Digg icon reddit icon Stumbleupon icon
Print Email     Print Edition Stories

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

NSF funds UMass Lowell engineering outreach effort

By Brendan Lynch

Send this story to a friend

The University of Massachusetts Lowell has landed $2.4 million from the National Science Foundation to teach science and engineering graduate students how to communicate about research to local high schools.  

The project, called GK-12: Vibes and Waves in Action, connects graduate-level researchers to high-school teachers and students in Lowell and Lawrence. Participating graduate students will discuss their own research, build experiments for the classroom and become mentors and role models to students, according to UMass Lowell. The project theme on sound and electromagnetic vibrations and waves relates well to the high school physics and math curriculum, say teachers.

Under the program, eight graduate students who are already engaged in research will spend 10 hours a week each in physics and math classrooms, working with teachers and students. The graduate students should get a better understanding of the community while the high school teachers get experience with scientific issues and research, the school said.

UMass Lowell is partnering with Raytheon Corp., MathWorks Inc., MIT Lincoln Labs and Motorola Inc. on the project. Raytheon, MathWorks and Lincoln Labs will provide mentoring on the project. MathWorks is also donating software licenses. Motorola has given the UMass Lowell a $51,000 grant to support the project after supporting a pilot program.  
 


 

 

Digg icon reddit icon Stumbleupon icon
Contact Editor Latest News

Comments

Please Login/Register to post comments.

No comments have been added or approved.

On the MHT blog now

Flagsuit wins another NASA Astronaut Glove Challenge

Southwest Harbor, Maine's Peter Homer won $450,000 in NASA's Astronaut Glove Challenge yesterday. This is Homer's second time winning the contest. Homer's first win in 2007 launched his startup, Flagsuit. Flagsuit is developing pressure suits using the same technology as Homer's prizewinning gloves -- for use as a wearable substitute for hyperbaric chambers used to treat conditions such as ...

Read More

Bryant University Graduate School
Most Popular Stories
EmailedViewed
Stay Informed
Check which newsletter you'd like to receive.
TechFlash (Daily)
FinanceFlash (Daily)
BioFlash (Daily)
GreenFlash (Weekly)
Startup Report (Weekly)
Breaking news, MHT events, local announcements
RSS feeds
Your email:

Affiliate publications: ACBJ.com, Boston Business Journal, Bizjournals.com, Portfolio.com, Wired.com

Web Site Developed by Neptune Web, Inc.

Use of, registration on, this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement. Please read our Privacy Policy (updated) A publishing partner with Portfolio