Earth Futures Undergraduate Frontier Fellows Program
Extended Deadline March 15, 2023
The UCSC Earth Futures Institute is pleased to announce the second year of our program of undergraduate research opportunities called EFI Frontier Fellowships. Each Frontier Fellowship provides the chance for an undergraduate student to do meaty interdisciplinary research on topics relevant to planning Earth’s future. Supervising these projects is also a chance for faculty to pursue project ideas that have long interested them but are difficult to fund from traditional funding sources. Each award includes a summer training program stipend of $6000 for the student and $2000 for research expenses and/or a faculty honorarium. Information on the Earth Futures Institute and its goals are available on the Institute’s website: https://earthfutures.sites.ucsc.edu.
The EFI Frontier Fellows Program is open to students and faculty (including emeriti) from all departments across all five academic divisions.
The proposal form can be found here.
Program Description:
1) The duration of the program is from the beginning of the Spring Quarter 2023 to the end of Spring Quarter 2024, inclusive.
2) Students and faculty will jointly write a short proposal outlining the goals of the project, the approach, and the deliverables. Proposals are due March 15, 2023. The proposals will be reviewed by the EFI Frontier Projects Review Committee, with the goal of having them in place by the beginning of the Spring Quarter of 2023. Thanks to generous donors, six awards are anticipated.
3) To facilitate the interdisciplinary nature of the projects, two faculty advisors are recommended, preferably from separate academic divisions, but in any case, from different fields. One faculty advisor is acceptable if the advisor possesses the requisite breadth of expertise. Each faculty team is limited to one student.
4) How to apply: Project proposals should briefly describe the proposed work to be done and its impact and importance. A proposed budget for the faculty allocation (up to $2000) should be provided. Projects will be judged on the following criteria: 1) importance of the work to planning the future of Earth over both short-term (decades) and/or long-term (millions of years). 2) Originality: has this idea been thought of before, or is it new? 3) Interdisciplinary nature: Is the project consonant with EFI’s strategy of viewing Earth’s Future through multiple disciplinary lenses? 4) Feasibility: Is it likely that the project, as envisioned, can be completed with the available time and resources? 5) Faculty commitment: Are faculty with the required expertise available and committed to the success of the project? The impact of possible continuing COVID restrictions should be taken into account and addressed. Create a PDF document from the proposal description with the student’s name in the filename. A brief letter is also required on UCSC letterhead signed by the faculty advisors confirming their support and commitment. Submit both documents as attachments to an email to earthfut@ucsc.edu. The due date for proposals has been extended to March 15, 2023.
5) It is envisioned that students will do foundational background reading and project planning during Spring Quarter, giving them a running start to focus full-time on project work over the summer. Students are expected to work full-time during the Summer Quarter of 2023 under the direction and supervision of their faculty advisors. Students will receive a $6000 summer stipend, and the $2000 allocation per project to faculty is intended to cover research expenses, salaries for possible graduate student mentors, faculty honoraria, etc. Students are not academically enrolled or employed by UCSC during the summer and do not receive academic credit; their stipends are paid through UCSC student fellowships.
The student will continue work on the project during the 2023-2024 academic year, and the project must be completed and submitted by the end of Spring Quarter of 2024.
6) The deliverables, together with a short summary report, will be evaluated by the Frontier Projects Review Committee. Work deemed to meet the high standards of the program will be denoted an Earth Futures Institute Frontier Project, and students who successfully complete the program will receive the designation Earth Futures Institute Frontier Fellow.
7) Deliverables: Each project must have at least one clearly defined deliverable, but its nature may vary depending on the nature of the research. The standard model is the senior thesis, which is a substantial original document written by the student under the guidance of their advisor(s). It is hoped that, in many cases, the results will develop into publishable papers. This mode is appropriate to the methods of documenting and promulgating research results in the sciences, engineering, and social sciences but may not properly reflect the nature of scholarly work in other divisions. To encourage participation by faculty from all five divisions, faculty may define other types of deliverables that are more appropriate to the nature of their discipline.
8) In addition to the deliverables, a short summary report is required of all projects as part of the final materials submitted to the Frontier Projects Review committee. These reports will be archived and posted on the Earth Futures Institute website as a permanent record of the program. If the results are exciting and of sufficient interest, students and their faculty advisors may be asked to provide information about the work to media and other interested groups (e.g., UCSC alumni) both on and off campus.
9) UC Riverside collaboration opportunity: The Earth Futures Institute at UCSC has a partner institution at UC Riverside. Frontier projects that involve collaborating faculty between UCSC and UCR are particularly welcome. To locate potential faculty partners, please contact Prof. Bahram Mobasher (mobasher@ucr.edu) at UCR.
10) Student and faculty roles: UCSC students and faculty are both encouraged to seek each other out to generate project ideas and write proposals. Once a project is accepted, students will work full-time over the summer under faculty supervision. Faculty will continue to supervise the research during the academic year 2023-2024, possibly by offering one or more quarters of Independent Study, and will actively assist the student in successfully completing the agreed-upon deliverables and promulgating the results according to the proposed plan.
12) Eligibility: All Academic Senate members are eligible to supervise an EFI Frontier Project; emeriti faculty are especially welcome. Students must be in academic good standing in order to apply, with the prospect of receiving their undergraduate degree by June 2024 or before.
13) Relationship to UCSC departmental senior theses and graduation requirements: The nature and magnitude of the research to be undertaken is comparable to that envisioned in original, research-oriented senior theses (as distinct from literature reviews), and it is therefore possible that some students will want to satisfy their senior thesis requirements through a Frontier Fellows Project. It is the responsibility of each student to make sure that their project permits them to fulfill all UCSC and departmental requirements.
For additional information, please contact EFI Director Prof. Sandra Faber at earthfut@ucsc.edu. Please put “Frontier Fellows Project” in the subject line.
This fellowship is is led by UCSC’s Earth Futures Institute and co-sponsored by The Humanities Institute.