The 诺伊斯程序 at 正规博彩十大网站排名学院 will offer STEM students scholarships in their Junior and Senior years as well as their student teaching semester from 2019-2024. Noyce Scholars must teach for 2 years per year of funding received: which means in accepting the scholarship they are agreeing to teaching in a high needs school for 5 years after completing the program.
为学者提供额外的资金支持
Noyce Scholars will receive funding to work 10 hours per week with a faculty member in their lab (or off-campus research, e.g. St. Jude, etc.). Each scholar will have funding to attend one professional conference in either their junior or senior year. They will also be paid for one summer research experience (either as rising juniors or seniors) and receive free housing on campus for that summer. 完成课程后, each scholar will have a grant to work with a Rhodes STEM faculty member to help them purchase supplies for their own classrooms. Finally, all testing fees associated with certification will be covered.
STEM教师参与
All Noyce Scholars will be mentored by a STEM faculty member at Rhodes.
Programming
We will facilitate “STEM 101” a workshop that takes place in a local school featuring hands on-inquiry based lessons and activities with P-12 students and the Noyce Scholars. We will also have responsibility for “STEM Week” as part of the Urban Education Summer Institute, 2019年夏季开始, 每年6月和7月举行. That week will feature professional development opportunities here on campus. We will also be bringing in guest speakers whose work focuses on STEM education and social justice.
Research
The overarching research question central to this project is about what happens when we combine intensive lab-based STEM training with our culturally relevant approach to urban teacher education. We have contracted with Brockport Research Institute to provide formative and summative evaluations of the project. They will be monitoring completer data as well as conducting surveys and phone interviews with the Noyce Scholars. Their work will form the basis for our data collection.
This project is supported by NSF award #1852661,