$1M Federal Grant Will Fund Scholarships, Boost Biotech Pipeline at JWU

Johnson & Wales University Professors Nicole Urban and Kristin Rosler recently received a grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation.
Johnson & Wales University Professors Nicole Urban and Kristin Rosler recently received a grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation.
Christopher Massa/Johnson & Wales University
Share
Johnson & Wales University Professors Nicole Urban and Kristin Rosler recently received a grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation.
Johnson & Wales University Professors Nicole Urban and Kristin Rosler recently received a grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation.
Christopher Massa/Johnson & Wales University
$1M Federal Grant Will Fund Scholarships, Boost Biotech Pipeline at JWU
Copy

Tuition and professional development for a dozen biology majors at Johnson & Wales University (JWU) will be covered through a U.S. National Science Foundation grant worth nearly $1 million, the school announced Wednesday.

The federal foundation’s Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics program is the source of the five-year, $999,960 grant, designed to subsidize education for academically talented low-income students in STEM fields, and help increase student retention, outcomes and career readiness offerings.

JWU’s new grant award will provide scholarships of up to $15,000 annually for up to four consecutive years of study. The money will be administered through the new JWU STEM Supplement Grant and will help eligible students meet 100% of their financial need.

“This program will be life changing for scholars,” said Nicole Urban, a professor in JWU’s Department of Biological and Physical Sciences, in a statement Wednesday. “It will allow them to focus on their studies and extra-curricular opportunities that are critical for their careers rather than working quite so much to finance their educations.”

Urban and fellow science faculty professor Kristin Rosler will serve as principal investigators for the project and administer the awards.

“We are excited that this program will equip our Scholars to take seats at the lab bench,” Rosler said in a statement, noting her hope that the program could help grow Rhode Island’s emergent biotechnology industry.

In addition to covering tuition and attendance costs, the program will provide mentorship, professional development, and training for students to better communicate the science in which they’re involved. The program’s career preparation aspects are designed to keep students ready to enter biotech careers in the Ocean State.

Glenn Robertelli, the executive director of trade group RI Bio, called the grant award “outstanding” in a statement, and added that it “advances Rhode Island’s efforts to develop a future-ready life sciences talent pipeline and prepares students for well-paying careers in the sector.”

This story was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

The Ocean State is one of just three states that still prohibit most retail on Thanksgiving — a throwback to centuries-old blue laws that continue to shape when Rhode Islanders can (and can’t) shop
Researchers at URI and the state Department of Environmental Management to spend five years on a comprehensive study of Rhode Island’s wild turkey population
November 28 - January 2, 2026
Will the Rhode Island Senate remain divided? Plus, Helena Foulkes leans on a big name to raise more campaign cash
From restaurants to bakeries to dance studios, local business owners describe customer losses, creative pivots, and the hard-earned resilience they’ve needed to keep going since the westbound bridge shut down in late 2023
The closures are the latest in what is expected to be a wave of parish consolidations across Rhode Island