PNNL-WSU Distinguished Graduate Research Program applications extended to May 10

The WSU Office of Research, the WSU Graduate School, and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) recently announced the call for applications for the eighth cohort of the Distinguished Graduate Research Program (DGRP).

To apply, co-advisors from WSU and PNNL should submit a joint-DGRP application online by the extended due date of May 10.

The DGRP is intended to increase the quality and quantity of STEM PhD students across the WSU system, provide an enhanced experience for the students through research in a U.S. Department of Energy National Laboratory, and align WSU faculty with scientists and the unique capabilities and research programs at PNNL and vice versa. Students in the DGRP are funded by their WSU and PNNL advisors, not by the DGRP.

For more information, please visit natlab.wsu.edu/dgrp, or email DGRP@wsu.edu.

The Notices and Announcements section is provided as a service to the WSU community for sharing events such as lectures, trainings, and other highly transactional types of information related to the university experience. Information provided and opinions expressed may not reflect the understanding or opinion of WSU. Accuracy of the information presented is the responsibility of those who submitted it. The self-uploaded posts are reviewed for compliance with state statutes and ethics guidelines but are not edited for spelling, grammar, or clarity.

Next Story

Recent News

Dr. Universe explains why bread rises in the oven

With help from WSU Breadlab head baker Mel Darbyshire, Dr. Universe explains that bread rises because of yeast, a tiny living fungus that feeds on sugar and releases carbon dioxide gas.

Students design for Columbia River community

A group of landscape architecture students recently presented designs to address issues of housing, infrastructure, river health, resilience, and sustenance in the Columbia River Gorge region. 

WSU lands $1.4M DOE grant to train next wave of nuclear workers

The grant will help expand WSU’s nuclear training capabilities, supporting a new “Reactor Ready” initiative aimed at preparing students and other workers for careers in the nation’s nuclear energy sector.