graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Graduate Research Fellowship Program

Administrative Guide

Become familiar with the most recent version of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)  Administrative Guide . It contains information on requirements and guidance on the administration and facilitation of GRFP Fellowships and details the responsibilities of both the Fellow and their GRFP awardee institution to ensure a successful tenure within the program.

For all Fellows (New and Continuing) and GRFP awardee institutions, acceptance of NSF funds indicates acceptance of and adherence to the award Terms and Conditions. New Fellows, Current Fellows, and Coordinating Officials are expected to familiarize themselves with the Administrative Guide.

Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)

Award Offers and Honorable Mentions List

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Last Name:  

Award Year:

Current Institution refers to the institutional affiliation of the applicant at the time of GRFP application submission.

 2024 Offered Award List

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Office of Graduate Student Assistantships and Fellowships

NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)

The purpose of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) is to help ensure the quality, vitality, and diversity of the scientific and engineering workforce of the United States. The program recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students who are pursuing full-time research-based master's and doctoral degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) or in STEM education. The GRFP provides three years of support over a five-year fellowship period for the graduate education of individuals who have demonstrated their potential for significant research achievements in STEM or STEM education. NSF actively encourages submission of applications from the full spectrum of diverse talent in STEM.

The five-year fellowship provides three years of financial support inclusive of an annual stipend of $37,000 as well as professional development opportunities.

Eligibility Requirements

  • Be a U.S. citizen, national, or permanent resident
  • Intend to enroll or be enrolled in a research-based master’s or doctoral degree program in an eligible Field of Study in STEM or STEM education (listed below)
  • Have never previously accepted a Graduate Research Fellowship
  • If previously offered a Graduate Research Fellowship, have declined by the acceptance deadline
  • Have never previously applied to GRFP while enrolled in a graduate degree program
  • Have never earned a doctoral or terminal degree in any field
  • Have never earned a master’s or professional degree in any field, or completed more than one academic year in a graduate degree-granting program, unless (i) returning to graduate study after an interruption of two or more consecutive years immediately preceding the application deadline, and; (ii) not enrolled in a graduate degree program at the application deadline
  • Not be a current NSF employee

  

Application deadline varies by academic discipline (must received by 5 p.m. local time of applicant’s mailing address):

October 11, 2024 : All reference letters must be submitted

October 15, 2024 : Chemistry; Geosciences, Mathematical Sciences; Physics and Astronomy

October 16, 2024 : Life Sciences

October 17, 2024: Engineering

October 18, 2024 : Computer and Information Science and Engineering; Materials Research; Psychology; Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences; STEM Education and Learning

Information Session

On September 12, 2024, the Office of Graduate Student Assistantships and Fellowships hosted an information session about this award. Please refer to the information session slide deck below to learn more:

Eligible Fields of Study

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Chemical Catalysis
  • Chemical Measurement and Imaging
  • Chemical Structure, Dynamics, and Mechanism
  • Chemical Synthesis
  • Chemical Theory, Models and Computational Methods
  • Chemistry of Life Processes
  • Computationally Intensive Research
  • Environmental Chemical Systems
  • Macromolecular, Supramolecular, and Nanochemistry
  • Other (specify)
  • Quantum Information Science
  • Sustainable Chemistry
  • Accessibility
  • Algorithms and Theoretical Foundations
  • Augmented Reality/Virtual Reality, Graphics, and Visualization
  • Bioinformatics and Bio-inspired Computing
  • Communication and Information Theory
  • Computer Architecture
  • Computer Security and Privacy
  • Computer Systems
  • Computer Vision
  • Cyber-Physical Systems and Embedded Systems
  • Cybersecurity
  • Data Science, Data Mining, Information Retrieval and Databases
  • Electronic Design Automation and Design of Micro and Nano Computing Systems
  • Fairness, Explainability, Accountability and Transparency in Analytics
  • Formal Methods, Verification, and Programming Languages
  • Human Computer Interaction
  • Information Sciences
  • Machine Learning
  • Natural Language Processing
  • Parallel, Distributed, and Cloud Computing
  • Scientific Computing
  • Social Computing
  • Software Engineering
  • Wired and Wireless Networking
  • Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering
  • Bioengineering
  • Biomedical Engineering
  • Chemical Engineering
  • Civil Engineering
  • Computer Engineering
  • Electrical and Electronic Engineering
  • Energy Engineering
  • Environmental Engineering
  • Industrial Engineering & Operations Research
  • Manufacturing Engineering
  • Materials Engineering
  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Nuclear Engineering
  • Ocean Engineering
  • Optical Engineering
  • Quantum Engineering
  • Systems Engineering
  • Wireless Engineering
  • Arctic-Antarctic
  • Atmospheric Chemistry
  • Biogeochemistry
  • Biological Oceanography
  • Chemical Oceanography
  • Climate and Large-Scale Atmospheric Dynamics
  • Coastal Marine Science
  • Coastal Studies
  • Earth System Science
  • Environmental Science
  • Geochemistry
  • Geochronology
  • Geodynamics
  • Geoinformatics
  • Geomorphology
  • Heliospheric Physics
  • Magnetospheric Physics
  • Marine Biology
  • Marine Ecology
  • Marine Geology and Geophysics
  • Ocean Technology (ROVs, AUVs, sensors)
  • Paleoclimate
  • Paleontology and Paleobiology
  • Physical and Dynamic Meteorology
  • Physical Oceanography
  • Remote Sensing
  • Sedimentary Geology
  • Solar Physics
  • Volcanology
  • Biochemistry
  • Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
  • Cell Biology
  • Developmental Biology
  • Environmental Biology
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Microbial Biology
  • Neurosciences
  • Organismal Biology
  • Structural Biology
  • Systematics and Biodiversity
  • Systems and Molecular Biology
  • Biomaterials
  • Chemistry of Materials
  • Electronic Materials
  • Materials Theory
  • Metallic Materials
  • Photonic Materials
  • Physics of Materials
  • Algebra, Number Theory, and Combinatorics
  • Applied Mathematics
  • Biostatistics
  • Computational and Data-enabled Science
  • Computational Mathematics
  • Computational Statistics
  • Geometric Analysis
  • Logic or Foundations of Mathematics 
  • Mathematical Biology
  • Probability
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
  • Condensed Matter Physics
  • Nuclear Physics
  • Particle Physics
  • Physics of Living Systems
  • Plasma Physics
  • Solid State Physics
  • Theoretical Physics
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Comparative Psychology
  • Computational Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Industrial/Organizational Psychology
  • Neuropsychology
  • Perception and Psychophysics
  • Personality and Individual Differences
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SSoE NSF GRFP Workshop – Sept 27 @ 9:30am

Engineering students interested in applying to the National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) program or learning more about the opportunity are invited to attend the  Samueli School of Engineering NSF GRFP Workshop on Friday, September 27 th , 9:30 – 10:30am , in person in ISEB 4020 and via Zoom ( Zoom registration link here ). The workshop will focus on guidelines and developing a competitive application.

