NSF Archives - سԹ /tag/nsf/ Washington State University | Tri-Cities Tue, 14 Dec 2021 22:44:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Education faculty awarded NSF grant to help high schoolers prep for STEM careers /education-faculty-awarded-nsf-grant-to-help-high-schoolers-prep-for-stem-careers/ Wed, 27 May 2020 16:36:31 +0000 /?p=82055 The post Education faculty awarded NSF grant to help high schoolers prep for STEM careers appeared first on سԹ.

]]>

RICHLAND, Wash. –Washington State University Tri-Cities education faculty are part of a new, $2.85 million National Science Foundation grant to develop curriculum and hands-on projects with local high schools that use geospatial technologies to improve STEM literacy and access to the STEM workforce. The four-year project is a collaboration between WSU, Lehigh University and Texas Christian University.

Through the NSF-supported project, local high school students will use GIS and GPS to collect and analyze data for local issues

Through the NSF-supported project, local high school students will use GIS and GPS to collect and analyze data for local issues.

Project members will work with high school faculty and students to develop hands-on STEM projects that use geographic information systems, GPS and related technology to gather and analyze data on important societal issues, said Judy Morrison, academic director for the College of Education at سԹ.

At each of the three university sites, faculty will collaborate with two high schools in their area to form what is called a “research practice partnership” to co-design, develop and implement the data-driven, socio-environmental science investigations, as part of the schools’ regular curriculum.

Leading up to this grant, Lehigh University developed a few hands-on projects with local high schools in their area that investigate topics such as the urban heat island effect, the civic impact of urban trees and the carbon cost of different transportation systems. Morrison said throughout the first year of the four-year grant, WSU faculty will work with six high school teachers in the Tri-Cities to plan the project. They will use the original Lehigh University projects as models to assess how to implement similar projects into their local curriculum.

In the last few years of the grant, the team will work with a larger group of 10 teachers to get the curriculum developed for use in the classroom. They will then collect data on the outcomes of the projects and how they affected students’ STEM abilities and attitudes towards a career in STEM fields. Student projects will be tied to issues specific to the local region. One project, for example, could be studying water quality at or surrounding the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, Morrison said.

“The learning activities provide opportunities for students to collaborate, seek evidence, problem-solve, master technology, develop geospatial thinking and reasoning skills and practice communication skills,” she said. “Each are essential for careers in the STEM fields that require students to not only use logical thinking processes, but also develop creative solutions for complex issues.”

Each university partnering on the grant is working with high schools of different sizes and types in their local area. سԹ is specifically working with Chiawana High School, a large traditional high school based in Pasco, as well as River’s Edge High School, a small project-based high school in Richland.

“Each university on the grant has a large comprehensive high school, as well as a smaller high school they are working with,” Morrison said. “We will be looking at different schools and how this model can be used effectively at each.”

Throughout the four-year grant, the three universities will compare results on their projects and discuss the best way to implement them, not only at other high schools across their particular state, but also across the country. Morrison said they will rely heavily on high school teachers to develop and implement projects that make the most sense for their students and region.

“We want it to be ground-up with the teachers,” Morrison said. “We, at سԹ, are going to provide the resources and organization to help get the program up and running, and the teachers will be crucial in designing the curriculum for their own students.”

Morrison is an associate professor of science education At سԹ, she will work with سԹ colleagues Jonah Firestone, assistant professor of science education, and Sarah Newcomer, associate professor of literacy education for the project.

Firestone has a background in working with technology to expand learning opportunities in an effort to supplement learning. Newcomer has a background in working with diverse school populations and relating learning back to the students’ own culture.

“While the use of the technology on this project is important, it is not at the forefront,” Morrison said. “We want the students to see the technology as tools in how they can investigate and answer questions surrounding these local issues. These are vital skills in STEM careers. It is not the technology that is the most important, but how you use the technology for creative investigations and solutions through science, technology, engineering and mathematics.”

