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  DOE's Computational Science   Graduate Fellowship

2008 Department of Energy
Computational Science Graduate Fellowship Annual Fellows’ Conference

The DOE-CSGF Annual Conference was held June 17-19, 2008 in Washington, DC at the Washington Court Hotel on Capitol Hill.  Please see the following link for detailed information.
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About the CSGF Program...

The Department of Energy's Computational Science Graduate Fellowship (DOE CSGF) program was developed to meet the Nation's growing need for science and technology professionals with advanced computer skills. As this need continues to rise into the 21st century, the DOE CSGF program has become even more important. The current potential shortage of skilled technology professionals could have severe consequences for the future.  The shortage of computational scientists at Department of Energy laboratories is particularly notable. Approximately 25% of DOE CSGF alums work or have worked in DOE laboratories.  In 2005, the DOE CSGF graduated 22 scientists and accepted 15 more into the program.  Currently the program supports 64 students at 30 universities in 22 states.  Nearly 225 students at more than 50 U.S. universities have trained as fellows, and the demand is only growing.  In fact, in 2005, 337 applicants representing 46 hometown states vied for the 15 available slots.

When created in the early 1990s, the Department of Energy's Computational Science Graduate Fellowship (DOE CSGF) was a bold experiment – a unique multi-disciplinary program focused on nurturing leading computational scientists.  A decade later it's clear the fellowship was, and is, a visionary program – pivotal strategic investment in attracting and training our nation's foremost computational scientists.

The DOE Office of Science initiated the fellowship because of the critical importance of computational science to DOE's core missions, and a profound recognition of our nation's growing and continuing need for broadly trained advanced computational scientists in academia, industry and government laboratories.

Indeed, computational simulation is now science and engineering's "third leg" – along with experimentation and theory. It's crucial to the success of projects from the development of next-generation automobiles to the quest for fusion energy.

Critically, the fellowship recognizes that the national academic environment is still working to develop graduate programs with the required mix of skills and knowledge for training leading computational scientists.  Focused external support is needed to assist this process.  Thus, the DOE CSGF program is more than a traditional academic grant. It's a fellowship with a mission.  More than simply providing money, it has provided more than 200 outstanding graduate students with guidance, support and community in preparing themselves as computational scientists.

The fellowship – now jointly funded by the DOE's Office of Science and the DOE's National Nuclear Security Administration – requires that graduate students plan and follow a course of study that transcends the bounds of traditional academic disciplines.  It requires substantive graduate work in each of a scientific or engineering discipline, computer science and applied mathematics. Fellows receive tremendous guidance and support to assist them in becoming scientists and engineers who are able to comfortably communicate across disciplines.

Fellows also participate in a 12-week research experience at a DOE laboratory.  In keeping with the DOE CSGF's interdisciplinary emphasis, this practicum must be in an area of research outside of the student's thesis dissertation. Laboratory supervisors are nearly unanimous in their enthusiasm for the high level of talent and skill that fellows bring to their practica and the quality of their work.  DOE CSGF alumni and the current fellows form a core group of computational science leaders that joins industry, academia and DOE, and other government laboratories in a range of more than 30 critical disciplines from bioinformatics to nuclear engineering and astrophysics.

These alumni are bringing their diverse, top-level skills and knowledge to research teams at DOE laboratories, including Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.  In 2002, a DOE CSGF alumnus received the DOE Early Career PI award.

In industry, alumni are helping push the traditional boundaries of high-performance computing.  They are helping companies such as Lockheed Martin and Intel further excel in using computational simulation, and they are bringing the competitive advantages of advanced computational science to businesses like Procter & Gamble and Medtronics.

As faculty, they are sharing their expertise with students at universities from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to the University of Michigan and Stanford University.

Together and individually, these computational scientists are critical links in our nation's innovation chain; the human capital that is helping ensure that the enormous potential benefits of advanced computational science are applied to solving our nation's most complex 21st century scientific and engineering challenges.

For more on the program, visit www.krellinst.org/cscf

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

DOE-CSGF Web Site
Contact the Program Manager
CSGF Program Manager
ASCR Program Manager
Mr. George Seweryniak
Department of Energy
Office of Advanced Scientific  Computing Research
SC-21.1 (Germantown)
1000 Independence Ave, SW
Washington, DC 20585-1290
 
Phone: (301) 903-0071
Fax: (301) 903-7774
 
DEIXIS - CSGF on-line Magazine

The links below highlight DOE CSGF fellows' work with DOE scientists, provides a sampling of computational science research at eight DOE labs, and lists information about current fellows and alumni.

DEIXIS 2002-2003
DEIXIS 2002-2003

DEIXIS 2003-2004
DEIXIS 2003-2004

DEIXIS 2004-2005
DEIXIS 2004-2005

DEIXIS 2005-2006
DEIXIS 2005-2006

DEIXIS 2005-2006
DEIXIS 2006-2007

DEIXIS 2005-2006
DEIXIS 2007-2008

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