If you are considering attending the workshop (in person or via Zoom),  please fill out our questionnaire  so that we can better assist you.

Resources from UCI’s Graduate Division  include an Incentive Program ($500 for submitting, and $1000 for winning) and consultations with fellowship mentors.

NSF GRFP Program Information

The NSF GRFP provides three years of support for the graduate education of individuals who have demonstrated their potential to make significant research achievements in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). The support is provided for graduate study that leads to a research-based master’s or doctoral degree in STEM.

More information about the GRFP can be found at  https://www.nsfgrfp.org/  and in the  solicitation  and  FAQs .

Below are the application deadlines (less than 1 month away) and eligibility requirements.

  • October 15, 2024: Chemistry; Geosciences, Mathematical Sciences; Physics and Astronomy
  • October 16, 2024: Life Sciences
  • October 17, 2024: Engineering
  • October 18, 2024: Computer and Information Science and Engineering; Materials Research

Eligibility Requirements

  • Be a U.S. citizen, national, or permanent resident
  • Intend to enroll or be enrolled full-time in a research-based Master’s or doctoral degree program in an eligible Field of Study in STEM or STEM education (See Appendix and Section IV.3 for eligible Fields of Study)
  • Never previously accepted a Graduate Research Fellowship
  • Declined any previously offered Graduate Research Fellowship by the acceptance deadline
  • Never previously applied to GRFP while enrolled in a graduate degree program
  • Never earned a doctoral or terminal degree in any field
  • Have completed no more than one academic year (according to institution’s academic calendar) while enrolled in a graduate degree program (non-degree coursework must be clearly identified in the transcript and does not count toward this limit)
  • Individuals holding joint Bachelor’s-Master’s degrees who did not apply while enrolled in the joint program, may apply as second-year graduate applicants if enrolled in an eligible doctoral program the beginning of the academic year immediately following the academic award year of the joint degree
  • not enrolled in a graduate degree program at application deadline
  • two or more consecutive years past graduate degree enrollment or completion at the application deadline
  • Not be a current NSF employee.

Happy Right Here: PhD Student Using Prestigious Fellowship to Continue Research at WPI

Department(s):.

Group shot

Left to right: Danielle Cote, associate professor and Harold L. Jurist ’61 and Heather E. Jurist Dean’s Professor in Materials Science and Engineering, PhD student Stephen Price, Rodica Neamtu, professor of Computer Science.

This spring, Stephen Price, a PhD student with a B.S. and M.S. from WPI’s Computer Science Department, was named a recipient of the prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP). While receiving the NSF Fellowship is a significant achievement, Price’s research journey began almost four years prior, when he first stepped foot on WPI’s campus. 

Price arrived at WPI in August of 2020 at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. With limited social interaction and strict protocols, his goal was simple: to graduate with a bachelor’s degree in computer science so he could transition to a full-time industry job as soon as possible. After discussing this with his academic advisor, Professor Rodica Neamtu, she convinced him to try to expand his education and perspective by attending a few research meetings for the Data-Driven Material Science (DDMS) lab under the supervision of Professor Rodica Neamtu and Professor Danielle Cote.  

Established only the year before, DDMS was founded by the two professors to serve at the cross-section of machine learning and material science with undergraduate and graduate students pursuing degrees in computer science and material science. The lab's mission is to harness cutting-edge machine learning techniques to solve complex problems in material science, such as predicting material behavior at various compositions and automating characterization processes or optimizing compositions for improved durability. Under the guidance of Professors Neamtu and Cote, students at DDMS undertake diverse projects, ranging from developing predictive algorithms for material degradation to automating the analysis of microscopic material structures.

After joining the lab in the Spring of his first academic year, it did not take long for Price to start making visible contributions. Tasked originally with reproducing a recently published paper to kick-start his research skills, he not only reproduced the results of this paper, but also identified areas where the paper could be improved further. Using computer vision to analyze and segment scanning electron microscope (SEM) micrographs, Price developed algorithms that accelerated data labeling by 75%, thus addressing one of the largest bottlenecks in machine learning, and improving performance across a broader range of materials.

Impressed by his work, Cote and Neamtu hired Price as a research intern over the summer of 2021 to continue this research work. Upon completion of the internship, Price submitted his work to IMMI, a peer-reviewed materials science journal. By the start of his sophomore year, Price had a first author publication, True testimony to his academic and research skills and perseverance.

More important than getting published, this was a turning point in his academic and professional career. He was enthralled with research and rather than simply focusing on graduating as soon as possible, Price chose to pursue his passions in researching the interdisciplinary applications of machine learning for material science. By the summer of of his sophomore year, Price traveled alone to Paris to present another research paper at ICPRAI 2022, marking his first conference, first international conference, and first conference presentation. 

Since then, Stephen has published a total of seven papers with four more under review. As a sophomore, Price was awarded the Two Towers prize, an award traditionally given to WPI’s top junior that best exemplifies a combined proficiency in the theoretical and practical union that is at the heart of the WPI educational tradition. Shortly after, WPI’s Computer Science Department nominated him for the Computer Research Association’s Outstanding Undergraduate Researcher award, where he was awarded honorable mention, placing in the top 60 for undergraduate computer science researchers in North America. 

