(L-R) Heartland President Keith Cornille, ISU President
Larry Dietz, IWU President Eric Jensen.
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Heartland Lincoln Center included in $4.6 Million NSF Grant with ISU,
IWU
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[November 16, 2018]
The National Science Foundation has awarded
$4.6 million to a consortium comprised of Illinois Wesleyan
University, Illinois State University and Heartland Community
College to fund NexSTEM: A Community Assets Program that Fosters the
Next Generation of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math)
Leaders.
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Grant dollars will fund scholarships and support at
all three Heartland Community College locations including Normal,
Pontiac and Lincoln.
Over the five-year granting period, the three-school consortium will
disburse nearly $2.8 million in scholarships and receive more than
$1.8 million to involve the NexSTEM scholars in community-based
research projects, to support the scholars’ classroom learning, to
study new strategies for retaining students in STEM majors, and to
keep the consortium running smoothly.
NexSTEM represents a collaborative effort between IWU, ISU and
Heartland with local not-for-profit agencies to increase the
recruitment and retention of talented, socio-economically
underrepresented students in four-year STEM degree programs.
The program is built on the premise that its three institutions of
higher education can generate a larger number of more successful
STEM graduates by working together, and with community partners,
than by working separately.
“Few communities enjoy such rich collaborations between a large
state university, a small private liberal arts college, and a
community college,” said Heartland Community College President Keith
Cornille. “The NextSTEM program will help bolster our shared
commitment to the community and our responsibility to provide all
students with a pathway to success.”
While the project's three institutions of higher education have a
shared commitment to student-centered, undergraduate STEM education,
they offer programs of study and campus environments that complement
rather than duplicate each other.
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Because of a national shortage of STEM professionals, employers
in the U.S. often struggle to fill jobs in these fields. This shortage of STEM
professionals arises, in part, because persistent socio-economic inequities have
prevented equal access to these disciplines.
NexSTEM aims to counter these trends by offering substantial
four-year college scholarships, research experiences, and mentoring to talented
high school seniors who are interested in STEM, but for whom significant
financial need and limited familiarity with STEM careers are obstacles to
obtaining bachelor's degrees. In this way, the program intends to diversify and
grow the pool of STEM professionals.
An estimated 70 four-year scholarships will be offered through NexSTEM, with
between 20 and 25 scholarships awarded to students at each of the three schools
who matriculate in the falls of 2019 and 2020. Recipients may be awarded up to
$10,000 annually from the NexSTEM grant; however, each student’s specific
NexSTEM award is dependent upon financial need. NexSTEM scholars who begin their
undergraduate educations at Heartland can carry their scholarships with them if
they transfer to Illinois Wesleyan or Illinois State.
Offices of Admissions, Financial Aid, and Student Services at the three
institutions will join the PI and Co-PIs in identifying the cohort pool.
Students can apply now by visiting NexSTEM.org.
[Steve Fast
Associate Director of Public Information
Heartland Community College] |