QPL Students Receive NSF GRFP Awards!

Congrats to Hae and Nick for receiving awards!!!

April 8, 2022

From UCSB ECE:

Three ECE students recognized by National Science Foundation (NSF) for the 2022 Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP): Hae Lim (fellowship) and Spencer Hutchinson & Nicholas Lewis (honorable mentions)

Eleven students associated with UC Santa Barbara's College of Engineering (COE) have received prestigious graduate research fellowships from the National Science Foundation (NSF). Fellows selected for the 2022 Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) will receive three years of financial support, totaling $138,000, in the form of an annual $34,000 stipend and an annual cost-of-education allowance of $12,000 paid to the graduate degree-granting institution for tuition and fees. Fellows also receive opportunities for international research and professional development.

The GRFP is the nation’s oldest fellowship program that recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students pursuing research-based graduate degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines. The program is intended to ensure the vitality and diversity of the nation’s scientific and engineering workforce, inspiring future contributions to research, teaching, and scientific innovation. Students can apply to the program before beginning or early in their graduate studies. On average, about 13,000 students submit applications each year.

This year, 2,193 students nationwide were offered fellowships, and 1,377 students received honorable mention. The NSF issues honorable mention as an academic recognition to meritorious applicants who did not receive fellowship awards. PhD students from the chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, electrical and computer engineering, and materials departments were offered fellowships. Six additional COE graduate students received honorable mention.

Of the more than 60,000 graduate research fellows who have received GRFP funding since 1952, 42 have gone on to become Nobel laureates and more than 450 have been elected to the National Academy of Sciences.