WVU, PSC team up on NSF-funded S-STEM project to recruit and retain biology students to Keyser campus

The West Virginia University Potomac State College and Center for Excellence in STEM Education have been awarded $749,996 from the National Science Foundation to build a stronger pipeline of rural, low-income biology students at WVU.

The Pathways to Academic Student Success for biology majors (PASS) project aims to recruit and retain West Virginia students into PSC’s two-year biology program, as well as help project participants transfer to Morgantown campus’ four-year biology program, if desired. PASS is a scholarship program funded through a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for academically promising students majoring in Biology at WVU Potomac State College with demonstrated unmet financial need. This scholarship is designed for students who, for various reasons, did not perform up to their potential in high school to receive a PROMISE or other merit-based scholarship to pursue their dreams in college.

Principal investigator and PSC associate professor of STEM, Sheri Chisholm, explained that thanks to the NSF funding, up to 70 scholarships will be awarded to eligible high school students to join the PASS project over a six-year period. Each scholarship will total approximately $6,400 per year.

“Our hope is that these scholarships, coupled with this program’s tailored instruction and advising support, will incentivize talented high school students from rural communities who may not have considered attending college to reconsider and enroll in our biology program,” Chisholm said. 

Director of WVU’s Center for Excellence in STEM Education Gay Stewart expressed her excitement to serve as a member on the advisory board. 

“I’m excited to dig into this research and help identify ways to improve student success among our STEM majors,” Stewart said. “The lessons learned from the PASS project will help inform us on what attracts students to STEM careers, how we can better prepare them to stay in their STEM-related field of study through curriculum, student success services and personalized support, as well as how to help transfer students succeed in their programs,” Stewart said.

Stewart added that the data collected and examined could also extend beyond WVU, laying the foundation for transforming student success in STEM at a range of higher education institutions.

Learn more about this scholarship and to apply, click here.

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