On October 5, 2020, NSF will require biographical sketches and current and pending support forms be provided in specific formats.  One of the formats uses SciENcv to manage your data and generate compliant PDF forms for upload.  Join College proposal support personnel for training and work sessions to assist you in transitioning to this new system.  

Sessions will be held in Zoom on Tuesday, Oct 6 from 12-1pm and Friday, Oct 9 from 10-11am.  Please register for a session at the link below and we will send you a Zoom invitation.  Handouts and instructions will be provided at the sessions and also made available to researchers who are unable to attend. 

Qualtrics Registration Link: https://oregonstate.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_9LAEqMH49PzXc2h

For questions or additional details, contact:

Liz Etherington at Liz.Etherington@oregonstate.edu 
Cyndy Kelchner at  Cyndy.Kelchner@oregonstate.edu

Melora Park at  Melora.Park@oregonstate.edu

Greetings from the University of Texas at El Paso, we currently have four faculty searches in the Chemistry and Biochemistry department.

Assistant Professor-Chemical Education

https://utep.interviewexchange.com/jobofferdetails.jsp?JOBID=123969&CNTRNO=7&TSTMP=1601053689340

Assistant Professor Chemistry (Energy)

https://utep.interviewexchange.com/jobofferdetails.jsp?JOBID=125096

Assistant Professor Chemistry-Health, Human Disease, and Diagnostics 

https://utep.interviewexchange.com/jobofferdetails.jsp?JOBID=125105

COS Environmental Chemistry 20-06

https://utep.interviewexchange.com/jobofferdetails.jsp?JOBID=125093

 Subscribe to ACS’s Graduate & Postdoctoral Chemist magazinefor career advice, wellness tips, career paths, lab life insights, awards, fellowships, and general topics related to grad student and postdoc life. Don’t delay, subscribe today at GPChemist.ACS.org!
September Highlights: Cultivating My Authenticity and Self-Awareness As a STEM Graduate Student2020 is the year of self-awareness, according to health experts. Purdue University STEM graduate student Josie Nardo takes you on a journey of self-awareness, authenticity, and identity. Read moreGrad Students Weigh in on Returning to Lab after QuarantineAs labs reopen, students and faculty must adjust to new campus guidelines on conducting research in the COVID-19 era. See what graduate students from four universities think are the keys to a safe return to the lab and research during a pandemic. Read moreHow Not To NetworkLearn how to achieve your professional development goals through the power of networking. Case studies provide great of what not to do during a networking event or conversations. Read more.  Don’t miss these articles and more. 
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We Want Your Input! We invite ACS graduate students, postdoctoral scholars, faculty advisors, and mentors to write for us. Share your stories, advice, and information with readers. Email your ideas to GradEd@acs.org.

As announced in July, the College of Science will host a virtual town hall listening to Black students in the College. The purpose of this listening session will be to center Black students’ experiences and listen to their suggestions through written and spoken testimonials. The date for the listening session is set for Thursday, Oct. 8, 5–6:30 p.m.

Many Black students have had a negative experience in College of Science courses. For example, Black students have a 70% higher DFW rate in some classes than non-Black students. Regardless of intent, this is a racist outcome. The listening session is one step toward achieving a different, anti-racist outcome. The town hall will be followed by an action plan developed over the subsequent months.

Please make arrangements to attend this event. We all need to hear the voices of our Black students, and our expectation is that all College employees – faculty, staff, and graduate students assistants – attend this listening session.

This virtual town hall, the first in a series centering voices from marginalized identities in STEM, is being organized in collaboration with the College of Science Student Anti-Racism Coalition, as well as Black staff members from the OSU Educational Opportunities Program and the Black Cultural Center. 

Closed captioning will be provided. Registration is required.

Sincerely,

Roy

__________________________

Roy Haggerty (he/him/his)

Dean of Science

128 Kidder Hall

Oregon State University

Corvallis, OR 97331

I am writing to request your assistance in identifying doctoral students of color in your program to participate in the Southern Regional Educational Board(SREB) Doctoral Scholars Program. Oregon State University has partnered with SREB to provide mentoring and support for doctoral students of color who are interested in becoming faculty members in academia. While the program is designed primarily for students of color, anyone can apply. The SREB Doctoral Scholars Program was established more than 20 years ago to increase the number of scholars of color who earn their Ph.D., and to address the need for a more diverse college faculty. OSU participates as an individual institution, and supports four doctoral students and their advisors to participate in the SREB program at no cost to your department. OSU currently has funding for three new Doctoral Scholars Program participants, and we invite nominations from you and doctoral candidate advisors to participate starting with the 2020-21 academic year. Please share this information with doctoral program directors in your college.

Preference is given to candidates who are just beginning or within their first year of doctoral study. SREB is especially interested in candidates from STEM disciplines, however other disciplines are welcomed. Additionally, the doctoral advisor can attend the Institute on Teaching and Mentoring for one year with the doctoral student at no cost to the advisor or student based on our agreement with SREB.

