The Woods Institute’s REIP awards seek to move research toward innovative solutions that private market, public policy and individual stakeholders can employ that are of significant consequence in solving pressing environmental challenges.
The EVP program provides seed grants from $5,000 to $250,000, for up to two years, for interdisciplinary research projects that seek to identify solutions to pressing problems of the environment and sustainability.
EST Initiatives invites applications for funding to support the development of projects that advance understanding of ethical implications or societal impacts of science and technology innovation.
CTL offers quarterly teaching advancement grants of up to $2500 to Stanford instructors to support projects that directly enhance learning for Stanford students, with a particular emphasis on IDEAL goals.
Course Innovation Awards support the development of new courses focused on topics of regional or global interest. The goal is to spur the design of courses that appeal to large numbers of students or reach students early in their academic careers.
MUIR provides stipends to Stanford undergraduate students to work on a specific research project in support of a faculty member's environmental research over the summer.
Grants of up to $10,000 to support new mass spectrometry projects requiring LC-MS/MS targeted quantitation capabilities, in support of methodology development, early phase investigations, and pilot studies.
The Office of Community Engagement is soliciting applications for Pilot Grants for Community-Engaged research projects. Projects must have a community engagement component. Research teams new to community-engaged research are encouraged to apply.
The Spectrum MedTech Pilot Program funds projects involving medical devices, diagnostics and digital health technologies used to diagnose and treat disease.