ESA honored at White House Ceremony
Society receives presidential Award in Mentoring

19 November 2007

President Bush announced on November 16 that the Ecological Society of
America (ESA) is one of the recipients of the 2006 Presidential Award
for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring
(PAESMEM).  ESA is the only organization to receive the 2006 PAESMEM
award; the other awardees are all individuals.  The award, the highest
of its kind in the United States, is supported and administered by the
National Science Foundation (NSF) and includes a $10,000 grant for
continued mentoring work.

ESA's program, Strategies for Ecology Education, Development and
Sustainability (SEEDS), garnered the presidential award.  Made possible
by generous support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Society
established the program in 1996 to anchor its diversity initiatives.

"We view the ESA SEEDS Program as the jewel in our crown," said ESA
President Norman Christensen.  "It is truly one of the initiatives of
which we are most proud and today's award underscores its tremendous
value."

Over the years, ESA has partnered on SEEDS with the United Negro College
Fund, Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Tribal Colleges, the
Institute of Ecosystem Studies, and others.  With the goal of
diversifying and advancing the profession of ecology, the SEEDS program
provides a full spectrum of mentoring and learning opportunities to
underrepresented undergraduate students.  

Managed by ESA's Office of Education and Diversity Programs, these
include SEEDS ecology clubs and chapters, research fellowships, group
field trips, and travel to the ESA Annual Meeting where students are
assigned a mentor for the duration of the meeting.  SEEDS directly
serves over 200 students and its chapters serve nearly 2,000 students.
These students credit SEEDS with enabling them to pursue a career in
ecological science and to forge lasting relationships with both peers
and mentors that help support their academic pursuits.  

SEEDS has reached beyond ethnic minority students to include an
ever-expanding pool of ESA members involved in mentoring students and
learning much from them.  Over 200 ESA members have volunteered to serve
either as a mentor at the Annual Meeting, as a mentor for a Fellowship
student, or to assist with a field trip.  Another facet to the program
is ESA's web series, "Focus on Ecologists: What do Ecologists Do?" that
profiles a diversity of people trained in ecological science and offers
their advice to students.
(http://www.esa.org/education/ecologists_profile/EcologistsProfileDirect
ory/) 

"We recognized the need to increase the diversity of our membership
early on," says ESA Executive Director Katherine McCarter.  "The Society
took a number of steps towards this goal in which the SEEDS program has
figured prominently."

McCarter notes that the ultimate measure of success has been in the
great strides ESA has made in membership numbers of underrepresented
populations.

In 1992, underrepresented minorities represented 5.7 percent of the
Society's membership.  In 2006, that number had grown to 11 percent.
The number of American Indian/Alaska Native members more than doubled
and that of African American members nearly tripled.   

"It's imperative that we draw from the talent of the broad spectrum of
the U.S. population who will bring the range of creativity, skills, and
approaches needed to address ecological challenges," says ESA President
Christensen.

The Society has made a long-term commitment to continue the mentoring
opportunities for students and members alike, particularly those
organized and supported at the Society's annual meetings.  It plans to
dedicate the presidential award to supporting travel for
underrepresented students to continue to attend the annual scientific
conference and to participate in the mentoring activities sponsored at
these yearly events.

More information about the 2006 PAESMEM Award can be found on the NSF
website at:
http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=110716&org=NSF&from=news

========================================================================
==

The Ecological Society of America is the country's primary professional
organization of ecologists, representing 10,000 scientists in the United
States and around the world.  Since its founding in 1915, ESA has
diligently pursued the promotion of the responsible application of
ecological principles to the solution of environmental problems through
ESA reports, journals, research, and expert testimony to Congress.  For
more information about the Society and its activities, visit the ESA
website at http://www.esa.org.

Reply via email to