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Displaying 251 - 275 of 294
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NSF Connecting Higher Ed and K-12 for Math & Science

Friday, November 5, 1999

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has made a first round of grants to researchers at 31 institutions nationwide under a new program enabling talented graduate students and advanced undergraduates in science, mathematics, engineering and technology to serve as teaching fellows in K-12 schools.



  • Read more about NSF Connecting Higher Ed and K-12 for Math & Science

NSF Funds $10 M Center for Bioengineering Ed Technology

Friday, October 22, 1999

A five-university partnership led by Vanderbilt University (TN) will develop bioengineering educational technologies and curricula at a new Engineering Research Center funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Through a five-year, nearly $10-million cooperative agreement, the center will support and enhance the education of a new generation of bioengineers needed to strengthen the industry.

  • Read more about NSF Funds $10 M Center for Bioengineering Ed Technology

Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentors Honored

Friday, October 22, 1999

Ten individuals and five institutions have received the 1999 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring. The mentoring awards honor those whose personal and organizational activities have increased participation of underrepresented groups in mathematics, engineering and science from kindergarten through graduate level.

  • Read more about Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentors Honored

ATP Announces 37 New Awards for 1999

Friday, October 15, 1999

The Advanced Technology Program (ATP), managed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, has selected 37 projects from the 1999 solicitation to receive awards. Recipients will share $110 million of ATP funding for high-risk R&D projects with the potential to spark important, broad-based economic benefits for the United States. ATP funds will be matched by at least $102 million from private industry.

  • Read more about ATP Announces 37 New Awards for 1999

R&D Share of GDP Grows

Friday, October 15, 1999

Total annual research and development (R&D) expenditures — expected to pass $247 billion in 1999 — have grown 7.2 percent over 1998 levels (adjusted for inflation), according to a recent Data Brief from the National Science Foundation. Growth in R&D expenditures has been accelerating since 1995. The annual real R&D growth for 1995-99 is expected to average 6.1 percent. Almost all of the growth is attributed to a resurgence in industrial R&D.

  • Read more about R&D Share of GDP Grows

People

Friday, September 24, 1999

Anne Armstrong has been named CEO for the Virginia’s Center for Innovative Technology.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, August 20, 1999

Catherine Renault, managing director of Virginia's Center for Innovative Technology, has accepted a position with Advantage Consulting.

  • Read more about People

Five NSF S&T Centers Funded

Friday, August 6, 1999

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has committed almost $94 million over the next five years in matching funds for five new Science & Technology Centers (STC). The new centers join 23 existing centers that were selected in 1989 and 1991. (Two more original STCs cease to exist.)

  • Read more about Five NSF S&T Centers Funded

EPSCoR Evaluation Released

Friday, June 25, 1999

The National Science Foundation's Directorate for Education and Human Resources has released A Report on the Evaluation of the National Science Foundation's Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research. The report (NSF 99-115) was prepared under contract by the COSMOS Corporation.

Among the report's findings are:

  • Read more about EPSCoR Evaluation Released

NSF Releases MRSEC Solicitation

Friday, June 11, 1999

The National Science Foundation's (NSF) Directorate for Mathematical and Physical Sciences Division of Materials Research has announced that approximately $22 million will be awarded in FY 2000 for grants to support 10-15 Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers (MRSECs).

  • Read more about NSF Releases MRSEC Solicitation

Positions Available

Friday, May 28, 1999

Virginia's Center for Innovative Technology is seeking a new President and Chief Executive Officer. The CIT president's primary responsibility will be to assist the Secretary of Technology in implementing the Commonwealth's technology strategy by developing and directing CIT's key role in the strategy. Applications are due by June 22, 1999.

  • Read more about Positions Available

NSF, EPA Looking for Sustainable Environment Technology

Friday, May 21, 1999

The Environmental Protection Agency and the National Science Foundation have announced approximately $5 million will be awarded in FY 2000 for grants to support research toward "Technology for a Sustainable Environment."

Entities eligible to submit proposals include universities and not-for-profit institutions. The agencies anticipate making 20 grant awards for the solicitation in January 2000. Proposals are due July 26, 1999.

  • Read more about NSF, EPA Looking for Sustainable Environment Technology

People

Friday, May 14, 1999

Robert Templin, president of Virginia's Center for Innovative Technology (CIT), has resigned. Wolfgang Tolle, managing director, has been named acting president. Patsy Brown, CIT's director of public affairs, also has left CIT.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, May 14, 1999

Kate Latta Hoffher, senior public affairs specialist with the National Science Foundation's Office of Legislative and Public Affairs, is on detail to NSF's Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) until the end of July.

  • Read more about People

PRESIDENTIAL MENTORING AWARD NOMINEES SOUGHT

Friday, February 26, 1999

The National Science Foundation has issued a call for nominations for the 1999 Presidential Awards for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM). Each award is accompanied by a $10,000 grant.

