Kennesaw State gets $1M grant for Hispanic, black STEM students

Kennesaw State University received a five-year, $1 million  Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant for black and Hispanic students in STEM fields.

Credit: Kennesaw State University

Credit: Kennesaw State University

Kennesaw State University received a five-year, $1 million Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant for black and Hispanic students in STEM fields.

For the next five years, Kennesaw State University will have $200,000 more a year to make make black and Hispanic students more successful.

The Maryland-based Howard Hughes Medical Institute announced Wednesday it has given KSU a $1 million grant for those STEM — science, technology, engineering, and mathematics — students.

It was one of the 33 institutions chosen from 594 across the country and was the only one in Georgia.

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The HHMI initiative seeks to help underrepresented ethnic minorities, first-generation college students or working adults with families.

The schools submitted plans to develop more inclusive learning environments in STEM.

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The grant will support faculty development and changes in teaching methods in addition to funding the redesigning of classroom experiences to improve learning opportunities for all students, the school said in a news release.

“This will help us broaden participation in all the areas of science a student may choose to pursue, everything from studying about the origins of the universe, to changes in the environment, to zoology,” said Mark Anderson, dean of the College of Science and Mathematics.

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