VBRN News & Highlights

Norwich University Lands $650,000 National Science Foundation Grant

Story by: Matthew Crowley

(Dr. Olsen has received funding from the Vermont Biomedical Research Network.)

Norwich University’s commitment to education and excellence in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM, got a major boost this month when a team led by mathematics Professor Darlene Olsen landed a $650,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to increase STEM degree completion by low-income, high-achieving undergraduates.

The five-year grant ends Jan. 31, 2025, and supports “Promoting Success of Undergraduate STEM Students Through Scholarships, Mentoring and Curricular Improvements in First-year Mathematics Courses.” Olsen is the award’s primary investigator. She’ll work with College of Science and Mathematics Dean Michael McGinnis, mathematics Professor Christine Latulippe; and physics Professor Tabetha Hole, all co-primary investigators.  

“I really want to make a difference in somebody’s life. If we can provide opportunities for low-income students to attend a great academic institution like Norwich, that’s awesome.”

Professor Darlene Olsen

Scholarships from the grant will support two 11-scholar cohorts, one from the Class of 2024, one from the Class of 2025. The program will award at least six scholarships of up to $10,000 to low-income, academically talented incoming high school students majoring in biology, biochemistry, chemistry, neuroscience, mathematics or physics for the fall 2020 semester.

McGinnis said the National Science Foundation money could be fate-altering for some prospective students. With the money, Pell Grant-eligible students in the College of Science and Mathematics majoring in STEM degree tracks will be eligible for an additional $10,000 scholarship grant. McGinnis said he suspects the money could drastically reduce, or eliminate, the tuition a scholar’s family must pay.

Karen Hinkle, a biology professor and Norwich’s associate provost for research, said the scholarship program, which will use educational research to expand Norwich’s STEM programs and bolster retention and recruitment, will heighten the university’s profile as a STEM leader.

“It boosts our reputation, not only regionally, but nationally, as an attractive choice for academically strong students,” she said. “It shines a light on our already strong STEM programs and showcases how we strive to support our students to succeed from the time they enter our doors to the time of graduation, and even beyond as the students (graduate and) enter the workforce.” 

A boost to mentoring, research

McGinnis said the grant will boost mentoring, expanding and creating opportunities for new internships, undergraduate research and student engagement. 

Beyond math, Olsen said that by bolstering calculus offerings, the new program will help Norwich’s engineering majors, who must take the subject, and boost student outcomes, because the U.S. armed forces, businesses and nonprofits are eager to hire STEM graduates.

Most importantly, she said, the program will give some talented students, especially from underrepresented populations a chance to attend and succeed at college.

“I really want to make a difference in somebody’s life,” Olsen said. “If we can provide opportunities for low-income students to attend a great academic institution like Norwich, that’s awesome.”

The project team recognizes that students who enter college with less mathematics experience are less likely to graduate with STEM-discipline degrees. So, Norwich’s program will:

Measure the benefits of corequisite implementation of precalculus and calculus to help students complete the required calculus sequence by the end of their first year

Implement and assess a leadership training program to improve communication and leadership skills for peer tutors in mathematics courses

Measure the effect of improved academic, financial and career support for the scholars across their academic career at the university.

Persistence pays off

Landing the grant took two years, requiring a second application after the first fell short. (Norwich’s “I will try” motto became “I will try again.”) Olsen said working with the Vermont Biomedical Research Network over the past decade and attending National Science Foundation S-STEM workshops (the first S stands for scholarships) sharpened her grant-writing chops. She has negotiated with the foundation since July (2019), revising the proposal and budget several times, most recently over Thanksgiving break (2019).

Latulippe will help with curriculum changes for the program’s calculus sequence and help train the student tutors. Hole will oversee the mentoring program and mentor the physics scholars. Professors Meghan Doczi (biology, neuroscience) and Ethan Guth (chemistry, biochemistry) will mentor the scholars in their disciplines.

“To get this has been a team effort,” Olsen said.

Olsen said she was thrilled when Mina Peshavaria, Norwich’s sponsored-programs director, emailed to say the grant was landed and official. The news was especially nice, she said, given that, according to the foundation, only 17 percent to 19 percent of the grant proposals in a given year succeed.

“Mike McGinnis came up to my office when the funding was final,” Olsen said, “and we had a good (moment of) ‘Go, team, go.’”

Although Norwich’s program will focus on math, the foundation, on its website, said the S-STEM grants, as they’re called, support scholarships to study biological sciences (except medicine and clinical fields); physical sciences (including physics, chemistry, astronomy and materials science); mathematical sciences; computer and information sciences; geosciences; and engineering. The scholarships also support studying STEM-related technology including biotechnology, chemical technology, engineering technology and information technology, the foundation said.

Beyond the classroom, the foundation said, the S-STEM grants encourage collaboration among disciplines, institutions and faculty and partnership among educational institutions, business and community organizations, national labs and governments.

Originally published: https://www.norwich.edu/news/2085-norwich-university-national-science-foundation-2019