About NSDL

Mission

The National Science Digital Library (NSDL) was created by the National Science Foundation to provide organized access to high quality resources and tools that support innovations in teaching and learning at all levels of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education.

NSDL seeks to serve a vital role as STEM educational cyberlearning for the nation, meeting the informational and technological needs of educators and learners at all levels.

Overview

Educators need efficient and reliable methods to discover and use science and math materials that will help them meet the demands of instruction, assessment, and professional development in an increasingly complex technology-based world.

NSDL was established by the National Science Foundation (NSF) in 2000 as an online library providing access for users to exemplary resources for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education and research.

NSDL provides an organized point of access to high-quality STEM content that is aggregated from a variety of other digital libraries, NSF-funded projects, and NSDL-reviewed web sites. NSDL also provides access to services and tools that enhance the use of this content in a variety of contexts. NSDL is designed primarily for K-16 educators, but anyone can access NSDL.org and search the library at no cost. Access to most of the resources discovered through NSDL is free; however, some content providers may require a login, or a nominal fee or subscription to retrieve their specific resources.

NSDL serves as a nexus for educators, researchers, policy makers and the public by building bridges:

History

Initial development of the National Science Digital Library (NSDL) program began in late 1995 with an internal concept paper for the National Science Foundation (NSF) Division of Undergraduate Education. In 1996, NSF released a report about ways to improve undergraduate science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education. It recommended establishing a national digital library that would constitute an online network of learning environments for improving teaching and learning for STEM education at all levels. Beginning in 1998, two rounds of prototype projects were supported through special initiatives conducted under the auspices of the multi-agency Digital Libraries Initiative - Phase 2 (DLI-2) program. (For more background see the NSDL progress report by Dr. Lee Zia in D-Lib Magazine.)

The NSDL program held its first formal funding cycle during fiscal year 2000. From 2000 onward, over 200 projects have been funded to create collections, services, and tools for teacher and learners at all levels, and perform targeted research in digital libraries and their application to education. The NSDL program is an unusual program for NSF in that its projects are engaged in building an enterprise much larger than the object of any one grant.

Beginning in October 2008, the NSDL transitions to a new phase of development and organization, with the granting of awards for the NSDL Resource Center, and Technical Network Services.

Technical Network Services provides the foundation for central services: operations, technical development fostering collaborative community creation, use, and reuse of resources, tools, and services supporting transformative STEM education.

The NSDL Resource Center combines intra-community support structures for the NSDL community of grantees with mechanisms for effective and efficient outreach and dissemination; systematic data gathering, monitoring and reporting on trends and practices; provision of services and support for teacher training, professional development, and STEM workforce growth; brokering of partnerships and opportunities on behalf of the community; and promoting and advocating for NSDL.

See Organization for more information.