SREB provides the following:

  1. Coordinates the annual Institute on Teaching and Mentoring for Scholars, which emphasizes gaining knowledge, developing professional skills and building a sense of commitment, teamwork and belonging.
  2. Provides the following program services: orientation for scholars; consultation with the scholar’s campus liaison and advisor/mentor; monitoring scholar enrollment and progress reports; initiating periodic and frequent communications via such avenues as listservs, newsletters, emails, phone calls and personal contact; and supporting scholar professional development.
  1. To nominate a student you think would benefit from this program, please share their name and email with my assistant, Pamela Johnson at pamela.johnson@oregonstate.edu.  (Prior to October 9th.)
  2. She will forward them a short application to complete. 

Deadline to submit applications to our office is Oct. 9, 2020. Please feel free to contact me with any questions at charlene.alexander@oregonstate.edu.

About SREB

The Southern Regional Education Board works with states to improve public education at every level, from early childhood through doctoral education. We help policymakers make informed decisions by providing independent, accurate data and recommendations. We help educators strengthen student learning with professional development, proven practices and curricula. And we help policymakers, institutions and educators share scarce resources to accomplish more together than they could alone.

Best regards,

Charlene

You may have seen President Alexander’s message or other messages requesting your participation in TRACE-OSU.  I would like to amplify OSU’s request for your participation. OSU will best be able to measure prevalence and help to keep our community healthy by maximizing the number of people enrolled.

Please see the President’s message below for details, and go to this link to enroll.   Furthermore, I would very much appreciate it if you encourage others to enroll.  Thank you.  

–Roy Haggerty, Dean of Science

Welcome to a new academic year – one where it is more important than ever to prioritize your health and the well-being of all community members. Please join me in contributing to a safer community – and learning more about your own wellness – by participating in TRACE OSU COVID-19 testing.

TRACE OSU prevalence testing begins Monday, Sept. 28, on our campuses in Corvallis and Bend and at the Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport. Current faculty, staff and students are invited to participate in this testing by using this link to enroll. Enrolling only takes a few minutes.  

Each week during fall term, up to 1,000 names of faculty, staff and students, who have enrolled to participate in TRACE OSU – and who reside in the Corvallis, Bend or Newport areas – will be drawn randomly from a pool of enrollees and invited by e-mail to be tested. 

Once you have enrolled in TRACE OSU, wait until you receive an e-mail inviting you to be tested. This invitation will include a unique QR code. Please bring that code on your smartphone or on a printed copy of your e-mail invitation to whichever OSU testing site is most convenient for you. There will be two testing sites on the Corvallis campus: one at the Reser Stadium ticket booths and one in the plaza between Kelley Engineering Center and Johnson Hall. Testing will be offered in two HMSC apartments and in a testing center room in Tykeson Hall Room 204 at OSU-Cascades.

Testing will be conducted by the TRACE OSU team and is designed confidential, easy, simple and safe and takes less than five minutes. Your personal information will be kept secure at all times, and your results will be provided to you by secure e-mail, typically within 48 hours. As required, results of positive tests will be provided to the local county health authority to aid in contact tracing.

Meanwhile, OSU will do weekly analysis of wastewater on our Corvallis and OSU-Cascades’ campuses, at HMSC and in the Corvallis, Bend and Newport communities. 

TRACE OSU prevalence results through random COVID-19 testing and wastewater testing will help the university and local county health departments plan, serve those who test positive, and respond to changes in the presence of the virus that causes COVID-19.  

Join me in enrolling now and participating this fall in TRACE OSU.

While testing itself does not prevent the spread of COVID-19, nor are the results guaranteed, testing does provide a sense of your own COVID-19 personal wellness and participation in testing encourages proper personal and public health measures by each us. Because testing is but a snapshot of results at specific time, I ask you always to observe these public health measures:

  • Wear a face covering.
  • Observe physical and social distancing measures by staying 6 feet apart from others.
  • Limit holding or attending social get-togethers of more than 10 people.
  • Wash your hands regularly.
  • Conduct daily personal health checks.
  • Stay at home if you are not feeling well or if you test positive for COVID19.
  • Get tested by TRACE OSU.

Be well and best of luck this year!

Sincerely,

F. King Alexander

President

On October 5, 2020, NSF will require biographical sketches and current and pending support forms be provided in specific formats.  One of the formats utilizes SciENcv to generate compliant PDF forms for upload.  Join College proposal support personnel for training and work sessions to assist you in transitioning to this new system.   

Sessions will be held on Zoom Tuesday, Oct 6, 2020 from 12-1pm, and Friday Oct 9, 2020 from 10-11am.  

Please register for a session at the qualtrics link below and we will send out a Zoom invitation prior to the session.  Handouts and instructions will be provided at the sessions and also made available to researchers who are unable to attend. 

Qualtrics Registration Link: https://oregonstate.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_9LAEqMH49PzXc2h

For questions or additional details, contact:

Liz Etherington at Liz.Etherington@oregonstate.edu 
Cyndy Kelchner at  Cyndy.Kelchner@oregonstate.edu

Melora Park at  Melora.Park@oregonstate.edu