DOE Announces RENEW Initiative Support for Five Pathway Summer Schools


| Brookhaven National Laboratory

As part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Reaching a New Energy Sciences Workforce (RENEW) initiative, Brookhaven Lab and Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility will collaborate on an immersive summer school designed to provide college freshmen and recent high school graduates with working knowledge and skills for “big data” and artificial intelligence/machine learning.

The summer school will utilize a hybrid model, reflecting how modern-day science is performed, while leveraging the unique strengths and capabilities of each lab. Big data applications will include those developed for the future Electron-Ion Collider — a collaborative project between the two laboratories — and additional laboratory-specific topics.

A total of 165 students will spend next summer learning, networking, and conducting scientific research at seven of the nation’s national laboratories via funding from the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Reaching a New Energy Sciences Workforce (RENEW) initiative.

All of the students are in high school, are recent high school graduates, or early undergraduate students interested in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). They will be participating in the RENEW Pathways Summer School (PSS) program. The PSS program, sponsored by the Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) at the Office of Science, works to diversify the STEM talent pool via hands-on learning opportunities and inclusive mentorship at DOE national laboratories and user facilities.

“A diverse workforce now and into the future is absolutely essential if we are going to solve the huge scientific challenges we are facing,” said Harriet Kung, Acting Director of the DOE Office of Science. “These pathway summer schools are a wonderful and innovative way to bring talented young individuals into our nation’s scientific powerhouses, our national laboratories. The goal is that they will see the many different opportunities available and avenues to pursue a career in science.”

In particular, new awards will go to the following labs:

- Argonne National Laboratory: A Taste of Technical Roles: A Community College Pathway Summer School

- Brookhaven National Laboratory and Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility: Big Data Science and Applications Summer School at Brookhaven and Jefferson Labs

- Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory: Fermilab Program for Research, Innovation, and STEM Mentorship

- Los Alamos National Laboratory: BEAM: Bridging Education in Optics and Applied STEM

- National Renewable Energy Laboratory and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory: NREL-SLAC Pathway Summer School: Exploring Chemistry, Transforming Communities

The new PSS groups will join a consortium of intentional efforts across DOE national laboratories to explore inclusive pathways for young students to enter the science and technology workforce in support of DOE's mission.

The Pathways Summer Schools leverage existing partnerships between DOE national laboratories and local organizations supporting underrepresented groups in STEM to recruit participants. A total of 12 national labs will be conducting 16 Pathways Summer Schools in the upcoming year (this cohort includes seven national labs running five summer schools). Students will participate in activities aimed at increasing their knowledge and understanding of STEM while promoting their STEM identity.

Examples include hands-on learning guided by mentors or mentoring teams, networking with mentors and other participants, as well as professional development activities. The summer schools will take place during Summer 2025.

Find out more about opportunities available to students, faculty, and researchers at the Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists website.

Daily Feed

Local

Investors Throw Millions at Suffolk

The sale of $350 million in Tax Anticipation Notes at 2.94% and $46.4 million in Refunding Serial Bonds at 2.66% was reported by Comptroller John Kennedy. He attributes the impressive number of bidders to the county’s improved credit ratings which resulted in healthy competition, and significant cost savings for the residents of Suffolk County.


Local

History Comes Alive at Military Museum

The museum is the dream of the nearby Rocky Point VFW Post 6249 membership, whose stories are befitting of the many heroes depicted in the gallery’s hallowed halls. There’s museum advisor Joe Cognitore, the post’s commander, whose Army service in Vietnam earned him a Bronze Star with a “V” for Valor.


Local

Fort Sumter Pilgrimage Explores Family’s Civil War Legacy

Following the War of 1812 with Britain, President Andrew Jackson realized the need to strengthen the new nation’s coastal defenses, especially to protect the Atlantic entrance to Charleston, the south’s busiest port. Millions of tons of Massachusetts granite created an island at the confluence of the Ashley and the Cooper rivers where none had been before