Media contacts:

Judy Morrison, سԹ academic director for the College of Education, 509-372-7176, jamorrison@wsu.edu

Maegan Murray, سԹ public relations/communication coordinator, 619-403-3617 (cell), maegan_murray@wsu.edu

The post Education faculty awarded NSF grant to help high schoolers prep for STEM careers appeared first on سԹ.

]]>
سԹ researchers receive NSF grant to test market potential for jet fuel research /wsu-tri-cities-researchers-receive-nsf-grant-to-test-market-potential-for-jet-fuel-research/ Thu, 01 Dec 2016 18:35:55 +0000 /?p=34212 The post سԹ researchers receive NSF grant to test market potential for jet fuel research appeared first on سԹ.

]]>

RICHLAND, Wash. – Researchers at Washington State University Tri-Cities have been awarded a National Science Foundation I-Corps grant to explore the market potential of their biojet fuel research.

Bin Yang, associate professor of biological systems engineering and principal investigator for the grant, and his team have spent several years developing a process for transforming lignin, a polymer that makes plants woody and rigid, and currently a waste product in the biofuels production process, into hydrocarbon molecules that can one-day be certified as jet fuel.

Libing Zhang

Libing Zhang

Yang said by leveraging research results from projects funded by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the Department of Transportation, the Joint Center for Aerospace Technology Innovation and The Boeing Company, he and his team have successfully demonstrated a new, water-based process for deconstructing and recovering lignin from biomass and converting it into jet fuel-range hydrocarbons that may be certified as jet fuel in the near future. Yang currently holds a patent on the process.

“Our ultimate goal is to demonstrate a flexible catalytic process that selectively converts all the carbon in the lignin into jet fuel-range hydrocarbons at minimal cost,” he said.

Libing Zhang, a سԹ postdoctoral research associate and the entrepreneurial lead of the project, said currently commercial airlines are facing pressure to reduce emissions, which is why they may have an interest in seeing a lignin-derived alternative fuel brought to market.

“The airlines see alternative jet fuel as a strategic need, helping guarantee smooth business operations and a long-term and sustainable jet fuel supply,” Zhang said. “Our conversion process can potentially reduce jet fuel cost to end users by using lignin waste from refineries and less expensive catalytic upgrading to jet fuel.”

Zhang said the NSF I-Corps program helps leading researchers develop a business platform for their research and technology that could one-day change the world, while not trying to “reinvent the wheel” by recreating processes and strategies that are already working well within the industry.

For the NSF I-Corps grant, Yang and his team are working under the mentorship of Terri L. Butler from the University of Washington for the business aspects of the project.

“The NSF I-Corps program encourages researchers to step out of the academic environment and listen to the needs of industry,” Butler said. “The researchers can then determine if their technology solves an important problem or if their research efforts should head in a different direction. This is the approach our team has taken as we work on possible business models for our biojet fuel technology while considering the needs of customer segments, key partners, cost structures and revenue streams.”

WSU is leading the nation in biofuel production. In November, Alaska Airlines made the first commercial flight using alternative jet fuel from forest residuals produced through WSU-led Northwest Advanced Renewables Alliance. Read more .

WSU also has an NSF I-Corps site led by the Voiland College of Engineering and Architecture that provides training and funding to find commercial applications of new business ideas and technologies. The free site program promotes entrepreneurism of faculty, student and staff by preparing participants for submission of a proposal to NSF to become an I-Corps team. Learn more .

 

News media contacts:
Bin Yang, سԹ biological systems engineering, 509-372-7640, binyang@tricity.wsu.edu
Libing Zhang, سԹ postdoctoral research associate, libing.zhang@wsu.edu
Maegan Murray, سԹ public relations, 509-372-7333, maegan.murray@tricity.wsu.edu

The post سԹ researchers receive NSF grant to test market potential for jet fuel research appeared first on سԹ.

]]>