Grants Database

The Foundation awards approximately 200 grants per year (excluding the Sloan Research Fellowships), totaling roughly $80 million dollars in annual commitments in support of research and education in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and economics. This database contains grants for currently operating programs going back to 2008. For grants from prior years and for now-completed programs, see the annual reports section of this website.

Grants Database

Grantee
Amount
City
Year
  • grantee: National Opinion Research Center
    amount: $511,946
    city: Chicago, NY
    year: 2025

    To study the effects of minimum wage increases and pre-K expansions on labor markets for childcare by combining administrative records from several states

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Robert Goerge

    What can improve the hiring and retention of care workers? Research led by Robert Goerge at the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) will examine the labor market for childcare workers using linked data from multiple states. The project will construct a longitudinal dataset by combining administrative records, including childcare workers’ employment and wage histories as well as their educational credentials. The team will use variation in locations with different policy shifts—like local minimum wage increases or the rollout of universal pre-K—to estimate the threshold wage needed to retain childcare staff and identify any unintended consequences, such as daycare teachers being drawn away to work at local schools instead. The research will yield new evidence about labor policies in this critical sector.  Along with academic publications, expected outputs include interactive data dashboards that give states real-time insight into their childcare labor markets.

    To study the effects of minimum wage increases and pre-K expansions on labor markets for childcare by combining administrative records from several states

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  • grantee: Emily Sohn
    amount: $64,400
    city: Minneapolis, MN
    year: 2025

    To support the research and writing of "The New Wilderness: How Life Finds a Way in the Most Unexpected Places" to be published by Sourcebooks in 2026

    • Program Public Understanding
    • Sub-program Books
    • Investigator Emily Sohn

    To support the research and writing of "The New Wilderness: How Life Finds a Way in the Most Unexpected Places" to be published by Sourcebooks in 2026

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  • grantee: Southwest Research Institute
    amount: $49,001
    city: San Antonio, TX
    year: 2025

    To develop spacecraft operations and scientific plans to maximize the scientific return of the New Horizons mission during its encounter with the heliospheric termination shock

    • Program Research
    • Investigator Kelsi Singer

    To develop spacecraft operations and scientific plans to maximize the scientific return of the New Horizons mission during its encounter with the heliospheric termination shock

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  • grantee: Columbia University
    amount: $50,000
    city: New York, NY
    year: 2025

    To pilot a multi-city network initiative to address urban energy insecurity in three cities

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Diana Hernández

    To pilot a multi-city network initiative to address urban energy insecurity in three cities

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  • grantee: Stanford University
    amount: $749,482
    city: Stanford, CA
    year: 2025

    To support the institutionalization of an Open Source Programs Office at Stanford University

    • Program Technology
    • Sub-program Open Source in Science
    • Investigator Russell Poldrack

    Since 2020 the Sloan Foundation has been supporting the establishment of Open Source Program Offices (OSPOs) within universities as a strategy to institutionalize support for open source software in the research enterprise. In 2023, Sloan provided two years of funding to six institutions, including Stanford University, to establish OSPOs, to launch a set of pilot activities to determine the most promising strategies for supporting open source software development on their respective campuses, and to develop a clear vision for a long-term institutional support ecosystem for open source. This grant provides an additional two years of support to the Stanford OSPO, directed by Zach Chandler, a 17-year veteran of Stanford who has worked in the Libraries, University IT, and the Office of the Vice Provost and Dean of Research and supported by faculty director Russ Poldrack, to build on early successes and bridge to independent sustainability beyond Sloan funding.

