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The Extent of Federal S&E Funding to Minority-Serving InstitutionsMinority institutions are an important subset of the universe of academic institutions. This InfoBrief presents key data on funding to historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), Hispanic-serving institutions (HSIs), and tribal colleges and universities as derived from two surveys of the National Science Foundation's (NSF's) Division of Science Resources Statisticsthe Survey of Federal S&E Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions and the Survey of Research and Development Expenditures at Universities and Colleges. Universities and colleges in each of these three categories of minority institutions receive funds from Federal agencies in support of research and development and other science and engineering activities. More than for nonminority-serving institutions, these Federal S&E dollars are allocated relatively less for R&D and relatively more for S&E capacity-building activities ("capacity building" refers to the ability to create the infrastructure to do research and the training of scientists and engineers). Funding to HBCUsThe Survey of Federal S&E Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions collects data on six science and engineering (S&E) categories: R&D; fellowships, traineeships, and training grants (FTTGs); R&D plant; facilities and equipment for instruction; general support for S&E; and other S&E activities. The 2001 U.S. Department of Education Accredited Postsecondary Minority Institutions listing reported 105 HBCUs; from the Federal S&E Support survey, 76 HBCUs were reported as receiving Federal S&E obligations in fiscal year 2001. Federal agencies provided over $404 million (table 1) to HBCUs in FY 2001 in support of S&E. This was the highest amount ever and was a 21 percent increase over FY 2000. By comparison, Federal S&E obligations to all other academic institutions increased by 13 percent. Over the decade (FYs 1991 through 2001), the average annual increases for S&E obligations at both HBCUs and at all other academic institutions was virtually the same (nearly 7 percent). Table 1 Source Data: Excel fileR&D played a smaller role in Federal S&E obligations to HBCUs than in such obligations to all other academic institutions. In FY 2001, nearly three-fifths of all Federal S&E obligations to HBCUs was provided for R&D. The corresponding figure for all other academic institutions was 87 percent (approximately $19 billion of an S&E total of about $22 billion) (tables 1&2). Table 2 Source Data: Excel fileThe miscellaneous category "other S&E activities" accounted for the second largest portion of Federal S&E obligations at HBCUs (25 percent, or $103 million) compared with a 6 percent share of Federal S&E support to non-HBCUs. Examples of "other S&E activities" include support for technical conferences, teacher institutes, and programs geared to increase the scientific knowledge of precollege and undergraduate students. Such activities comprise some of the building blocks of science education and future research capability. Agency Mix of HBCU Support Compared to All Other Academic InstitutionsIn FY 2001, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) obligated over one-third of all Federal S&E support that went to HBCUs and over two-fifths of all Federal R&D funds that went to HBCUs. The Department of Agriculture (USDA) funded about one-fourth and one-fifth of all HBCU S&E support and R&D, respectively. USDA's significantly larger share of HBCU Federal S&E obligations when compared to its share for non-HBCUs (25 percent versus 5 percent, respectively) reflects the predominance of land grant colleges among HBCUs. About one-fifth of all HBCUs, but less than one-tenth of the approximately 1,100 non-HBCU academic institutions receiving Federal S&E support, are land grant colleges. Top 10 HBCUsIn FY 2001, 56 of the 76 HBCU recipients of Federal S&E funds showed current-dollar increases, as did 47 of the 67 HBCU Federal R&D recipients (table 3). When ranked by the amount of Federal R&D funding received in FY 2001, the leading 10 HBCU recipients accounted for 61 percent of all HBCU Federal R&D support and 53 percent of all HBCU S&E support. Eight of the top 10 HBCU Federal R&D recipients were also among the top 10 S&E recipients. The two institutions ranked among the top 10 Federal R&D HBCUs that were not among the top 10 S&E recipients (Southern University A&M All Campuses and Xavier University of Louisiana) were 11th and 12th, respectively, in Federal S&E support to HBCUs. Howard University, which received $30 million in Federal R&D and $36 million for all S&E, was the leading HBCU recipient ranked in both R&D and S&E obligations, as it has been for 7 consecutive years. Table 3 Source Data: Excel fileData from the FY 2001 NSF Survey of Research and Development Expenditures at Universities and Colleges showed that the federally financed portion of R&D expenditures dominates the HBCU R&D total, accounting for 86 percent of FY 2001 total R&D spending at these institutions (table 4). For all non-HBCU institutions, the Federal share was substantially less (58 percent), which may indicate a Federal commitment to grow the research capability of these minority-serving institutions. Table 4 Source Data: Excel fileOver the FY 1991 through 2001 time frame, federally financed spending at HBCUs rose on an average annual basis by 8 percent (in current dollars), while other R&D sources at HBCUs showed a 4 percent annual increase. At non-HBCU institutions, in contrast, federally financed expenditures were up 6 percent a year on average over the decade; this rate was the same on average for all other R&D sources at non-HBCUs. Looking at the R&D expenditures survey by S&E discipline yields the following observations:
