| LCI
News |
June
27, 2008
Kent State Receives Multi-Millions in Grant Awards from State
of Ohio
|
State Funding
to Support University’s
Projects, Partnerships and Student Scholarships
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio state administration, education and development
officials this week announced numerous grants for Kent State strategic
scientific programs and innovative economic development projects.
The state awards announced included:
Bioterrorism Detection
Device Program
Kent
State also was part of a $3 million Ohio Third Frontier grant, with the
Northeastern Ohio
Universities College of Medicine (NEOUCOM),
announced today to support the development of a technology company incubated
at Kent State’s Centennial Research Park. The grant supports future
expansion of Pathogen Systems, Inc., which licenses biosensor technology
developed by a Kent State and NEOUCOM researchers.
Alpha Micron Project
Kent State also is a partner in a $5 million state grant received by
Kent-based Alpha Micron Inc. The funding, also a Third Frontier grant
from the engineering and physical sciences research and commercialization
program, is a three-year award for adaptive window technology and involves
Kent State and NASA.
Choose Ohio First
Scholarship
Kent
State is the lead institution on a $2 million Choose Ohio First Scholarship
program
designed to train Northeast Ohio’s future biomedical and biotechnology
workforce. The program will provide hundreds of scholarships for students
studying at all eight of the campuses in the Kent State system, as
well as more at Cuyahoga Community College, Lakeland Community College,
Lorain Community College and Stark State College of Technology.
The program also
will integrate undergraduate and graduate education through joint research
projects, build on Kent State’s nationally recognized leadership
in biomedical research and technology and help fulfill the goals of
the University System of Ohio’s 10-year master plan. The initiative
addresses both the needs of students and the demands of Ohio companies
for a skilled and adaptable workforce. It also provides for a pipeline
to encourage middle and high school-age students to spark their interest
in science and science careers.
The grant is from
the Ohio Innovation Partnership, designed to be Ohio’s premier
model for recruiting and retaining more Ohio residents as students
in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine.
###