Alongside these very impressive achievements, Price was still able to graduate with his bachelor’s degree in three years, and earning the Salisbury prize, the highest award given to graduating students from each department. However, instead of going directly to industry as he originally planned, Price chose to pursue his Master’s degree co-advised by Professors Neamtu and Cote, which he earned in December of 2023. 

Interested in continuing his work using machine learning to optimize materials and manufacturing conditions and receiving a research assistant position from Professor Cote, Price chose to stay at WPI to pursue his Ph.D. With the support and guidance of Prof. Cote and Neamtu, Price spent the next few months building his NSF GRFP application, including a detailed proposal for his future work. After many months of waiting, Price was named a recipient of the NSF GRFP, the only recipient from WPI in 2024. 

The oldest award of its kind under the NSF, the Graduate Research Fellowship Program, or GRFP, aims to ensure the quality, vitality, and diversity of the scientific and engineering workforce of the U.S. Past GRFP include Nobel Prize winners, former U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu, and Google founder Sergey Brin. The three-year fellowship includes an annual stipend and cost-of-education allowance. Thirty-two WPI graduate students have been named NSF graduate fellows since 1996. It’s also the second straight year Cote has had a GRFP fellow; her PhD student, Caroline Dowling, received the fellowship last year. 

Four years since first stepping onto WPI’s campus, Price is poised to use this award to embark on his Ph.D., devising novel ways for using machine learning to improve material characterization and optimize manufacturing capabilities. As he moves forward, Price pushes the boundaries of not only computer science, but also material science, winning multiple material science awards, including Best Student Poster for Additive Manufacturing  at TMS 2024 and the winning the Student Speaking Symposium (S3)  from ASM internation.  

With the support of Profs. Neamtu and Cote, Price continues to search for new opportunities to use his fellowship to expand his research in innovative ways, bridging the gap between machine learning and material science, and seeking to develop advancements that will shape the future of both fields.

Redirect Notice

Individual fellowships.

NIH awards individual fellowship grants (often referred to as the "F" series) to provide research experience to students and scientists at the graduate and postdoctoral levels.

Individual fellowship programs provide mentored research experience to students and scientists at various stages of their careers.

These fellowships may provide a stipend, institutional allowance to help support the costs of training, tuition and fees, and childcare costs. Please see the funding opportunity for details. 

View Current Funding Opportunities

Grants Process

Ready to develop your application? Learn from a step-by-step guide.

Review Criteria

To find the criteria reviewers will use to evaluate your application, see Section V of your funding opportunity.

Still looking for a funding opportunity? Check out the Fellowship Parent Announcements , which are broad funding opportunities allowing applicants to submit investigator-initiated applications. Parent Announcements include the minimum standard review criteria appropriate for their program.

Programs by Career Stage

Predoctoral.

Period during which a student who has earned a bachelor's or equivalent degree is pursuing additional education and performing research to obtain a research doctorate. Clinical students acquire the knowledge to earn the clinical doctorate degree.

  • Individual Predoctoral NRSA for M.D./Ph.D. Fellowships (F30)
  • Predoctoral Individual National Research Service Award (F31)
  • Predoctoral to Postdoctoral Fellow Transition Award (F99) / (K00)

Postdoctoral/Residency

Postdoctoral refers to a temporary and defined period of mentored advanced training for those who have received a doctoral degree (or equivalent) to enhance the professional skills and research independence needed to pursue their chosen career path. Residency refers to a graduate medical education (GME) program that provides physicians with hands-on experience and training in a specific medical specialty after they graduate from medical school.

  • Ruth L. Kirschstein Postdoctoral Individual National Research Service Award (F32)

Established Investigator

Stage at which investigator leads research programs in an academic, industry, or government setting with independent (often peer-reviewed) research funding and have delivered significant research outputs due to their experience and scientific quality.

  • Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards for Senior Fellows (F33)

Also Consider...

  • Dissertation Award (R36)
  • Fellowship for Intramural Dual-Degree Scientists (FIDDS) (FM1)
  • Research Supplements to Promote Diversity 
  • Research Supplements to Promote Re-entry & Re-integration into Health-Related Research Careers
  • Research Continuity Supplements

Upcoming Events

Full list of activity codes.

  • What Early Career Researchers Should Know (Part 1) – the Hidden Curriculum
  • What Early Career Researchers Should Know (Part 2) – Discovering Strengths to Advance Your Research Career
  • Navigating Early Career Funding Opportunities
  • Understanding NIH Programs
  • Developing and Optimizing Your Mentor Relationships

Websites and Topic Pages

  • NIH Research Training and Career Development Site
  • NIH Extramural Diversity Site
  • Early Stage Investigator (ESI) Policies
  • Family-Friendly Initiatives 

Stipend Levels & Info

  • NIH Policies for NRSA Stipends, Compensation and Other Income
  • NRSA Stipends (FY 2024)
  • NRSA Stipends (FY 2023)
  • Stipend/Salary FAQs

Policy Notices

  • NOT-OD-24-129: Updates to NIH Institutional Training Grant Applications for Due Dates on or After January 25, 2025
  • NOT-OD-24-116: Childcare Costs for Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) Individual Fellows and Institutional Research Training Awards
  • NOT-OD-24-107: Implementation of Revisions to the NIH and AHRQ Fellowship Application and Review Process
  • NOT-OD-24-084: Overview of Grant Application and Review Changes for Due Dates on or after January 25, 2025
  • NOT-OD-23-111: Reminder – NIH Policies for NRSA Stipends, Compensation and Other Income
  • NOT-OD-23-076: Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) Stipends, Tuition/Fees and Other Budgetary Levels Effective for Fiscal Year 2023

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CAAAS launches graduate research fellowship with support from the University Libraries

When doing research in African and African American studies, it’s not uncommon for students to need funding to support crucial research endeavors such as traveling to a region to access primary source materials or to disseminate findings.

To support CU Boulder graduate students doing research in these multidisciplinary areas, the Center for African and African American Studies (CAAAS) has teamed up with University Libraries and the Graduate School to sponsor a fellowship program that connects selected students with a dedicated librarian and provides a stipend to cover additional research expenses.

This year, eight graduate students are named as fellows for the Center for African & African American Studies Graduate Student Fellowship Program from the history, theater and dance, philosophy, anthropology, journalism and media studies departments, the College of Music and the School of Law.

