National Science Foundation Awards UVI $1M to Support Marine Science Graduate Students

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Student from UVI’s Center for Marine and Environmental Studies (Submitted photo)

The University of the Virgin Islands (UVI) has received a $1 million award from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) to support UVI students who wish to pursue a master’s degree in marine and environmental science at UVI and to secure workforce positions in marine and environmental science in the territory.

The award, entitled Securing STEM (Science Technology Engineering Mathematics) Island Pathways, is led by Kristin Wilson Grimes, Ph.D., research assistant professor in UVI’s Center for Marine and Environmental Studies and Lawanda Cummings, Ph.D., Science Technology Engineering Mathematics (STEM) education director for the Virgin Islands Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (VI EPSCoR).

It builds on past investments in the territory by the NSF, including the NSF INCLUDES SEAS Islands Alliance, VI EPSCoR’s Ridge to Reef: Processes and Interdependent Drivers of Small Island Resilience, and the Florida-Caribbean Louis Stokes Regional Center of Excellence.

Over four years, zzzzzz9Securing Science Technology Engineering Mathematics) STEM Island Pathways will support 13 post-degree recipients in graduate school at UVI as well as local workforce positions. Graduate students will receive tuition, fees and a graduate research assistantship stipend, plus additional mentoring and other non-financial supports.

Those entering the workforce will have the opportunity to gain experience in either 8-week or year-long positions. Year-long positions are salaried and receive full benefits. Past workforce fellows have been placed with territorial partners — Department of Planning and Natural Resources, Divisions of Coastal Zone Management; Fish and Wildlife; and The Nature Conservancy — on both St. Thomas and St. Croix.

“We are excited by this investment in the territory by the National Science Foundation and hope the project will serve as a model program for how we can stabilize STEM career pathways, lessen unemployment, and retain talented, emerging scientists within the U.S. Virgin Islands,” said Grimes.

“Because UVI is one of only three Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in the United States with a master’s degree program in marine science, the project bridges a critical period of uncertainty for many underrepresented groups in the geosciences,” said Grimes.

“I am grateful for the collaborative culture at UVI that allows us to build upon past successes and innovate on how we support our emerging scientists with more holistic development models and pathways for inclusion in the local STEM workforce,” said Cummings.

Eligible students are UVI graduates (B.A., B.S., M.Sc.) in STEM fields. For more information about this award or the NSF INCLUDES SEAS Islands Alliance, email: [email protected]. To learn about the NSF INCLUDES SEAS Islands Alliance, visit https://www.seasislandsalliance.org/ or visit VI EPSCoR, at https://viepscor.org/.

For more information contact the Public Relations Office at [email protected].

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