| skip navigation | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
back to college of arts & science news site home news archives arts & science departments college of arts & science home mu campus |
MU researchers win NSF grant to train environmental biologists$1.2 million program targets minority studentsCurrently in the United States, a shortage of minority students training in environmental studies and conservation biology exists. In an effort to encourage more diversity in these fields, the National Science Foundation recently awarded a $600,000 grant to two University of Missouri-Columbia researchers to establish the Undergraduate Mentoring in Environmental Biology (UMEB) interdisciplinary program. MU matched the grant to complete funding for the $1.2 million program.
The program, Training Ecologist Doctors for the 21st Century, will recruit students for a 14-month rotation in one of three areas: forest and grassland ecology and wildlife biology, urban ecology, and sustainable resources and crop development. The program will start in the summer of 2007 with a class of eight students. Each student will receive a $14,000 stipend for participating in the program. The program will train 32 students over four years. Each student will be assigned to a faculty mentor who will assist the student in choosing a research program. The research project will begin in the summer and last one year. During the last two months of the project, each student will have an internship with a partner company or organization. Those organizations include Monsanto, the Missouri Botanical Garden, the Missouri "MU has a strong undergraduate research program and an excellent record in involving underrepresented minority students in research," said Charles Nilon, associate professor of urban wildlife management in Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences. "We look forward to working with the students who will start in UMEB next year and watching their progress as they become professionals in the environmental sciences." Galen said that recruitment for the program will begin this year. When students complete the program, they will have earned a certification in environmental studies along with their bachelor's degree.
Links:MU Environmental Biology Program Candace Galen Charles Nilon 06 06 << back to news << back to archives |
| copyright © 2000 The Curators of the University of Missouri Last update: 15-Jun-2006 contact the project: Web information |