THE
Office of Public Relations
Annual Awards $3,000 for Four Years Being Presented;
Academic Support Included for Recipients, Non-minorities
Eligible and Encouraged to Apply
For Immediate Release
November 15, 2003
Contact: Tim Kelly
Holly Euler
Stockton Public Relations
(609) 652-4950
POMONA, NJ Richard Stockton College of New Jersey has received a $396,000 grant from the National Science Foundation in recognition of its innovative work in making mathematics and computer science programs more attractive and accessible to women and minority students. Thirty Stockton talented but financially disadvantaged students will be awarded scholarships through the grant in the amount of $3,000 per year for up to four years. The college is encouraging applications by minority and female students.
We are thrilled to have been awarded these funds and to have been recognized for helping to bridge the gender and minority gaps in the training of computer and mathematics professionals, said Dr. Jill Gerhardt of Ventnor, Associate Professor of Computer Science and Information Systems, whose proposal successfully garnered the funding for the local college. Her management team on the grant includes Drs. Michael Olan, Saralyn Mathis of Wildwood, and Mohammad Neilforoshan of Wellesley, Mass. from the computer science program and Dr. Chia-Lin Wu of Mays Landing and Dr. Judith Vogel of Delran from the math program.
According to the United States Office of Technology Policy, thousands of new information technology jobs are expected to increase in the country by the end of the
-more-
NSF Grant at Stockton College/page 2
decade.
Three-fourths of these jobs will require a bachelors degree. Currently,
Some of the support services, offered to insure the success of the scholarship recipients, include:
A new 1-credit Bridges Connecting Computer Science and Calculus course
An already-proven Women in Computing course which has been very successful
Tutoring services in Programming
Research Seminar
Mentoring Program in which students are matched up with faculty role models
So many of our students have to work fulltime and part-time jobs just to make ends meet and to get through their studies, Gerhardt said. With these scholarships, some of our students will be able to study more and perhaps work (at jobs) a little less. And with the exception of the mentoring program, the great thing about these services is, they are open to all of our math and computer science students, not only our scholarship recipients.
One of the keys to the program is
the Bridges course, taught by
The Women in Computing Course taught by Mathis, is designed to recruit women as Computer Information Systems majors by building their confidence and interest in strengthening computer skills. Gerhardt believes fewer women have traditionally been drawn to the field because more boys play with computer games when they are young.
It has nothing to do with ability, she maintains. Boys are more interested in video games and more comfortable sitting alone in front of a computer. Girls as a rule tend to be more social. They would probably be more interested in computers at a younger age if more video games were designed to be played as a group instead of as an individual.
A research component to the
project offered by Neilforoshan enables seniors to
earn four credits for papers presented at a computer society conference related
to their studies. Dr. Mike Olan will train
programming tutors who will be available to the students. Gerhardt said the