Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Catalyzing systemic change: Team will use $1.3 million in funding to reduce racial disparities in STEM graduate programs

03.05.22 | Northern Arizona University

GoPro HERO13 Black

GoPro HERO13 Black records stabilized 5.3K video for instrument deployments, field notes, and outreach, even in harsh weather and underwater conditions.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, only 10 percent of all M.S. degrees were awarded to Latinx students between 2015-16, and a stunningly low 1 percent to Indigenous students. The situation for Ph.D. students is even more dire, with only 8 percent of Ph.D. graduates coming from Latinx populations and less than 1 percent from Indigenous populations.

Students representing these populations often encounter systemic racism, discrimination and bias through prevailing institutional and departmental policies and practices—which disrupts their pathways to earning higher degrees, especially in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).

The workplace of the future will increasingly focus on STEM jobs including occupations in life sciences, physical and Earth sciences, engineering and architecture, computer and math occupations as well as health-related occupations including healthcare providers and technicians. Even as the demand for educated workers in STEM fields grows—and with it, earnings potential—experts believe there is little indication that diversity in STEM-related graduate programs will shift significantly any time soon unless major changes are made within the academic system itself.

To address these inequities on an institutional level, a multidisciplinary team of Northern Arizona University researchers recently launched two related projects, supported through nearly $1.3 million in funding overall. The team includes principal investigator professor Catherine Propper of the Department of Biological Sciences and her co-investigators, assistant research professor Anita Antoninka of the School of Forestry , professor Monica Brown of the Department of English and professor Angelina Castagno of the Department of Educational Leadership , who is also director of the Diné Institute for Navajo Nation Educators .

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation has awarded Propper and the team a $499,750 grant for “Multi-institutional transformation and graduate student support initiative (MITSI): Building bridges and transforming institutions to support graduate STEM education.” The three-year project is designed to create long-term, equity-oriented systemic change aimed at reducing racial disparities in STEM graduate pathways. NAU is supporting the project through a matching grant of $590,450, combined funding from the Office of the President, the Office of the Provost, the College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, the College of Engineering, Informatics, and Applied Sciences, the College of Arts and Letters, the College of Education and the Graduate College.

Genentech has awarded additional funding and is partnering with the Sloan Foundation to earmark $200,000 for “Priming the STEM Ph.D. pathway: Equity-centered faculty as key stakeholders in BIPOC graduate student success initiatives.” Led by Castagno and Brown with support from Antoninka and Propper, this project is designed to provide STEM faculty development training in anti-racist educational practices in doctoral-granting programs across the Southwest.

“As the child of a Peruvian immigrant to the United States,” Brown said, “I’m very excited to be a part of making higher education accessible and inclusive. We will work towards the elimination of structural barriers, so that we might reduce disproportionality and systemic inequities found in STEM fields. As a group, we will work both on personal action plans and systemic, institutional change.”

Cohort-based bridge program will serve as the catalyst for change

The team will create a cohort-based bridge program between NAU-Flagstaff and partners Diné College, a tribal college operated by the Navajo Nation, and NAU-Yuma, a Hispanic Serving Institution whose student body is drawn largely from the largely Latinx population around Yuma, Ariz. A key element of this partnership is collaborating with clinical professor Francisco Villa from NAU Yuma and associate professor Don Robinson and professor Shazia Tabassum Hakim from Diné College.

“These grants support a series of initiatives to facilitate both the recruitment of Indigenous and Latinx students into STEM graduate education programs at NAU and transform graduate education at NAU into a more student-centered educational model that is oriented toward student success,” Propper said.

The team will tackle this challenge through four major initiatives.

“Together, these programs will lead to systemic change in the capacity to recruit, train and place students from historically excluded groups into STEM careers,” Propper said. “We are committed to implementing these changes, which will ultimately lead to a more diverse STEM workplace.”

“These initiatives are prime examples of the work that is critically important for Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs) and Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) like NAU,” NAU president José Luis Cruz Rivera said, “to increase economic mobility and equitable postsecondary educational value.”

As he recently testified before the House Higher Education and Workforce Investment Subcommittee, Cruz Rivera advocated for increased investments in HSIs. “Together, we can propel more low-income, first-generation students and students of color to the middle-class and beyond. Support for HSIs will pave the way for less inequality, more social mobility and broader economic prosperity in America.”

About Northern Arizona University

Northern Arizona University is a high-research institution providing exceptional educational opportunities in Arizona and beyond. NAU delivers a student-centered experience to its nearly 30,000 students in Flagstaff, statewide and online through rigorous academic programs in a supportive, inclusive and diverse environment. Dedicated, world-renowned faculty help ensure students achieve academic excellence, experience personal growth, have meaningful research opportunities and are positioned for personal and professional success.


# # #

Keywords

Contact Information

Kerry Bennett
Northern Arizona University
Kerry.Bennett@nau.edu

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Northern Arizona University. (2022, March 5). Catalyzing systemic change: Team will use $1.3 million in funding to reduce racial disparities in STEM graduate programs. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3RNRO68/catalyzing-systemic-change-team-will-use-13-million-in-funding-to-reduce-racial-disparities-in-stem-graduate-programs.html
MLA:
"Catalyzing systemic change: Team will use $1.3 million in funding to reduce racial disparities in STEM graduate programs." Brightsurf News, Mar. 5 2022, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3RNRO68/catalyzing-systemic-change-team-will-use-13-million-in-funding-to-reduce-racial-disparities-in-stem-graduate-programs.html.