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May 21, 2004

Diversity in the S&E Workforce: Industry vs. Academia

--Dr. Willie Pearson, chair of Georgia Tech's School of History, Technology, and Society

February 17, 2006

Same School, Different Degree, All Part of the Plan

The transition to graduate school required her to learn how to handle family and financial issues, while also keeping up with her studies and research.

May 06, 2005

Timbuktu Academy: Mentoring Future Scientists

Established in 1990 with funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Louisiana Board of Regents, the Timbuktu Academy is an award-winning mentoring program for underrepresented minorities in STEM fields.

December 05, 2003

A Shortage of Scientists and Engineers?

"The board recommends creating partnerships between businesses and educational institutions to prepare students, primarily trained for academia, for entrance into the private sector."

August 08, 2003

Mentor With a Mission

Cuker felt he was meant to help minority students become aquatic scientists, which is why he created the ASLO Minorities Program in 1989.

June 18, 2004

Science Policy's Frontline

From the director and board to the directorates and offices at NSF, these specialists play a vital role in making sure the science policy "machine" runs smoothly.

April 07, 2006

The Wild World of Doctoral Funding

Most Ph.D. students manage to support themselves, however modestly, with a combination of TAs, RAs, and fellowships.

June 03, 2005

The Road to a Neurobiology Ph.D.

Gregory is now nearing completion of his Ph.D. at UCLA so now he has to figure out the next step on his career path.

November 18, 2005

Clinton Junior College: Monitoring, Motivating, and Mentoring Students in STEM

The CIPA grant is part of a program designed to help minority institutions develop science and math curricula while attracting and preparing underrepresented students for careers in STEM.

November 21, 2003

The Theory of Everything

"While mathematics is the foundation for his study into the nature of the universe, he credits his family and upbringing for providing him with the foundation for success."

September 23, 2005

Defending Your Graduate Life

Valentine, scheduled to defend her dissertation in March 2006 at Johns Hopkins University's Department of Physics and Astronomy, shares her graduate school experiences and talks about her preparation for her thesis defense.

August 22, 2003

Are HBCUs Still Necessary?

Are minority students better served by an undergraduate education at one of the historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) or have these institutions outlived their usefulness?

April 01, 2005

A GEM of a Program

The GEM Consortium -- a collaboration of 93 member universities and 48 corporations -- provides funding, a support network, mentoring, and professional development to underrepresented minority graduate students.

August 20, 2004

Exceptional, Chic, Successful

Mack asserts, "I've not seen any one profession which would allow me to do as much as I've done and continue to do more than math."

August 26, 2005

Congress Reduces the 2006 NSF Workforce Budget

While the overall NSF EHR budget took another round of cuts, Thompson believes individual programs aimed at diversifying the scientific workforce will continue to meet the agency's objective to keep youth "engaged" in science.

October 29, 2004

AIMS for African Math and Science

Now in its second year, a 9-month postgraduate course in the mathematical sciences recruits promising science, math, and engineering students from various African countries and lecturers from around the world.

June 20, 2003

Web Site Review: The Faces of Science

"The Faces of Science brings humanity to the scientific achievements of African Americans."

April 16, 2004

Pride and Principle

Through it all, she bettered her skills and honed her experience until she could get her dream job--combining her knack for communicating with her science training.

February 11, 2005

We're Doing Just Fine

A survey of the top 50 ranked physics departments in 2002 shows that of 1998 physics faculty members, there were 12 of identifiable African heritage.

November 19, 2004

In Memoriam: John R. La Montagne

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