University of California Irvine MIND Programs Get Sustained Support
New Delhi: Sustained support from philanthropists Joan and Don Beall to the Institute for Memory Impairments and Neurological Disorders will allow for the continuation of an educational outreach program in Orange County high schools and the creation of a new research award for an early career researcher.
“We are grateful for the Beall’s leadership, involvement and increased support of $100,000 a year for our educational and research programs,” said Joshua Grill, director of UCI MIND. “Support like theirs is critical to the institute’s mission and demonstrates the trust and commitment of the local community in the organization and its work.”
One of the Beall-assisted efforts is the UCI MIND Beall Scholar Program to Inspire Future STEM Leaders, a high school education outreach effort launched in 2021 to enhance the training mission of the institute.
The program gives outstanding students at local high schools in Orange County an opportunity to receive unique instruction and inspiration from UCI MIND faculty and trainees in a week-long workshop. It is involved at some of the most diverse schools in the county, with the explicit goal of inspiring groups of students from diverse backgrounds to choose careers in science – particularly geriatric neuroscience and medicine – and to give them tools to be successful.
With the Beall’s aid, the program is free for students to participate. Since its launch, 32 students have participated – more than 90 percent being from underserved groups and 41 percent being the first in their family to attend college. Most were female.
The new commitment of support will also launch the UCI MIND Joan and Don Beall Scholar Award. It will provide a critical investment into the research program of an assistant or associate professor. Faculty members from any school are eligible, provided that their research focuses on Alzheimer’s disease or another neurodegenerative condition that results in dementia.
The award will provide $50,000 a year for five years, and it is renewable one time. It is intended to help early-career investigators ensure the development of a robust and successful research program that will make an impact on UCI MIND’s mission to discover solutions for Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.