The Westside Gazette

North Carolina A&T breaks sponsored research record with $62.5 million in grants, contracts

Chancellor Martin
Chancellor Martin

North Carolina A&T breaks sponsored research record with $62.5 million in grants, contracts

By North Carolina AT&T State University

Already the state’s third most productive public research university, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University took in a school-record $62.5 million in research contracts and grants in 2016-17, school leaders announced recently.

External research funding at North Carolina A&T now has more than tripled over the past 16 years, growing from $18.4 million in 2001 to $62.5 million in 2017. The super-majority of A&T research awards come from federal sources — the most competitive arena for research funding.

The growth also comes during a period in which federal spending on research decreased as a percentage of national gross domestic product and during which across-the-board budget cuts caused by sequestration produced significant decreases in available research funding.

“The outstanding work of our faculty not only brought in more support for our research programs than in any previous year, but made significant contributions to the advancement of science, particularly in the STEM disciplines in which A&T’s work is so well known,” said Chancellor Harold L. Martin Sr.

“As we prepare to begin construction on a new engineering complex and continue to realize more of the research benefits from last year’s academic re-organization, we hope to build on this new milestone, delivering even more scientific, educational and economic impact in the months and years ahead.”

Principal investigators received 259 awards across campus from such federal funders as the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, NASA, the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of Labor and the U.S. Department of Education. Support from private sources came from Intel, Duke Energy, Honeywell, the Merck Company Foundation, Lockheed Martin, Science Applications International Corp. and a range of other partners.

Those awards not only benefit the research in question and the university, but the local and state economies, as well. A study published in 2014 in the journal Science, for instance, showed that about 30 percent of federal research funding is spent on local vendors for goods and services – about half of that in the university’s home county and about half in its home state. Among the many A&T projects driving growth in 2016-17:

“Our faculty are competing for research support at the highest levels with peers from across the country, and their growing success is transforming our scientific programs,” said Barry Burks, vice president for Research and Economic Development at A&T. “In addition to the vital scientific questions they are answering, faculty researchers are contributing to the growth of our research centers, helping our graduate programs grow and playing a strong role in enhancing the university’s standing and reputation nationwide. I’m very proud of their success.”

 

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