  • Read more about PRESIDENTIAL MENTORING AWARD NOMINEES SOUGHT

BORDOGNA NAMED NSF DEPUTY DIRECTOR

Friday, February 5, 1999

The President announced his intent to nominate Dr. Joseph Bordogna as Deputy Director of the National Science Foundation (NSF). Dr. Bordogna has served as Acting Deputy Director and Chief Operating Officer of the National Science Foundation since 1996. For the four years prior to this service, he was the Assistant Director for Engineering at the National Science Foundation.

  • Read more about BORDOGNA NAMED NSF DEPUTY DIRECTOR

NSF 1998 SBIR PHASE I AWARDS BY STATE

Friday, January 29, 1999

The accompanying table on the SSTI website http://www.ssti.org/Digest/Tables/NSFfy98_SBIR1.htm presents the results of the 1998 SBIR Phase I competition held by the National Science Foundation in rank order by total dollars awards in each state. The award figures were compiled from the NSF Fast Lane website. (There were no Phase I awards reported within the 13 states omitted from the table.

  • Read more about NSF 1998 SBIR PHASE I AWARDS BY STATE

NSF Invests $10 Million in New Engineering Research Centers

Friday, November 20, 1998

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has invested $10 million to fund the first year of new Engineering Research Centers (ERCs) in Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland, South Carolina and Virginia. Each of the five centers will receive $2 million in the first year from the NSF, leveraged by support from industry, state governments and partnering universities. NSF will support the centers for five years, after which the support agreement is subject to renewal.

  • Read more about NSF Invests $10 Million in New Engineering Research Centers

VIRGINIA SELECTS THREE NEW CENTERS

Friday, September 18, 1998

Innovative manufacturing, plasma and photon processing, and Internet technology will be the focus of three new Centers of Excellence in Virginia. The Commonwealth of Virginia and Virginia’s Center for Innovative Technology (CIT) recently announced the selection of these three new Centers as the second-generation of CIT’s Technology Development Centers program.

  • Read more about VIRGINIA SELECTS THREE NEW CENTERS

HIGH-TECH INDUSTRIES DRIVING GLOBAL ECONOMIC ACTIVITY

Friday, September 11, 1998

Four industries (aerospace, computers and office machinery, electronics and communications equipment, and pharmaceuticals) are growing at a rate more than twice as fast as other manufactured goods,  thereby driving national economic growth around the world, according  to a National Science Foundation (NSF) Issue Brief, High-Tech Industries Drive Global Economic Activity (NSF 98-319).

  • Read more about HIGH-TECH INDUSTRIES DRIVING GLOBAL ECONOMIC ACTIVITY

NSF RELEASES 1998 SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING INDICATORS

Friday, July 31, 1998

The most comprehensive source of statistical information on science and engineering issues has been released by the National Science Board. "Science and Engineering Indicators: 1998" is the 13th report in a biennial series.

The 800-page report contains a wealth of information on a variety of topics, including four cross-cutting themes:

  • Read more about NSF RELEASES 1998 SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING INDICATORS

INDUSTRIAL R&D UP — TURNAROUND IN MANUFACTURING CITED

Friday, July 24, 1998

Industrial research and development spending totaled approximately $145 billion in 1996, a 10 percent increase for the second year in a row. More than 83 percent of that funding came from industry itself with the federal government providing the remaining funds, according to a new Data Brief prepared by the National Science Foundation. Small businesses, those with 500 or less employees, spent slightly more than $20.2 billion or 14 percent of the total industrial R&D spending in 1996.

  • Read more about INDUSTRIAL R&D UP — TURNAROUND IN MANUFACTURING CITED

NSF RELEASES THREE DATA BRIEFS ON FEDERAL R&D FUNDING

Friday, July 10, 1998

The National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Science Resources Studies has released three individual data briefs all pertaining to federal research and development funding trends.

  • Read more about NSF RELEASES THREE DATA BRIEFS ON FEDERAL R&D FUNDING

NSF RELEASES ERC PERFORMANCE STUDY

Friday, June 12, 1998

A recent study found that 90 percent of industry participants benefitted in some way by participating in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Engineering Research Center (ERC) Program. Nearly a quarter of all firms reported having developed a new product or process as a result of their interaction with an ERC, and two-thirds reported that their firm's competitiveness had increased.

  • Read more about NSF RELEASES ERC PERFORMANCE STUDY

COLWELL CONFIRMED AS NEW NSF DIRECTOR

Friday, June 5, 1998

Rita Colwell was confirmed by the Senate on May 22 as the new National Science Foundation (NSF) Director. She is expected to be sworn in within a few weeks. Dr. Colwell was the President of the University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute and former President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She has a Ph.D. in marine microbiology from the University of Washington.

  • Read more about COLWELL CONFIRMED AS NEW NSF DIRECTOR

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