A photo of the CAAAS fellows, with the Dean of Libraries, Dean of Social Sciences, Dean of the Graduate School, and Dr. Rabaka

Top, from left to right: Reya Roussel, Antoinette Kendrick, Idowu Odeyemi, Trevor Egerton, Success Osayi Middle, from left to right: Nandi Pointer, Tyreis Hunte, Ubochi Igbokwe Bottom, from left to right: Dean of Libraries, Robert H. McDonald; Dean of Social Sciences, Sarah E. Jackson, Director of CAAAS, Dr. Reiland Rabaka; Dean of the Graduate School, E. Scott Adler.

“This program is campus-wide,” said Reiland Rabaka, founder and director of the CAAAS. “We have artists. We have social scientists. We have law—all mixing it up together. Our goal is to train the next generation of researchers and artists who will be interdisciplinary and work in entirely new areas of scholarship and creative work. I have been dreaming of doing this for the past 20 years I have been here at CU.”

The year-long fellowship is funded through a monetary grant from the EBSCO Family Foundation, a provider of research databases, e-journals, magazine subscriptions, ebooks and discovery service for academic libraries. Students were able to use stipends to attend and present at conferences or travel, both nationally and internationally, for research of primary source materials that might not otherwise be possible without this support.

Ubochi Igbokwe, a musicology PhD student, used the stipend to travel to Japan this summer to study Igbo African masquerade music and the cultural impacts of the Igbo African émigrés.

“While much of the current scholarship on Africa-Asia affairs tends to focus heavily on trade and economic relations, with particular attention to rising Chinese influence, there is a relative lack of attention on the cultural dynamics that equally shape the nature of the relationships,” said Igbokwe, who is gathering data through ethnographic and archival studies.

Trevor Egerton, a history PhD candidate studying race and outdoor recreation in the twentieth century American South, visited three formerly segregated state parks in Tennessee and South Carolina to interview local residents and workers and explore archival documents. At T.O. Fuller State Park in Tennessee, one of the first Black-only state parks east of the Mississippi River, he realized that he wanted to approach discussion of this park through the lens of labor as it was built or formed at different times through a Black Civilian Conservation Corps crew, enslavement, convict leasing and sharecropping.

Reya Roussel, a third-year law student and senior fellow with the Byron White Center for the Study of American Constitutional Law, is studying the theft of land from Black property owners and writing a critique of rural land reparations. “Millions of dollars of land has been systematically stolen from African Americans,” Roussel said. “It was happening throughout the 20th century.”

University Libraries Success & Engagement Librarian Katerina Allmendinger is assisting the students to locate materials needed for their research. Because the students are working in new areas, the materials they need may not already be part of the University Libraries collections. Allmendinger anticipates the students needing additional subscriptions to databases or help connecting with archivists and other area studies specialists across the country—or the world. In addition to supporting their information needs, Allmendinger and her colleagues in the libraries are working with the students to support a graduate research symposium that meets several times a semester to give fellows support in disseminating their research.

Dean of the University Libraries Robert McDonald said the libraries would do all that it can to support the students with their research. This may include enhancing current collections or finding new means of accessing the primary source materials that are needed.

“What they are doing and the collaborative, interdisciplinary research they are undertaking is challenging due sometimes in part to lack of documentation or inability to access many of the primary source materials needed for the research,” McDonald said.

“Since its inception, the CAAAS has been tireless in their support of graduate students and their ground-breaking research, and this new program with the libraries is no exception. I have no doubt that these eight students will go on to do great work,” said Dean of the Graduate School Scott Adler. “This program will be transformative for the academy.”

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graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Andrei Semenov

Senior Research Scientist, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, in Dubna, Moscow Oblast, Russia

E-mail: semenov(at)jlab.org

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Barry Pointon

Adjunct Professor, BCIT and TRIUMF affiliated scientist

E-mail: [email protected]

Research interests Experimental neutrino physics with water Cherenkov detectors (Super-k and Hyper-k), supernova neutrinos (SNEWS), machine learning, nuclear medicine and issues in science and religion.

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Cristiano Fanelli

Assistant Professor, College of William & Mary

E-mail: cfanelli(at)wm.edu

Research interests Quantum chromodynamics, hadron spectroscopy, nucleon spin, beyond Standard Model, particle identification, artificial intelligence

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Dave Hornidge

Professor, Mount Allison University

Office: Dunn 218 and 204 E-mail: dhornidge(at)mta.ca Phone: 506-364-2586 Website: https://www.mta.ca/dhornidge/

Research interests Experimental subatomic physicist

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Staff Scientist, Jefferson Lab

E-mail: mack(at)jlab.org Phone: 757-269-7442

Research interests Experimental Nuclear Physics

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

David Gaskell

E-mail: gaskelld(at)jlab.org Phone: 757-269-6092 Website: https://www.jlab.org/physics/hall-c

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Professor Emeritus, University of New Brunswick

E-mail: [email protected] Website: https://www.uregina.ca/engineering/faculty-staff/faculty/hussein-esam.html

Small Modular Reactors, Nuclear Methods for Nondestructive Testing & Imaging, Inverse Problems and Monte Carlo Methods.

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Justin Stevens

Office: Small Hall 343C E-mail: jrstevens01(at)wm.edu Phone: 757-221-5494 Website: http://www.wm.edu/as/physics/people/fulltimefaculty/stevens_j.php

Quantum chromodynamics, hadron spectroscopy, nucleon structure, and particle identification detector technology

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

Rosemary Pike

Center for Astrophysics Harvard & Smithsonian

E-mail: rosemary.pike(at)cfa.harvard.edu Website: https://minorplanetcenter.net/about

Research interests Solar System Astronomy including small body physical and orbital properties, n-body integrations, observational astronomy

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Russian Company AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA"

Brief profile.

active Commercial

TIN 5010031470
Region, city Moscow Oblast, Dubna (the organization also has )
Company Age (for comparison: the industry average is 10 years)
Core Activity Other research and experimental development on natural sciences and engineering
Scale of Operation
Founders

Registrar:

Manager (general manager)
Where the company is listed as the founder (10.64%; 21.5 million RUB) (100%; 1 million RUB)

Facts to Consider

There was an enforcement proceeding against the legal entity

There are 3 more firms at this address.

