UofL, IU and Missouri S&T win grant to help women, minority scientists become entrepreneurs

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    LOUISVILLE, Ky. -The University of Louisville, Indiana University and Missouri University of Science and Technology will be helping women and minority faculty, staff and student innovators improve their success in securing money to commercialize their inventions.

    The National Science Foundation has awarded a $225,000 grant for a , called AWARE: ACCESS: Building Innovation Capacity through Diversity. UofL is the lead institution for the grant.

    鈥淲omen and underrepresented researchers have great ideas that need to be translated into the marketplace鈥 said Rob Keynton, UofL鈥檚 director of research initiatives and lead investigator of the program. 鈥淯nfortunately, these innovators have had limited success in securing federal business grants and other funding. We hope to change that with this new program.鈥

    According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, woman-and minority-owned small businesses receive less than 16 percent of federal grants (SBIR/STTR) to move their research and technology to the marketplace.

    鈥淚ncreasing the participation of women, African-Americans, and other underrepresented groups in the technology industry is an important social and economic challenge in America. 聽AWARE: ACCESS will help lay the foundation for making significant progress on this issue,鈥 said Malcolm Townes, associate director of Missouri S&T鈥檚 Office of Technology Transfer and Economic Development.

    The pilot program has four major goals for women and minority academic innovators:

    • Identify, engage and mentor them to pursue entrepreneurship as a career
    • Expand educational, experiential and networking opportunities
    • Enhance their competitiveness for federal grant applications
    • Create a regional ecosystem for entrepreneurs and sharing of best practices by UofL, IU and Missouri S&T聽聽聽聽

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    Mark Hebert
    Following a 28-year career as a radio and television reporter, Mark Hebert joined the University of Louisville as the Director of Media Relations in 2009, serving as the main spokesperson. In 2015, Mark was named Director of Programming and Production. He鈥檚 now producing and hosting a radio show about 鈥渁ll things UofL鈥, overseeing the university鈥檚 video and TV productions and promoting UofL鈥檚 research operation. Mark is best known for his 22 years as the political and investigative reporter for WHAS-TV in Louisville where he won numerous awards for breaking stories, exposing corruption and objectively covering Kentucky politics. In 2014, Mark was inducted into the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame.