
Visit the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute.
University of Maryland College of Life
and Sciences
Georgetown
University Medical Center
Howard
University College of Arts and Sciences
University
of Virginia College of Arts and Sciences
College of William and Mary Arts and
Sciences Program
Johns Hopkins
University
|
Area Universities Get
$8.8 Million
to Fund Students' Science Research
By DAN ODENWALD
Capital News Service
September 16, 1998
ANNAPOLIS - Sara Brooks, a 20-year-old
senior at the University of Maryland,
College Park, was planning on working a
retail job this summer.
After all, she needed the money.
Instead, thanks to a grant from the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Chevy
Chase, she researched cell division in
plants, hoping to better understand how
and why they grow.
"This grant allowed me to stay on
campus and get valuable job skills,
instead of working some retail job back
home," Brooks said. Of the $52.5
million grant, distributed to 42
universities in 1992, Brooks was given a
$2,000 stipend for living expenses and
received another $2,000 to cover research
costs.
On Wednesday, the medical institute
announced it was awarding another grant
for undergraduate science education -
this one for $91.1 million.
The grant will fund projects at 58 U.S.
universities from 1998-2002.
In Maryland, UMCP and Johns Hopkins
University each received $1.6 million
grants. This the second time UMCP has won
the grant, and the third time for Johns
Hopkins.
In the District of Columbia, Georgetown
University was awarded a $1.2 million
grant, and Howard University received
$1.6 million.
The University of Virginia in
Charlottesville won $1.2 million, and
William and Mary in Williamsburg received
$1.6 million.
Both UMCP and Hopkins plan to spend the
money by paying undergraduates to conduct
their own research.
"With this grant," said William
J. Higgins, associate dean of UMCP's
College of Life Sciences, "we can
recruit the top-level students coming
out of high school - the very best of the
very best."
At UMCP, where Brooks is researching
plant growth, the grant will enable 40
students a semester to develop research
proposals, conduct
experiments and submit findings to
national scientific journals for
publication, Higgins said.
"This grant gives students the
extra, out-of-classroom experience that
completes their educations," he
said.
Indeed, he added, most of the students
who participate in the grant's programs
go on to obtain Ph.D.s or medical
degrees.
Roughly 80 percent of Hopkins' students
who benefit from the grants go on to
publish their results in nationally
peer-reviewed journals, said Gary
Ostrander, associate dean for research at
the school of arts and sciences.
At Hopkins, the medical institute's grant
will be used to renovate science
laboratories, add new courses to the
curriculum and, of course,
pay for undergraduate research.
"Hopkins is not just a high-powered
research center," Ostrander said.
"It also has a real commitment to
undergraduate education."
The medical institute, established by
billionaire movie maker/aviator
Howard Hughes, is primarily a medical
research organization with more than 330
scientists working in cell biology,
genetics, immunology, neuroscience and
structural biology. It started its
undergraduate grant-giving program in
1988.
"Our grants program was developed to
train the next generation of biomedical
researchers," said Dr. Joseph
Perpich, vice president for grants and
special programs at the medical
institute.
Perpich said the $91.1 million for study
of the life sciences couldn't come at a
better time. Whereas the 20th century
belonged to the physicists, he said, the
21st century will belong to the
biologists, because of the advances
taking place in cloning and human genome
research.
"We began this program to help
colleges and universities bring the
intellectual excitement of this
discipline to undergraduates,"
Perpich said. "It permits students
to do research they really couldn't do
before."
|
|