The organization has registered trademarks

The organization holds 7 licenses.

show 4 more positive facts

Complete Profile

  • 1. General Information
  • 2. Registration in the Russian Federation
  • 3. Company's Activities
  • 4. Legal Address
  • 5. Branches and representative offices
  • 6. Owners, Founders of the Entity
  • 7. AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" CEO
  • 8. Entities Founded by Company
  • 9. Company Finance
  • 10. Timeline of key events
  • 11. Latest Changes in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities (USRLE)

General Information

Full name of the organization: AKTSIONERNOE OBSHCHESTVO "GOSUDARSTVENNOE MASHINOSTROITELNOE KONSTRUKTORSKOE BIURO "RADUGA" IMENI A.IA.BEREZNIAKA"

TIN: 5010031470

KPP: 501001001

PSRN: 1055024900006

Location: 141983, Moscow Oblast, Dubna, ul. Zhukovskogo, 2A

Line of business: Other research and experimental development on natural sciences and engineering (OKVED code 72.19)

Organization status: Commercial, active

Form of incorporation: Non-public joint-stock companies (code 12267 according to OKOPF)

Registration in the Russian Federation

The tax authority where the legal entity is registered: Mezhraionnaia inspektsiia Federalnoi nalogovoi sluzhby №12 po Moskovskoi oblasti (inspection code – 5010).

Registration with the Pension Fund: registration number 060008000009 dated 9 July 1991.

Registration with the Social Insurance Fund: registration number 503001096050301 dated 20 December 2000.

Company's Activities

The main activity of the organization is Other research and experimental development on natural sciences and engineering (OKVED code 72.19).

Additionally, the organization listed the following activities:

16.23.1 Manufacture of wooden building structures and joinery
25.40 Manufacture of weapons and ammunition
26.30.11 Manufacture of communication means that perform the function of switching systems
26.30.12 Manufacture of communication means that perform the function of digital transport systems
26.30.13 Manufacture of communication means that perform the function of control and monitoring systems

AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" holds licenses entitling to carry out the following activities:

Number, date of issue Issued by Types of operations Valid
L052-00102-77/00565579
of 06/30/2022
MINISTRY OF INDUSTRY AND TRADE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION Maintenance of weapons and military equipment from 06/30/2022
AN 50-001175
of 08/19/2019
CENTRAL INTERREGIONAL DEPARTMENT OF STATE HIGHWAY SUPERVISION OF THE FEDERAL SERVICE FOR SUPERVISION OF TRANSPORT Bus transportation of passengers and other persons from 08/19/2019
L008-00102-77/00345360
of 04/30/2013
Licensing of the development, production, testing, installation, installation, maintenance, repair, disposal and sale of weapons and military equipment, development, production, testing, storage, sale and disposal of ammunition (with the exception of the specified activities carried out by military units and organizations of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation and the troops of the National Guard of the Russian Federation, in the case of if the implementation of the specified activity is provided for by their constituent documents) from 04/30/2013

The organization has 2 registered trademarks: 96392 , 107068 .

Legal Address

AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" is registered at 141983, Moscow Oblast, Dubna, ul. Zhukovskogo, 2A. ( show on a map )

The following organization are also registered at the following address (including liquidated organizations):

  • PERVICHNAIA PROFSOIUZNAIA OBSHCHESTVENNAIA ORGANIZATSIIA GOSMKB "RADUGA"; PPOO GOSMKB "RADUGA"
  • ZHSK "STROITEL" (liquidated 05/23/2017)

Branches and representative offices

  • Astrakhan Oblast, r-n Akhtubinskii, Akhtubinsk, 85141 korp. 30993, 30993
  • Moscow Oblast, Zhukovskii, ul. Tupoleva, 2A
  • PPOO AO"SMAZ" RPSTAP
  • OGBUZ "POLIKLINIKA №7"
  • OOO " STSAK "
  • OOO "ZHUKOVSKII ATTS"

Owners, Founders of the Entity

Since the organization is a joint-stock company, the list of shareholders is not contained in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities. To obtain an extract from the register of shareholders, you should contact the registrar AO VTB REGISTRATOR

There is no data on the founders of AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" as of 09/27/2024 in the Uniform State Register of Legal Entities. The previous founders were:

Founder from which date Until
02/14/2005 01/01/2022

The legal predecessor of AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA": FGUP "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA BEREZNIAKA" (liquidated 02/14/2005)

AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" CEO

The head of the organization (a person who has the right to act on behalf of a legal entity without a power of attorney) since 15 July 2022 is general manager Bogatikov Sergei Anatolevich (TIN: 770304117100).

Previously the organization was managed by (general manager from 02/14/2005 until 07/15/2022 * ).

Entities Founded by Company

Currently AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" is listed as a founder in the following organizations:

  • OOO "TRV-AKHTUBINSK" (Astrakhan Oblast, r-n Akhtubinskii, Akhtubinsk; 10.64%; 21.5 million RUB)
  • OOO "NPP "RADUGA-15" (Moscow Oblast, Dubna; 100%; 1 million RUB)

Previously the organization was listed as a founder in:

  • OOO "TEKHNOPARK "DUBNA" (Moscow Oblast, Dubna; 0.03%; 3.8 thousand RUB) - until 04/24/2018
  • "INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGICAL CENTER FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY, ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND ENERGY SAVING" (Moscow Oblast, Dubna; 2.5 thousand RUB) - liquidated 03/14/2018
  • "RADEF" LTD/ (Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, Sarov; 60%; 600 thousand RUB) - liquidated 06/14/2016

Company Finance

The Authorized capital of AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" is 8.2 billion RUB.

The net assets of AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" as of 12/31/2018 totaled 7.7 billion RUB.

The organization is not subject to special taxation regimes (operates under a common regime).

The organization had no tax arrears as of 08/10/2024.

