The
investments of the National Science Foundation’s Human Resource
Development Division’s Alliances for Graduate Education in the
Professoriate (AGEP) program continue to show changes in
institutional culture across its portfolio. Here are a few selected
highlights:
AGEP
institutions produced approximately 35 percent of the STEM Ph.D.s
and 40 percent of the minority STEM Ph.D.s in 2005.
Compared
to the baseline year of 1999, AGEP institutions reported an average
annual increase in the number of minority Ph.D. recipients in all
STEM fields of 7 percent in 2005.
Between
1999 and 2005, the average annual number of graduate student
enrollees in all STEM fields increased from 7,800 to 9,100, an
increase of 16 percent. As specific examples, the category of all
natural sciences and engineering increased 21 percent,
engineering and computer sciences increased 20 percent, biological
sciences increased 23 percent, and physical sciences
increased 25 percent.
Between
1999 and 2005, the average annual number of new graduate student
enrollees in all STEM fields increased from 1,802 to 2,131, an
increase of 18 percent. As specific examples, the category of all
natural sciences and engineering increased 19 percent,
engineering and computer sciences increased 20 percent, biological
sciences increased 16 percent and physical sciences increased
27 percent.
Selected
AGEP project-specific highlights include:
Maryland
Alliance (University of Maryland Baltimore County, University of
Maryland at College Park, and University of Maryland at Baltimore;
NSF grant HRD-0342790) -- From 2000-2004, total minority STEM
doctoral enrollment increased from 57
to 204
(an increase of 258 percent).
Colorado
PEAKS Alliance (University of Colorado at Boulder and Colorado State
University; NSF grant HRD-0086551) -- From 2000-2004, minority STEM
doctoral enrollment increased from 69
to 106
(an increase of 54 percent).
Louisiana
Alliance (Tulane University, Louisiana State University, Xavier
University; NSF grant HRD-0202178) -- From 2000-2004, total minority
STEM doctoral enrollment increased from 88
to 171
(an increase of 94 percent).