Agenda | Call for Abstracts | Directions | List of Presenters | Registration | History


PROMISE: Maryland’s Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate (AGEP), invites you to attend our Second Annual Research Symposium, Monday, January, 22, 2007 at the Stamp Student Union on the University of Maryland College Park campus.

REGISTRATION: Online Abstract Submission | Audience Registration

AGENDA
All events will take place at the Colony Ballroom in the Stamp Student Union on the University of Maryland College Park campus.

8:30 a.m.
Registration & Continental Breakfast
9:30 a.m.

Greetings, Opening Remarks and Program Overview
Greetings:
Charles Caramello, Dean, Graduate School, University of Maryland College Park

Opening Remarks by PROMISE Co-Principal Investigators:

Dr. Jordan Warnick, University of Maryland Baltimore
Dr. Janet Rutledge, University of Maryland Baltimore County
Dr. Johnetta Davis, University of Maryland College Park
Program Overview: Dr. Renetta Tull, PROMISE Project Director

9:45 a.m.
Oral Presentations
Biomedical
, Health, Chemical and Life Sciences
10:45 a.m.
Poster Presentations
Biomedical/Health, Chemical and Life Sciences
11:45 a.m.
Oral Presentations
Mathematics, Physical Sciences, and Engineering
12:15 p .m.
Poster Presentations
Mathematics, Physical Sciences, and Engineering
1:00 p.m.
Working Lunch
1:30 p.m.
Poster Presentations
Social Sciences, Art, Education and Humanities
2:30 p.m.
Oral Presentations
Social Sciences, Art, Education and Humanities
4:30 p.m.
Awards Ceremony and Closing Reception

ABOUT AGEP

The National Science Foundation's Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate (AGEP) program is intended to increase significantly the number of domestic students receiving doctoral degrees in the sciences, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), with special emphasis on those population groups underrepresented in these fields (i.e., African Americans, Hispanics, American Indians, Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders). In addition, AGEP is particularly interested in increasing the number of minorities who will enter the professoriate in these disciplines. Specific objectives of the AGEP program are (1) to develop and implement innovative models for recruiting, mentoring, and retaining minority students in STEM doctoral programs, and (2) to develop effective strategies for identifying and supporting underrepresented minorities who want to pursue academic careers.

ABOUT PROMISE: Maryland's AGEP

PROMISE: Maryland's AGEP is an alliance of the three public research universities in Maryland, led by UMBC, dedicated to the increasing the number and diversity of Ph.D. graduates in the sciences and engineering who go on to academic careers. AGEP is a program of the National Science Foundation. Maryland's AGEP was awarded in 2002 and will be funded for 5 years. The PI for Maryland's AGEP grant is UMBC Provost Dr. Arthur T. Johnson.

The Co-PIs on each campus are: Dr. Janet C. Rutledge, UMBC Sr. Associate Dean of the Graduate School; Dr. Jordan E. Warnick, Assistant Dean of Student Research at the University of Maryland Baltimore (UMB); and Dr. Johnetta G. Davis, Associate Dean of Graduate Studies at the University of Maryland College Park (UMCP). The alliance between UMBC, UMB, and UMCP encourages interaction between the university communities. Each university will develop its own set of activities in three areas: 1) cultivating new graduate students; 2) building a supportive community where students can excel; and 3) promoting professional development. Although some of the activities will be on individual campuses, one of the keys to the success of PROMISE: Maryland's AGEP is the development and implementation of activities that promote successful recruitment, retention, graduation, and professorial training that will involve and engage students from all three campuses.

PROMISE uniquely serves the needs of graduate students across three campuses through activities that range from retreats, seminars, and conferences, to informal discussions during breakfast. The services and programs of PROMISE are open to all graduate students who are seeking or interested in obtaining the PhD, regardless of discipline. The focus of the services and programs is geared toward one of the goals of PROMISE: To increase the numbers and diversity of Maryland's graduate student population in sciences, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields. The services and programs of PROMISE will always reflect this goal. PROMISE seeks to increase diverse representation by designing programs that will successfully cultivate new students from diverse ethnicities; and facilitate retention, successful graduation through the PhD, and preparation for the professoriate.

Broadly, students can participate in PROMISE regardless of their status (full-time, part-time), ethnicity, discipline, or source of funding. Narrowly, students who are underrepresented will be strongly supported as they utilize the services and resources of PROMISE; these students can be encouraged to consider PROMISE to be one of their major mechanisms of support. Services and resources are available to underrepresented students, and to students of all ethnicities who work to achieve the goals of PROMISE at UMBC, UMB, and UMCP.

 

PROMISE • Maryland's Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate
Lead Institution: University of Maryland, Baltimore County • 1000 Hilltop Circle • Baltimore, MD 21250 • 410-455-2930 • promise@umbc.edu
University of Maryland Baltimore • 10 S. Pine Street MSTF 300 • Baltimore, Maryland  21201 • 410-706-3026 • promise@umaryland.edu
University of Maryland College Park • 2108 Lee Building • College Park, MD  20742 • 301.405.4180 • promise@gradschool.umd.edu