HSIsOf the approximately 300 Hispanic-serving institutions recognized in 2001 by the Department of Education,[1] 80 such institutions received Federal S&E support in FY 2001 totaling $509 million. HHS supplied 56 percent of all Federal S&E obligations to HSIs (in line with its 57 percent share to all universities), and NSF obligated 14 percent of the Federal HSI total. Most of the remainder was provided by DoD (10 percent) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (9 percent). The top 10 HSIs received $443 million, or 87 percent of all Federal S&E obligations to such institutions (table 5). The University of Miami ($124 million) was the largest Hispanic-serving recipient and ranked 54th in Federal S&E obligations among all universities; three-fourths of that university's Federal S&E funds came from HHS. That agency funded 92 percent of the $84 million total to the second-ranked HSI, the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. HHS supplied 58 percent of all Federal S&E support to the leading 10 HSIs. Table 5 Source Data: Excel fileFifty-five HSIs received Federal R&D obligations in FY 2001, totaling $379 million or 74 percent of total Federal S&E obligations to these institutions. ("Other S&E activities" was the second largest Federal funding category, accounting for 12 percent of the HSI total.) HHS obligated 62 percent of all Federal R&D support to HSIsa proportion in line with HHS' 61 percent share of all Federal academic R&D obligations. DoD and NSF provided the next largest shares of Federal R&D obligations to HSIs (12 and 11 percent, respectively). The top 10 HSIs in terms of Federal R&D obligations accounted for $349 million, or 92 percent, of all such obligations provided to these institutions. Thus, Federal R&D obligations are much more highly concentrated for HSIs than for HBCUs, whose top 10 Federal R&D share was 61 percent. The leading five Federal R&D recipients were ranked in the same order as for total S&E support to HSIs, and 9 of the top 10 R&D recipients were among the top 10 S&E Hispanic-serving recipients. HHS provided the majority of Federal R&D support to the top 10 recipients, obligating 64 percent of all R&D to the top 10 R&D recipients and 77 percent of the R&D to the leading R&D recipient, the University of Miami. HHS provided 91 percent of the Federal R&D obligations accorded the second-ranked HSI, the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Tribal Colleges and UniversitiesMost of the institutions (28 of 32) on the 2001 Department of Education listing of tribal colleges and universities received Federal S&E support in FY 2001; these funds totaled $29 million. In contrast, just over one-fourth of all HSIs received Federal S&E support that year. NSF (46 percent) and USDA (32 percent) together provided over three-fourths of all Federal S&E funding to tribal institutions in FY 2001. USDA, which obligated S&E support to each of the 28 tribal universities that received Federal S&E funds, accounted for just 5 percent of Federal S&E support to all academic institutions in FY 2001. HHS, the dominant source of Federal support for HSIs, supplied just 9 percent of all tribal S&E support. Disaggregating funding by S&E activity, $16 million of the $29 million obligated to tribal institutions supported the miscellaneous category "other S&E activities," with $6 million allocated to R&D and $4 million to FTTGs. Each of the 28 tribal support recipients showed some Federal FTTG obligations in FY 2001, although only about half received R&D funding (see below). The leading 10 tribal institutionstopped by Montana's Salish Kootenai College with $4.3 millionreceived 77 percent ($22 million) of the Federal S&E support total; about half of this amount was supplied by NSF (table 6). Table 6 Source Data: Excel fileThe $6 million in Federal R&D obligated to tribal colleges and universities in FY 2001 was distributed among 15 institutions, led by South Dakota's Oglala Lakota College ($1.4 million). HHS and NSF together supplied 91 percent of the R&D to the top two tribal recipients in FY 2001. HHS (27 percent), NSF (25 percent), and USDA (21 percent) together accounted for nearly three-fourths of all Federal R&D obligations to tribal institutions. In comparison, HHS funded 61 percent of Federal support for academic R&D, NSF 13 percent, and USDA 3 percent. DefinitionsThe Higher Education Act of 1965 defines an HBCU as ...any historically black college or university that was established prior to 1964, whose principal mission was, and is, the education of black Americans, and that is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or association determined by the Secretary [of Education] to be a reliable authority as to the quality of training offered or is, according to such an agency or association, making reasonable progress toward accreditation. The U.S. Department of Education defines Hispanic-serving institutions are those whose full-time undergraduate enrollment of Hispanic students is 25 percent or more of total enrollment. Thus, the universe of HSIs can vary annually. The designation of tribal institutions is covered under several Federal statutes. For example, the Tribally Controlled College and University Assistance Act covers 25 postsecondary institutions where 50 percent or more of student enrollment is American Indian. For more information contact Richard J. Bennof Footnote [1] Some of the HSIs are branch campuses within the Federal S&E Support Survey. Examples of branch campuses included in this report are the University of New MexicoMain Campus, New Mexico State UniversityMain Campus, and the University of New Mexico-Los Alamos campus. (The University of New Mexico-Los Alamos data are not shown because it fell below the top 10 ranked HSI institutions). | ||||||||||||