Enforcement proceedings

In relation to a legal entity, the database of the Federal Bailiff Service contains the following enforcement proceedings as of 10/21/2024:

Enforcement proceedings, number, date of initiationAmount due, rub.Remaining debt balance, rub.
Fine of another authority for period 2023
The act on the case of an administrative offense # from 04/14/2023

Timeline of key events

Latest changes in the unified state register of legal entities (usrle).

  • 06/30/2023 . State registration of changes made to the constituent documents of a legal entity related to changes in information about a legal entity contained in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities, based on an application.
  • 01/11/2023 . Representation by the licensing authority of information about the grant of a license.
  • 12/01/2022 . Submission by the licensing authority of information on the renewal of documents confirming the existence of a license (information on the renewal of a license).
  • 11/03/2022 . State registration of changes made to the constituent documents of a legal entity related to changes in information about a legal entity contained in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities, based on an application.
  • 08/10/2022 . State registration of changes made to the constituent documents of a legal entity related to changes in information about a legal entity contained in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities, based on an application.
  • 07/15/2022 . Change of information about a legal entity contained in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities.
  • 07/07/2022 . Representation by the licensing authority of information about the grant of a license.
  • 07/06/2022 . Representation by the licensing authority of information about the grant of a license.
  • 06/28/2022 . Representation by the licensing authority of information about the grant of a license.
  • 05/13/2022 . Submission of information about the registration of a legal entity with the tax authority at the location of the branch/representative office.

* The date of change in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities is shown (may be different from the actual date).

The data presented on this page have been obtained from official sources: the Unified State Register of Legal Entities (USRLE), the State Information Resource for Financial Statements, the website of the Federal Tax Service (FTS), the Ministry of Finance and the Federal State Statistics Service.

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Important information about NSF’s implementation of the revised 2 CFR

NSF Financial Assistance awards (grants and cooperative agreements) made on or after October 1, 2024, will be subject to the applicable set of award conditions, dated October 1, 2024, available on the NSF website . These terms and conditions are consistent with the revised guidance specified in the OMB Guidance for Federal Financial Assistance published in the Federal Register on April 22, 2024.

Important information for proposers

All proposals must be submitted in accordance with the requirements specified in this funding opportunity and in the NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG) that is in effect for the relevant due date to which the proposal is being submitted. It is the responsibility of the proposer to ensure that the proposal meets these requirements. Submitting a proposal prior to a specified deadline does not negate this requirement.

NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) - Graduate Research Internship Program (GRIP)

Dear Colleagues:

The Division of Graduate Education announces the continuation of the Graduate Research Internship Program (GRIP). GRIP provides professional development to NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) Fellows (referred to as "Fellows") through internships developed in partnership with federal agencies (see https://www.nsf.gov/grip for a current list of partner agencies). Through GRIP, Fellows participate in mission-related, collaborative research under the guidance of host research mentors at federal facilities and national laboratories. GRIP enhances the Fellows' professional skills, professional networks, and preparation for a wide array of career options. The sponsor agencies benefit by engaging Fellows in applied projects, helping to develop a highly skilled U.S. workforce in areas of national need.

Through GRIP, Fellows benefit from partnerships developed by NSF and other federal agencies to provide internship opportunities. Internship details for each partner agency differ and are available through links to agency websites. As additional agencies develop internship partnerships with NSF, updates will be made to the GRIP website ( https://www.nsf.gov/grip ).

Eligibility

GRIP is open to active Fellows (both "on tenure" and "on reserve") [1] who have completed at least one year of their graduate program at the time of application and will retain their active status for at least 12 months following the application submission deadline. They must be certified by the GRFP Institution to be making satisfactory progress towards their degrees, and have fulfilled all GRFP reporting requirements. For some agencies, Fellows must be U.S. citizens.

Fellows are encouraged to consult the GRFP Administrative Guide for questions related to their fellowship. This is accessed through the following link: https://www.nsf.gov/publications/pub_summ.jsp?ods_key=nsf16104

GRIP internship allowances are awarded to Fellows based on a twice-yearly competition. The maximum number of Fellows to be supported by GRIP in each fiscal year is 75. All GRIP awards are subject to the availability of funds, merit review, and acceptance by both the National Science Foundation and NSF's partner agencies.

A Fellow may submit one (1) application per partner agency and may apply to a maximum of two (2) partner agencies for each submission deadline. A Fellow may receive only one (1) GRIP internship per fellowship year. Previous GRIP recipients may reapply to conduct internships with the same partner agency as their original award, or propose a new internship project, as long as they meet the general eligibility requirements.

All internship applications are subject to: 1) confirmation by the Fellow's advisor that the Fellow is making satisfactory progress in her or his graduate degree program and that participation in GRIP will enhance the Fellow's graduate education; 2) the availability of funds from NSF and appropriate resources from partner agencies; and 3) review of the applications and acceptance by the National Science Foundation and the partner agency. In some cases, Fellows will be required to pass a background and/or security clearance check before they may begin an internship position. Background and/or security clearance checks will be conducted by the individual agencies. Interested Fellows should check with the partner agency contact to see if they meet the clearance criteria for the agency to which they are applying.

Fellows will not be employees and will not conduct inherently governmental functions. Fellows must not act in a manner that would lead anyone to believe s/he is an employee of, or a representative of, NSF or the partner agencies. Please see the Guiding Principles for Fellows and partner agencies.

GRIP Internship Funding and Allowable Costs

Fellows will receive an internship allowance of $5,000 through their GRFP institution to cover travel and research costs associated with the GRIP internship project (see the Budget and Budget Justification section below for restrictions on use of NSF funds). Additional support to cover expenses while the Fellow is conducting the GRIP internship differs among partner agencies. Further information, including links to the partner agencies' GRIP websites, is available on the NSF GRIP website ( https://www.nsf.gov/grip ). The internship allowance provided by NSF may be used to fund multiple trips to the partner agency within the award period, subject to the approval of the partner agency and the Fellow's research advisor and GRFP institution.

Fellows "on tenure" selected for GRIP will receive a GRIP internship allowance in addition to their NSF GRFP stipend through their GRFP institution. The NSF GRFP stipend remains subject to U.S. tax laws. Fellows "on reserve" for any or all of the GRIP research experience period will not receive the NSF GRFP stipend during the period they are on "on reserve" but will receive the GRIP internship allowance and associated support from the partner agency.

