
Dean of Graduate Education Juan Gonzales said the scholarship will create more support for graduate students. Photo by Shubhechhya Mukherjee | Mercury Staff
Through funding provided by the National Science Foundation,
UTD is taking part in a nationwide effort to fund the graduate education of
minority students.
After being selected for the NSF’s Bridge to the Doctorate
program, the university was awarded $1.1 million to support the education of 12
minority students’ graduate education for the first two years of graduate
school. Dean of Graduate Education Juan Gonzalez said by being able to gain
support directly from the university, the students would then benefit from
structures created through the grant money.
“The grant strongly suggests that the structures we create
support the student. For example, advising on future careers, advising on
writing their dissertation, advising on how to effectively work in a lab and
interact with your mentor. All of these things that are essential for the
student,” Gonzales said. “It strongly suggests that those structures you create
are not only to support the students receiving the grant, but also to support
all of your students on campus. Supported one way or the other, a Ph.D. is a
hard thing to do. We need to support them.”
UTD was one of 20 universities selected for the grant among
200-300 applicants. The nearly six-month application process involved the work
of Gonzalez, materials science and engineering professor, Amy Walker and
various other faculty members of the UT system. A primary focus of the
application was UTD’s diverse undergraduate student body, highlighting the
potential for a similarly diverse graduate student body.
“We’re showing that we need more diversity in our program,
more diversity at the domestic level. We have big diversity on campus
internationally, but at a domestic level we don’t have the diversity would like
to have,” Gonzalez said. “We want more Hispanic and African American students,
and more women in the engineering side and more first-generation students
involved.”
Much of the focus for selecting grant recipients is being
placed on members of the Louis
Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation, another NSF
program aimed at improving accessibility of graduate education for minority
students in STEM. However, Gonzalez said that the grant is available to any
minority student interested in graduate research.
“We’re looking for students that clearly have a path towards
research … and research students with the letters of recommendation that
clearly show that they have the potential to be researchers in the future,”
Gonzalez said. “The end goal is not necessarily (that) students are going to
become part of a faculty of a university. We want them to be in the workforce
at the doctoral level, so that way we increase the diversity we have at those
levels.”