Samford University’s STEM Scholars program is celebrating the graduation of 12 students in the last year. The program, supported by a series of grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF,) helps academically talented and financially-at-risk transfer students from local community colleges complete Samford degrees in the disciplines of science, technology, engineering and math. The program also seeks to increase the participation of underrepresented and underserved groups in STEM careers.
Samford biology professor Betsy Dobbins, director of the program, said more than 80% of STEM Scholars graduate on time, and almost all go on to graduate school or directly to careers in their field. The recent graduates include:
Roland Burks (computer science)
Jaylen King (computer science
Jonathan Border (computer science)
Carissa Hope (biology)
Frank Gonzalez (marine science)
Nick Munoz (environmental science)
Ashlie Terry (biology)
Kaitlynn Wade (biology)
Logan Casperson (computer science)
Itzel Mendoza (biology)
Hannah Thompson (biology)
Erica Williams (math)
Dobbins said a recent NSF grant of $1 Million will allow Samford to admit 10 more STEM Scholars per year for the next four years.