To help two-year colleges prepare competitive proposals to the National Science Foundation’s Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Program (S-STEM) program the Community College S-STEM Network (CCSN) is offering a virtual, multi-week workshop beginning in October.
Thanks to a current Dear Colleague Letter to the Advanced Technological Education (ATE) community, ATE grantees may also apply for S-STEM funding for up to $1 less than 20 percent of their original ATE grant awards and one of the usual S-STEM funding tracks.
The ATE supplemental awards, however, are for scholarships only. They do not include funding for student services, faculty, staff, or institutional indirect costs of typical S-STEM awards, which begin at $1 million for six years and provide at least $600,000 for scholarships.
S-STEMs are last dollar scholarships that cover up to $15,000 annually of low-income, academically talented STEM majors’ unmet financial needs. Institutions submitting S-STEM proposals determine their costs of attendance, but these expenses can include not only tuition, fees, and books, but living expenses such as housing, transportation, and child care.
“This can be really transformative to people in community college communities,” said David R. Brown, one of the principal investigators of the project entitled Developing and Sharing Research on Low-Income Community College Student Decision-Making and Pathways in STEM.
The other principal investigator is Michelle Van Noy, director of the Education and Employment Research Center (EERC) at the School of Management and Labor Relations at Rutgers. The project is supported by a pair of collaborative grants, National Science Foundation (NSF) Award 2224671 to the Foundation for California Community Colleges and NSF Award 2224623 to Rutgers University.
Brown and Van Noy are leading the Community College S-STEM Network (CCSN) with a team of researchers who are focusing on how S-STEM students make decisions and what helps them persist to embark on STEM careers.
One of CCSN’s initiatives also assists community college faculty and staff members in navigating the S-STEM proposal process.
CCSN is currently taking applications for its free S-STEM Proposal Preparation Workshop. Selected individuals will meet online weekly for an hour beginning at 3:30 p.m. (Eastern) on Fridays from October 11 to February 28, to help them submit S-STEM grant proposals in advance of the program’s deadline on March 4, 2025.