2304100
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Network Connector: Dedicate: Data Science Equity-Driven Inquiry to Create Accessible Project-Based Training for Social Impact Education - The Network Connector: Dedicate: Data Science Equity-Driven Inquiry to Create Accessible Project-Based Training for Social Impact Education aims to solve some of the challenges to broadening participation in STEM at a systems-level.
To this effect, four problems were identified that are barriers to success. 1. Instructor-designed "projects" not based in project-based learning (PBL) research; 2. Silos of projects across STEM and non-STEM disciplines; 3. Lack of faculty-centric design; and 4. Lack of systemic-change networks.
Dedicate aims to address these four problems by 1. Leveraging the educational research behind PBL techniques, specifically to design PBL modules that are culturally relevant and can be used across disciplines to empower natural collaboration around real-world challenges; 2. Bridging both non-STEM and STEM disciplines into data projects around problems of high social impact, specifically climate change (geosciences), criminal justice, and food and water sciences; 3. Focus on faculty capacity-building and support as the primary mechanism for systemic change, as increasing faculty interest, ability, and confidence in delivering data-centric content across disciplines translates into exponential growth in the exposure of students to STEM and their preparation for STEM education, aligning with the INCLUDES initiative shared measures effort; and by 4. Fully supporting faculty networks with not only research-based PBL modules, but PBL creation frameworks and assessment and grading tools aligned to ACM and other national and international standards, supporting non-technical faculty in module delivery, creating curated social impact PBL modules - co-designed with impact area instructors from across the region, as well as providing training, community forums, and working groups for network expansion and organization around systemic advocacy topics.
Dedicate also plans to research key questions related to systemic strategies for data-enabled project-based learning that address the critical broadening participation challenge in STEM of lack of access to data knowledge and tools at not only historically underserved institutions (HBCUs and HSIs) but also within interdisciplinary areas (social impact areas).
The Dedicate network will establish itself as a connector in order to expand through a targeted capacity-building and mini-grants program with an open call for faculty teams to connect as either users or creators of data-enabled PBLs. Dedicate will build on the work of the South Big Data Innovation Hub and connect to the INCLUDES National Data Science Alliances (NDSA) and the Aspire Alliance, as well as other expansion partner networks, such as the HBCU Data Science Consortium and the former NSF HSI-STEM Hub, to build the infrastructure necessary to foster collaborations between alliance institutions.
Four lead institutions - NC Central University-HBCU, University of the Virgin Islands-HBCU, California State University, Fresno-HSI, and the Georgia Institute of Technology - will engage 30 faculty teams across the country to train over 3,000 students, across the Southern Census Region of the U.S. and California, which covers over 90 of the 101 HBCUs and 163 of the 451 HSIs.
Additionally, Dedicate will connect to the larger INCLUDES ecosystem through efforts to share data, learning modules, and access throughout the INCLUDES network. By using data as a connector, the PI team aims to empower natural areas of collaboration and new pipelines for faculty and student engagement in STEM education. The broader faculty network thus created through this project has the potential to empower a sustained advocacy network for systemic institutional change.
This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria. Subawards are planned for this award.
To this effect, four problems were identified that are barriers to success. 1. Instructor-designed "projects" not based in project-based learning (PBL) research; 2. Silos of projects across STEM and non-STEM disciplines; 3. Lack of faculty-centric design; and 4. Lack of systemic-change networks.
Dedicate aims to address these four problems by 1. Leveraging the educational research behind PBL techniques, specifically to design PBL modules that are culturally relevant and can be used across disciplines to empower natural collaboration around real-world challenges; 2. Bridging both non-STEM and STEM disciplines into data projects around problems of high social impact, specifically climate change (geosciences), criminal justice, and food and water sciences; 3. Focus on faculty capacity-building and support as the primary mechanism for systemic change, as increasing faculty interest, ability, and confidence in delivering data-centric content across disciplines translates into exponential growth in the exposure of students to STEM and their preparation for STEM education, aligning with the INCLUDES initiative shared measures effort; and by 4. Fully supporting faculty networks with not only research-based PBL modules, but PBL creation frameworks and assessment and grading tools aligned to ACM and other national and international standards, supporting non-technical faculty in module delivery, creating curated social impact PBL modules - co-designed with impact area instructors from across the region, as well as providing training, community forums, and working groups for network expansion and organization around systemic advocacy topics.
Dedicate also plans to research key questions related to systemic strategies for data-enabled project-based learning that address the critical broadening participation challenge in STEM of lack of access to data knowledge and tools at not only historically underserved institutions (HBCUs and HSIs) but also within interdisciplinary areas (social impact areas).
The Dedicate network will establish itself as a connector in order to expand through a targeted capacity-building and mini-grants program with an open call for faculty teams to connect as either users or creators of data-enabled PBLs. Dedicate will build on the work of the South Big Data Innovation Hub and connect to the INCLUDES National Data Science Alliances (NDSA) and the Aspire Alliance, as well as other expansion partner networks, such as the HBCU Data Science Consortium and the former NSF HSI-STEM Hub, to build the infrastructure necessary to foster collaborations between alliance institutions.
Four lead institutions - NC Central University-HBCU, University of the Virgin Islands-HBCU, California State University, Fresno-HSI, and the Georgia Institute of Technology - will engage 30 faculty teams across the country to train over 3,000 students, across the Southern Census Region of the U.S. and California, which covers over 90 of the 101 HBCUs and 163 of the 451 HSIs.
Additionally, Dedicate will connect to the larger INCLUDES ecosystem through efforts to share data, learning modules, and access throughout the INCLUDES network. By using data as a connector, the PI team aims to empower natural areas of collaboration and new pipelines for faculty and student engagement in STEM education. The broader faculty network thus created through this project has the potential to empower a sustained advocacy network for systemic institutional change.
This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria. Subawards are planned for this award.
Awardee
Funding Goals
THE GOAL OF THIS FUNDING OPPORTUNITY, "NSF'S EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON INCLUSION ACROSS THE NATION OF COMMUNITIES OF LEARNERS OF UNDERREPRESENTED DISCOVERERS IN ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE (INCLUDES) INITIATIVE", IS IDENTIFIED IN THE LINK: HTTPS://WWW.NSF.GOV/PUBLICATIONS/PUB_SUMM.JSP?ODS_KEY=NSF22622
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Atlanta,
Georgia
30332-0002
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been shortened from 09/30/28 to 09/30/25 and the total obligations have increased 69% from $622,841 to $1,051,144.
Georgia Tech Research was awarded
Project Grant 2304100
worth $1,051,144
from the Division of Human Resource Development in October 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Atlanta Georgia United States.
The grant
has a duration of 2 years and
was awarded through assistance program 47.076 Education and Human Resources.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity NSF's Eddie Bernice Johnson Inclusion across the Nation of Communities of Learners of Underrepresented Discoverers in Engineering and Science (INCLUDES) Initiative.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 8/27/24
Period of Performance
10/1/23
Start Date
9/30/25
End Date
Funding Split
$1.1M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$1.1M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for 2304100
Transaction History
Modifications to 2304100
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
2304100
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
491106 DIVISION OF EQUITY FOR EXCELLENCE IN STEM
Funding Office
491106 DIVISION OF EQUITY FOR EXCELLENCE IN STEM
Awardee UEI
EMW9FC8J3HN4
Awardee CAGE
1G474
Performance District
GA-05
Senators
Jon Ossoff
Raphael Warnock
Raphael Warnock
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
STEM Education, National Science Foundation (049-0106) | General science and basic research | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $622,841 | 100% |
Modified: 8/27/24