Hampton University Forms Partnership for Science Research With Brandeis University

Hampton University in Virginia has formed a partnership with Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts, to increase the number of African American students conducting scientific research. The Partnership for Research and Education in Materials (PREM) will include a 10-week summer program for Hampton undergraduate students. These students will participate in research projects with scientists at Brandeis. All expenses for the Hampton students will be paid by funds from a five-year, $3 million grant from the National Science Foundation.

samuelhsRaymond Samuel, assistant dean of the School of Engineering and Technology at Hampton University and co-director of the PREM program, said that “there are many talented young people who may never know they have an aptitude for research science. If they’re never exposed to it, they don’t know they are missing out on it.”

Another component of the PREM program will be two-year appointments for three assistant research professors. The scholars will spend their first year conducting research at Brandeis and their second year they will continue their research at Hampton. The goal of the program is to train these researchers for tenure-track posts at either university.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

The University of New Mexico Partners With the University of the West Indies

The University of New Mexico and the University of the West Indies Five Island Campus, Antigua and Barbuda, recently created a new partnership designed to expand immersion opportunities for students at both institutions.

The Huge Racial Gap in College Completion Rates

According to a new report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, the percentage of students who began college in the fall of 2018 and earned a credential within six years rose to 61.1 percent. For Black students who enrolled in 2018, 43.8 percent had earned a degree or other credential within six years. This is more than 17 percentage points below the overall rate. And the racial gap has increased in recent years.

American-Born Layli Maparyan Appointed President of the University of Liberia

Dr. Maparyan, a distinguished academic and prolific scholar, had been serving as the executive director of the Wellesley Centers for Women and a professor of African Studies at Wellesley College in Massachusetts.

Black Medical School Students Continue to Have to Cope With Racial Discrimination

A new study by scholars at the medical schools of New York University and Yale University finds that African American or Black students were less likely than their White counterparts to feel that medical school training contributed to their development as a person and physician.

Featured Jobs