GRIP funding is an internship allowance to the Fellow for the current fellowship year or subsequent fellowship year. Fellows must complete their GRIP internship and associated travel before the end of August of the subsequent fellowship year or by the end of the Fellow's GRFP Fellowship Period [1] , whichever occurs first. GRIP funds may not be transferred to another Fellow and may not be used to support travel for spouses or dependents.

The NSF internship allowance is for use by the Fellow during the internship experience identified in the application. The institution will disburse the $5,000 internship allowance to the Fellow. Proposed internship projects must be a minimum of 2 months, and may be up to 12 months. Extensions are subject to the approval of the Fellow's GRFP institution, NSF, and the partner agency.

GRIP Application Submission and Review Schedule

Please note that the information presented is current at the time of publishing. See the GRIP website for any program updates.

  • GRIP is announced to Fellows and GRFP Institutions. Fellows review available GRIP opportunities on agency websites and may contact possible host researchers to develop their applications. GRIP applications are due December 4 and May 6.
  • Fellows submit GRIP applications through the GRFP FastLane module, adhering to the NSF submission guidelines specified in the GRFP FastLane module. The GRFP Coordinating Official must approve the submission before NSF receives the application. Applicants are encouraged to check with their GRFP Coordinating Official regarding institutional policies and deadlines for submitting GRIP requests. GRIP applications that are incomplete or do not comply with the submission guidelines will be returned without review.
  • GRIP applications are reviewed internally by NSF using the National Science Board-approved Merit Review Criteria and additional criteria described below (GRIP Application Review). Meritorious GRIP applications are forwarded to the GRIP contact person at each partner agency for review and approval by the partner agency.
  • Fellows and their Coordinating Officials are notified via email and NSF's Fastlane system of the outcome of the selection and review process. GRIP internship allowances are provided to the GRFP institutions as part of the summer or fall funding increment. The GRFP PI and Financial Official provide administrative and financial oversight of the GRIP internship allowance(s) of Fellows selected for GRIP as part of the GRFP award to the institution.
  • GRIP internships must be initiated in the fellowship year following announcement of the award. GRIP Fellows must complete their internship and associated travel before the end of their GRFP Fellowship Period.

Instructions for Preparing GRIP Applications

  • Applications for GRIP are submitted by Fellows through the "GRFP Additional Funding Opportunities" link in the GRFP FastLane module . The GRFP Coordinating Official approves the GRIP application in the GRFP FastLane module and through this action submits the application to the NSF.

GRIP applications include all of the following elements (in the order they appear below) ,

The Project Description must describe how the Fellow will:

The Professional Development Plan must describe how the Fellow will:

Applications submitted by previous GRIP awardees must include a section labeled "Results of Prior GRIP Support." The section must include a summary of the outcomes and accomplishments of the GRIP internship and, if the application is for renewed support with the same internship partner(s), a description of the relation of the completed work to the proposed work.

Fellows are responsible for making their own travel arrangements, as well as for obtaining health insurance, travel insurance, passports, visas, and any other required travel documents, if applicable. Fellows traveling to foreign countries also must adhere to the requirements contained in the NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG) Chapter XI.F . Travel that fails to comply with these requirements cannot be reimbursed with federal funds.

  • The name of the Fellow, Fellow ID, Project Title, Start Date of Graduate Program, Proposed Partner Agency, Host/Sponsoring Researcher(s), Proposed Dates and Duration of Internship. The host researcher(s) and partner agency must be identified.
  • Project summary. (Limit: 1 page). A summary consisting of an overview of the internship project and collaboration and separate statements of the Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts of the proposed internship activities. Each section must be formatted with separate headings (i.e., Overview, Intellectual Merit, and Broader Impacts. The Professional Development plan should be summarized in the Broader Impacts section. The Project Summary should be informative to other persons working in the same or related fields and, insofar as possible, understandable to a broad audience within the scientific domain.
  • Integrate the proposed internship activities into the Fellow's graduate degree program and future career goals.
  • Benefit from mentoring and specialized expertise, equipment, facilities, field sites, data, and/or other resources.
  • Build professional skills and collaborations that will enhance and contribute to the Fellow's professional development, professional network, and future career goals.
  • Budget and Budget Justification: (Limit: 2 pages). The budget should consist of a $5,000 internship allowance request for the Fellow's costs incurred as a result of the internship project. Anticipated expenses should be itemized and reported in tabular format. Allowable expenses include, but are not limited to, travel to host site and agency, visa applications (if applicable), field permits, research supplies, excess luggage, travel and health insurance, per diem, and other travel-related costs. Support for Fellow stipends, major pieces of equipment, large amounts for materials and supplies, and spouse and dependent travel are not allowed. Travel to specific conferences and workshops may be included, but relevance to the internship project must be justified. Applications may not consist primarily of conference or workshop travel; internship host researcher engagement is required. The Budget Justification should include a reference to airfare (estimated) and other travel, relocation, and project costs (the remainder of the amount requested) for the project.
  • Biographical sketch of the NSF Graduate Fellow: (Limit: 2 pages). A biographical sketch is required and must be submitted using the NSF guidelines for senior personnel [see NSF PAPPG Chapter II.C.2.f ]. Applicants should not include personal information, such as home address, telephone, fax, date of birth, or drivers' license number.
  • Letter of Endorsement from the Fellow's Research Advisor: (Limit: 2 pages). The letter should be written on organization/institution letterhead and should describe the anticipated research benefits of the internship project for the Fellow's graduate program and the anticipated impact on her/his career. The letter must also indicate that the Fellow is making satisfactory progress in her or his graduate degree program.

GRIP Application Review

GRIP applications will be reviewed by NSF using the National Science Board-approved Merit Review Criteria of Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts. In addition, the following criteria will be used in evaluating the applications:

  • The potential opportunities for effective research collaboration;
  • The potential for effective professional development for the Fellow;
  • The potential for effective career development/opportunities;
  • Any agency-specific criteria (see proposed host agency website).

