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Blacksburg, Va., August 25, 2005 -- The
mass and energy transfer that takes place at natural interfaces
determines virtually every aspect of life. A Virginia Tech team of
scientists and engineers has received a prestigious Integrated Graduate
Education and Research Training (IGERT) award in the amount of $3.1
million to study these phenomena.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is providing the funding for
“Exploring Interfaces through Graduate Education and Research.” Known
as EIGER, Virginia Tech’s project will explore naturally occurring
interfaces among minerals, water, air, and microorganisms. In a unique
twist, EIGER also will explore the complex human interfaces among
people who make up the interdisciplinary teams that will investigate
these interfacial phenomena.
Virginia Tech is now in a highly select group of only five
universities in the U.S. with four active IGERT awards. The other
universities include: UCLA, UCSB, the University of Michigan, and the
University of Washington. Virginia Tech was among an elite group of 23
new IGERT grants awarded in this funding round out of 550 proposals
submitted.
A central feature of EIGER is that it is led by an integrated team
of principal investigators at Virginia Tech consisting of: George Filz
(civil and environmental engineering (CEE)), Roseanne Foti
(psychology), Mike Hochella (geosciences), John Little (CEE), and
Brenda Winkel (biology). These five faculty, together with Deb Olsen
(Institutional Research), Jim Mitchell (CEE), and Beate Schmittmann
(physics) developed the successful proposal to NSF. “It is a rare
privilege and great honor to team up with some of the most talented
faculty on campus to work in a research field that means so much to
science and engineering in general and the sustainability of Earth in
particular,” said Hochella, the director of EIGER.
In all, EIGER will involve 20 faculty across 10 departments and four
colleges. EIGER will support approximately 27 Ph.D. students during the
next five years using the $3.1 million grant from NSF and additional
cost sharing from participating departments and colleges.
EIGER includes 11 remote laboratory locations on five continents,
and EIGER fellows, in teams of two, will engage in research at these
international sites in a novel program called "paired internships."
“Gaining an interdisciplinary understanding of these complex
processes will only be possible if we are able to transfer knowledge
across the interfaces between humans and between disciplines. EIGER is
unique because we will study these physical and psychological processes
simultaneously,” said Little, the International Internship Coordinator.
EIGER will educate the "whole student" in a complex field vital to
the leading environmental issues of the day. It is envisioned that this
educational model will help drive an institutional transformation at
Virginia Tech and beyond.
“As part of EIGER, we will develop a new graduate-level course that
will actually teach students how to do interdisciplinary research in
science and engineering. We will be offering this course to Virginia
Tech’s EIGER Fellows and other doctoral candidates. These graduate
students are among the very best in the country, and it’s an exciting
prospect to work with them in the classroom and on research,” said
Filz, the Curriculum Coordinator.
IGERT is an NSF-wide program intended to meet the challenges of
educating U.S. Ph.D. scientists and engineers with the
interdisciplinary background, deep knowledge in a chosen discipline,
and the technical, professional, and personal skills needed for the
career demands of the future. The program is intended to catalyze a
cultural change in graduate education by establishing innovative new
models for graduate education and training in a fertile environment for
collaborative research that transcends traditional disciplinary
boundaries.
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