Selection!!!

  6. Office of Multidisciplinary Activities (OMA) • Catalyze & Support Emerging, Cross-Cutting Areas • Champion Broadened Participation in MPS • Enable and Facilitate through • Partnerships • Innovative models for education • Broadly enabling infrastructure • New research modalities • Integration of research and education ** OMA does not accept or review proposals **

  7. Broadening Participationin the Mathematical and Physical Sciences A FEW EXAMPLES Activities range from pre-college students and teachers to university faculty

  8. Research Experiences for Teachers Research Experience for Undergraduates Discovery-based learning experiences Wayne State Physics • More than 300 MPS REU (or similar) sites • >50% female, ~20% minorities • REU and RET coupled for synergy • 30 RET sites, 225 teachers • Program has reached >600,000 K12 students Partner with Cornell University projects in nuclear and high energy physics

  9. Faculty Recruiting ACS Academic Employment Initiative Objectives More inclusive hiring More efficient hiring Symposia on the academic hiring process Poster session for prospective faculty members

  10. Building Strong Academic Chemistry Departments through Gender EquityK. Houk, UCLA and C. Friend, Harvard http://www.chem.harvard.edu/groups/friend/ GenderEquityWorkshop/index.html January 29-31, 2006 Arlington, VA

  11. Alliance for the Production of African American Ph.D.s in the Mathematical SciencesThe Alliance consists of mathematics departments at four Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) together with departments in the mathematical sciences at the three Iowa Regents universities Less than 2% of all Ph.D. in mathematics awarded at US universities each year are awarded to African Americans, a percentage that has remained static over the last 25 years. The goal of this project is to ease the transition to graduate programs in mathematics for students attending HBCUs, with the aim of improving these numbers.

  12. 2006 Conference 15-19 February San Jose, CA http://nsbp.org/

  13. Computational Science Workshop for Underrepresented Groups P. Vashishta, R. Kalia, A. Nakano DMR-0427188 W. Goddard, T. Cagin, P. Meulbroek, M. Ortiz, A. van Duin DMR-0427177 and A. Grama DMR-0427540 Supported under an ITR award at USC : De Novo Hierarchical Simulations of Stress Corrosion Cracking in Materials • Participants: 25 undergraduate students and 10 faculty mentors, primarily from Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Minority Serving Institutions. • Hands on experience in parallel computing, Grid computing and visualization. • Participants built a parallel computer and then used it to perform a number of parallel computing exercises.

  14. Partnerships for Research and Education in Materials (PREM) www.mrsec.org/prem ….broaden participation in materials research and education by stimulating the development of long-term, collaborative partnerships between minority institutions and DMR-supported groups, centers and facilities • Awards to minority institutions • Up to $750K/year for 5 years • First 4 awards in FY04 • CSULA (Cal Tech MRSEC) • FAMU (Carnegie-Mellon MRSEC) • UPR Humacao (Penn MRSEC) • UPR Mayaguez (Wisconsin MRSEC and NIRT) • FY06 competition currently underway Summer 05 - UPR Mayaguez PREM

  15. Broadening Participation – The Challenge

  16. Thank You!

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