    To support the institutionalization of an Open Source Programs Office at Stanford University

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  • grantee: City Futures dba Center for an Urban Future
    amount: $200,000
    city: New York, NY
    year: 2025

    To elevate overlooked opportunities to strengthen New York City’s economy and expand access to well-paying careers for New Yorkers from low-income communities

    • Program New York City Program
    • Investigator Jonathan Bowles

    To elevate overlooked opportunities to strengthen New York City’s economy and expand access to well-paying careers for New Yorkers from low-income communities

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  • grantee: University of Maryland, College Park
    amount: $2,498,756
    city: College Park, MD
    year: 2025

    To demonstrate a scalable system for producing official price and quantity statistics using item-level transaction data from private firms

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator John Haltiwanger

    Official measures of inflation and consumer spending currently rely on surveys, store visits, and other old-fashioned methods of data collection. Even when there are enough staff and enough responses to generate reasonably representative statistics about various categories of sales, it is still the case that two different systems record prices and quantities in separate and independent ways rather than in simultaneous and more compatible ways. Research led by economist John Haltiwanger at the University of Maryland will demonstrate a more direct approach using the item-level transaction records of private retailers. The project, called Re-Engineering Statistics using Economic Transactions (RESET), leverages point-of-sale data that record prices, quantities, and product descriptions in real time, covering about two-thirds of U.S. retail transactions (over $3?trillion in annual sales).  The team will generate monthly inflation and spending indices on the same schedule and format as official government reports, but with the potential for greater granularity, accuracy, and timeliness.  The project will also provide a blueprint for how federal statistical agencies could adopt more modern methods like this to produce more responsive, cost-effective, and reliable economic indicators.

    To demonstrate a scalable system for producing official price and quantity statistics using item-level transaction data from private firms

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  • grantee: Brookings Institution
    amount: $1,200,000
    city: Washington, DC
    year: 2025

    To build up insights, proposals, and consensus about how to strengthen the production of key economic indicators

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator John Sabelhaus

    Consisting of 13 principal agencies as well as dozens of other officials and offices, the federal statistical system is highly decentralized. This institutional structure has widely been seen as convoluted and outdated compared with other countries, resulting in recent bi-partisan calls for reform. Researchers at the Brookings Institution will therefore lead a broad-based effort to develop and analyze options. Since form should follow function, this requires coordination with other researchers—including other Sloan grantees—who are inventing and testing ways to modernize statistical methodologies. Brookings will specifically commission white papers from experts and vet ideas with practitioners, users, and decision-makers from both the private and public sectors. The plan is for the reports and briefing materials generated to help build consensus, comprehension, and commitment about potential new institutional configurations for providing the United States with reliable economic indicators.  

    To build up insights, proposals, and consensus about how to strengthen the production of key economic indicators

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  • grantee: Princeton University
    amount: $221,355
    city: Princeton, NJ
    year: 2025

    To support a postdoctoral fellowship on Metascience & AI with a specific interest in implications of AI use for assessment and evaluation practices

    • Program Technology
    • Initiative AI in Science
    • Sub-program Exploratory Grantmaking in Technology
    • Investigator Mel Andrews

    To support a postdoctoral fellowship on Metascience & AI with a specific interest in implications of AI use for assessment and evaluation practices

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  • grantee: University of Toronto
    amount: $500,000
    city: Toronto, ON, Canada
    year: 2025

    To expand the capability, and extend the viability, of the Social Science Prediction Platform as an online resource for collecting and compiling expert forecasts about the results of social science experiments

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Eva Vivalt

    Which empirical findings are truly surprising? Economist Eva Vivalt at the University of Toronto will expand and enhance how the Social Science Prediction Platform crowdsources expert forecasts of research results. The platform allows social scientists to register predictions about the outcomes of planned studies before data are collected. This will highlight which results are truly surprising, help journals recognize the value of null findings, and improve the power calculations used to design empirical experiment. The plan is to enhance the platform’s capabilities and user base, integrating it with research registries and improving its long-term sustainability. By collecting thousands of forecasts across economics, psychology, and other social sciences, the initiative will also generate data for meta-research on expert judgment and forecasting acumen. Expected outcomes include an expanded database of predictions, scholarly publications assessing forecast accuracy, and greater adoption of forecasting as a standard practice to improve research transparency.

    To expand the capability, and extend the viability, of the Social Science Prediction Platform as an online resource for collecting and compiling expert forecasts about the results of social science experiments

    More
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