News & Events / Minority-Serving Institutions Excel in Preparing Students for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) Education

Minority-Serving Institutions Excel in Preparing Students for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) Education

Published May 13, 2014
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Washington, D.C., Dec. 3, 2009—Last week President Barack Obama launched the "Educate to Innovate" campaign, a nationwide effort to help motivate and inspire students to excel in science and math over the next decade. A critical component to addressing the President’s goal of building an American workforce with 21st century skills through science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) undergraduate education is already being demonstrated successfully at several minority-serving institutions (MSIs)—Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs), and Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs). Over the past three years, MSIs continue to take steps that help to further improve America’s global competitiveness and increase equity, especially among minority students, in STEM education.

A new report, Diversifying the STEM Pipeline: The Model Replication Institutions Program, released by the Institute for Higher Education Policy (IHEP), describes effective practices and policies that have enhanced and strengthened the STEM offerings at nine MSIs. These institutions participate in the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Model Replication Institutions (MRI) initiative, which builds on best practices in STEM undergraduate education identified previously by a NSF- and NASA-supported, 11-year-old program called the Model Institutions of Excellence (MIE). The participating MRI minority-serving institutions include: Alabama A&M University, Navajo Technical College, New York City College of Technology, Northwest Indian College, Paine College, Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute, Stillman College, Texas A&M University Corpus Christi, and Universidad del Turabo.

“Clearly, a driver of the future global economy is STEM and a way to close the gap in STEM degree completion rates is by tapping into underrepresented minorities who are the fastest growing segment in our population," said IHEP President Michelle Asha Cooper, Ph.D. “These institutions have set an excellent example of how to increase student enrollment and graduation rates while remaining committed to expanding and diversifying the STEM workforce and closing the achievement gaps in the STEM fields among Black, Hispanic, and Native American students.”

Key Practices to Improve Stem Education Among Minority Students

The report finds that the nine MRI minority-serving institutions replicated the following seven-components from the MIE model to improve their STEM programs:

  • Precollege Initiatives. Prepare matriculating students to succeed in college and introduce students to STEM disciplines and careers.
  • Student Support. Provide social, financial, and academic assistance to students.
  • Undergraduate Research. Enable students to become directly involved in ongoing research.
  • Faculty Development. Support recruitment, retention, and professional development of STEM faculty.
  • Curriculum Development. Align curricula with accepted content standards and concepts relevant to the marketplace, the community, and the student population.
  • Physical Infrastructure. Upgrade and maintain facilities and equipment.
  • Graduate Programs and Science Career Initiatives. Facilitate admission to and retention in STEM graduate programs and careers.

Diversifying the STEM Pipeline: The Model Replication Institutions Program offers several recommendations—geared toward institutions, private foundations, researchers, and federal and state policymakers—to improve recruitment, retention, graduation, and matriculation into STEM graduate programs or careers. Some suggested approaches include strengthening mathematics preparation through K-12 partnerships, providing statewide opportunities to share best practices, and investing in institutional data capacity.

The MRI program is managed by IHEP as part of a broader portfolio of MSI student success initiatives and its ongoing partnership with the Alliance for Equity in Higher Education, a collaboration established in 1999 by the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities, and the National Association For Equal Opportunity in Higher Education to represent the shared interests of TCUs, HSIs, and HBCUs.

Diversifying the STEM Pipeline: The Model Replication Institutions Program is supported by NSF, an independent federal agency that supports fundamental research and education across all fields of science and engineering, with an annual budget of $5.92 billion. NSF funds reach all 50 states through grants to over 1,700 universities and institutions. For more information or to download a free copy, visit IHEP's Web site at www.ihep.org.