NSF and agency partner program officers will review internship applications. Approval by NSF and the sponsoring partner agency is required before GRIP internships are announced. NSF will notify Fellows and the Coordinating Officials via email and NSF's GRFP FastLane Module regarding the status of GRIP applications, within 3 months of the application deadlines.

Reporting Requirements

  • Fellows who receive GRIP internship allowances must submit a report by May 1 of the following year through the GRFP FastLane Module that details the experience and accomplishments of the GRIP internship activities. The report should highlight publications, presentations, and other products or achievements that are outcomes of the GRIP activities. The report should also highlight any professional development achievements such as gaining proficiency in professional skills (e.g., communication, technical writing, project management, etc.) and expanding professional networks.
  • All reporting must be approved for "Public Release" by the partner agency. In some cases, Fellows may have to submit an internal report to the partner agency and a separate "cleared" report to NSF that does not contain sensitive information but does report on the general accomplishments and professional development of the Fellow through the internship opportunity.
  • The GRFP Institution disburses the $5,000 internship allowance to the Fellow and is responsible for reporting the expended GRIP allowance ($5,000) for each Fellow on the GRFP Program Expense Report covering the time period of the internship.

[1] Fellowship Tenure status is the period of time during which active Fellows receive GRFP financial support. Fellowship Reserve status is the period of time during which active Fellows do not receive GRFP financial support. An active Fellow is within the five-year Fellowship Period; not Completed or Terminated.

Organization(s)

  • Division of Graduate Education (EDU/DGE)
  • Directorate for STEM Education (EDU)

All University Info

University Profile

Get a quick snapshot of the university's key details.

University Name International University of Nature, Society and Man «Dubna»
Name in Local Language Международный университет природы, общества и человека «Дубна»
Year Established 1994

The university is located in Dubna, Moscow Oblast. Find the address of the university below.

Address ul. Universitetskaja 19, Dubna, Moscow Oblast, Russia

Connect with the university easily! Find their contact details.

Phone +7 (9621) 477 75
Fax +7 (9621) 224 64
Website
Email
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Admission Info

Find information below on admission to International University of Nature, Society and Man «Dubna».

Student Body Men and Women

Scholarship and Financial Aids

There is no information found on scholarships or financial aids offered by International University of Nature, Society and Man «Dubna». You may like to visit their website for more details.

Related Articles

Stay informed with the following article related to the university or higher education in Russia.

Dubna is a town in Moscow Oblast, Russia. It has a status of naukograd, being home to the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, an international nuclear physics research center and one of the largest scientific foundations in the country. It is also home to MKB Raduga, a defense aerospace company specializing in design and production of missile systems, as well as to the Russia's largest satellite communications center owned by Russian Satellite Communications Company. The modern town was developed in the middle of the 20th century and town status was granted to it in 1956. Population: 70,663; 60,951; 65,805.

graduate research fellowship program (grfp)

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Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubna

Official Website http://www.naukograd-dubna.ru/

Coordinates 56°44'10.574" N 37°9'44.531" E

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COMMENTS

  1. Home

    GRFP is a five-year fellowship program that supports outstanding STEM graduate students in the US. Learn about the benefits, eligibility, application process, deadlines, and events of GRFP.

  2. Applicants

    The National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students who are pursuing full-time research-based master's and doctoral degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) or in STEM education. The GRFP provides three years of support over a five ...

  3. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)

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  4. About Graduate Research Fellowship (GRFP) Program

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  8. Research.gov

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  9. PDF U.S. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

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  10. NSF 23-605: Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)

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    Learn how to apply for the NSF GRFP, a prestigious award for graduate students in science research. Find out the requirements, deadlines, review criteria, essay tips, and successful examples from Alex Lang, a former winner.

  12. PDF Graduate Research Fellowship Program

    GRFP Program Goals The purpose of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) is to help ensure the quality, vitality, and diversity of the scientific and engineering workforce of the United States. The program recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students who are pursuing full-time research-based master's and doctoral degrees in

  13. Administrative Guide

    Administrative Guide. Become familiar with the most recent version of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) Administrative Guide.It contains information on requirements and guidance on the administration and facilitation of GRFP Fellowships and details the responsibilities of both the Fellow and their GRFP awardee institution to ensure a successful tenure within the program.

  14. Research.gov :: GRFP

    Find out the names, institutions, fields of study, and current institutions of the applicants who received GRFP awards or honorable mentions in 2024. Search by year, award type, name, or current institution and view the list of 2,036 applicants.

  15. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)

    The purpose of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) is to help ensure the quality, vitality, and diversity of the scientific and engineering workforce of the United States. The program recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students who are pursuing full-time research-based master's and doctoral degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) or in STEM ...

  16. SSoE NSF GRFP Workshop

    Engineering students interested in applying to the National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) program or learning more about the opportunity are invited to attend the Samueli School of Engineering NSF GRFP Workshop on Friday, September 27 th, 9:30 - 10:30am, in person in ISEB 4020 and via Zoom (Zoom ...

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  22. Russian Company AO "GOSMKB "RADUGA" IM. A.IA.BEREZNIAKA"

    Full name of the organization: AKTSIONERNOE OBSHCHESTVO "GOSUDARSTVENNOE MASHINOSTROITELNOE KONSTRUKTORSKOE BIURO "RADUGA" IMENI A.IA.BEREZNIAKA" TIN: 5010031470 KPP: 501001001 PSRN: 1055024900006 Location: 141983, Moscow Oblast, Dubna, ul. Zhukovskogo, 2A. Line of business: Other research and experimental development on natural sciences and engineering (OKVED code 72.19)

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  24. International University of Nature, Society and Man «Dubna»

    International University of Nature, Society and Man «Dubna» is located in Dubna, Moscow Oblast, Russia. It is locally known as Международный университет природы, общества и человека «Дубна».The university was established in 1994. It is accredited by Ministry of Education of the Moscow Province.

  25. Dubna in Moscow Oblast

    Dubna is a town in Moscow Oblast, Russia. It has a status of naukograd, being home to the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, an international nuclear physics research center and one of the largest scientific foundations in the country. It is also home to MKB Raduga, a defense aerospace company specializing in design and production of missile systems, as well as to the Russia's largest ...