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: AIP Foundation
    amount: $49,793
    city: College Park, MD
    year: 2025

    To support a meeting on the funding landscape for History of Science research

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program History of Science and Technology
    • Investigator Trevor Owens

    To support a meeting on the funding landscape for History of Science research

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  • grantee: Association for the Study of Higher Education
    amount: $10,000
    city: Beaverton, OR
    year: 2025

    To support the Association for the Study of Higher Education 50th Annual Conference

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Jason P. Guilbeau

    To support the Association for the Study of Higher Education 50th Annual Conference

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  • grantee: University of Wisconsin, Madison
    amount: $24,951
    city: Madison, WI
    year: 2025

    To support the completion of a longitudinal study examining the social networks and community cultural wealth of undergraduate Latine STEM majors

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Nidia Banuelos

    To support the completion of a longitudinal study examining the social networks and community cultural wealth of undergraduate Latine STEM majors

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  • grantee: University of New Mexico
    amount: $25,000
    city: Albuquerque, NM
    year: 2025

    To complete an engineering education research pilot study and engage in related professional development opportunities

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Lizandra Godwin

    To complete an engineering education research pilot study and engage in related professional development opportunities

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  • grantee: University of Massachusetts, Boston
    amount: $25,000
    city: Boston, MA
    year: 2025

    To support student participation in summer research opportunities and academic year activities of the Urban Massachusetts LSAMP Program

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Joseph Berger

    To support student participation in summer research opportunities and academic year activities of the Urban Massachusetts LSAMP Program

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  • grantee: Community Initiatives
    amount: $249,760
    city: Oakland, CA
    year: 2025

    To continue to strengthen the professional network of research software engineers in the United States

    • Program Technology
    • Sub-program Open Source in Science
    • Investigator Sandra Gesing

    To continue to strengthen the professional network of research software engineers in the United States

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  • grantee: Federation of American Scientists
    amount: $250,000
    city: Washington, DC
    year: 2025

    To begin work on a more resilient national data infrastructure by documenting current and changing uses of key federal datasets

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Denice Ross

    To begin work on a more resilient national data infrastructure by documenting current and changing uses of key federal datasets

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  • grantee: Radboud University
    amount: $636,504
    city: Nijmegen, Netherlands
    year: 2025

    To establish a machine-learning-based ‘chemical evolution machine’ that leverages changes in the environment to evolve chemical networks towards functions important to life

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Matter-to-Life
    • Investigator Wilhelm Huck

    The progression from matter to life on Earth must have involved something akin to Darwinian evolution: molecules became increasingly more complex and functional and eventually organized themselves into self-replicating systems. To investigate the principles of chemical evolution necessary for this complexification and organization, this grant supports efforts by Wilhelm Huck, a Professor of Physical Organic Chemistry (Radboud University, NL), to develop an experimental platform capable of ‘prebiotic evolution.’ Huck intends to develop a machine-learning based and robotic ‘chemical evolution machine’ that leverages changes in the (experimental) environment to evolve chemical networks towards functions important to life. The project focuses on a prominent prebiotic chemical reaction (formose) and aims to evolve networks that achieve three goals regarded as important to the rise of life on Earth: enhanced yield of ribose (a key building block of RNA); self-catalysis (the emergence of molecules (catalysts) within a network that enhance the chemical reactivity of the network); and self-compartmentalization (the emergence of compartments that encapsulate the chemical mixture from which the compartments emerge). Huck and his team will leverage a machine-learning guided robotic system to evolve chemical networks towards targeted properties. The experimental apparatus will expose chemical systems to various conditions (reactant and catalyst choices and concentrations, variations in temperature and pH) chosen by the learning algorithms. Networks will be selected based on how closely they approximate a targeted property (ribose yield, self-catalysis, self-compartmentalization). This process will be repeated again and again, and it’s expected that the learning algorithms will become increasingly more effective at identifying conditions that lead to the targeted property. A successful project will uncover the mechanisms by which environment change nudges a formose chemical network towards functionality, while also establishing a workflow that can be used to discover how other chemical networks did or could achieve functions important to living systems.

    To establish a machine-learning-based ‘chemical evolution machine’ that leverages changes in the environment to evolve chemical networks towards functions important to life

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  • grantee: NumFOCUS
    amount: $244,375
    city: Austin, TX
    year: 2025

    To develop a declarative modeling language for structural economics that enables the sharing of complex models with heterogeneous agents in a standardized and transparent format

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Christopher Carroll

    To develop a declarative modeling language for structural economics that enables the sharing of complex models with heterogeneous agents in a standardized and transparent format

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  • grantee: University of Houston
    amount: $24,318
    city: Houston, TX
    year: 2025

    To complete a study on the engineering identities of Black undergraduate men in HSI and HBCU contexts

    • Program Higher Education
    • Investigator Jerrod Henderson

    To complete a study on the engineering identities of Black undergraduate men in HSI and HBCU contexts

    More
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