Four Penn State students in their respective areas of leadership have been honored with the 2026 John W. Oswald Award.
Administrator
Four Penn State students in their respective areas of leadership have been honored with the 2026 John W. Oswald Award.
For undergraduate student Amaya Heffelfinger, sustainability is more than a topic in the classroom. She said it is tied to the places where she grew up, the environmental questions she cares about and the kind of work she hopes to do in the future.
Gabriel Agostini, doctoral student in information science at Cornell Tech, will give a talk, “Inferring Fine-Grained Migration Patterns across the United States,” at noon on Wednesday, April 1, in 157 Hosler Building on the Penn State University Park campus.
Lee Kump, the John Leone Dean of the Penn State College of Earth and Mineral Sciences (EMS), has announced his decision to step down as dean, effective June 30.
To provide tenure-line faculty who are one year post tenure with discretionary funds to invigorate their research program, allowing them to branch out into new areas and develop some preliminary results leading to funded proposals, new collaborations, etc.
One-year post-tenure faculty who:
Applicants are not eligible if they:
Discretionary funds will not be awarded during a sabbatical year, nor are they permitted to be used for sabbatical leave activities.
Eligible newly tenured associate professors are invited to apply for up to $50,000 in discretionary research funding to be awarded at the beginning of the second or third year after receiving tenure.
The application must include a two- to three-page proposal outlining the scope of activities, a detailed budget and spending plan, and a letter of support from the faculty member’s department head.
It is expected that the proposals will focus on new research directions, though other proposed emphases may include novel educational, outreach and service activities.
Proposals should be submitted electronically to the dean, with a copy to Nicola Kiver (nmk17@psu.edu), via the faculty member’s department head on or before March 31 in the first or second year following tenure approval.
For example, if the faculty member was awarded tenure effective July 1, 2025, the deadline to apply would be March 31, 2026, or March 31, 2027, in order to receive funding for FY2026-27 (the beginning of the second year following tenure approval) or FY2027-28 (the beginning of the third year following tenure approval).
A sabbatical (either for a semester or an academic year) offsets the application process by one year. For example, if the faculty member was awarded tenure effective July 1, 2025, and then was granted a sabbatical for FY2026-27, then the deadline to apply would be March 31, 2027, or March 31, 2028, in order to receive funding for FY2027-28 or FY2028-2029.
Discretionary funds will be housed in a college account. The Dean’s Office will provide 50% ($25,000 maximum) of the funding and the department / EMS institute (for internally co-funded faculty, in the salary proportion) will provide 50% ($25,000 maximum) of the funding. The college will request the funds from the department / EMS institute in two increments ($12,500 in year one and $12,500 in year two).
These funds may be used to support graduate research assistantships. However, this funding may not support teaching releases.
Updated: October 6, 2025
As part of our regular “We Are!” feature, we recognize 19 Penn Staters who have gone above and beyond what’s asked of them in their work at the University including Alexandra Lloyd.
Researchers have figured out how to get DNA, a biological material, to work with electronics, by pairing synthetic DNA with a semiconducting material called crystalline perovskite.
Allison Beese, professor of materials science and engineering and of mechanical engineering at Penn State, has been named the senior associate director of Penn State’s new National Security Institute. She will begin her appointment on May 15.