Microsoft to pay for grants at MIT.
Published:
7 October 1999 y., Thursday
Microsoft has unveiled a partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in which the No.1 software maker will donate $25 million to the school for technology research grants. "Project I-Campus" will be based at MIT and involve MIT faculty and students and Microsoft researchers. The program is the largest educational research donation ever made by Microsoft. The funds will be awarded by a committee of Microsoft executives and MIT professors and administrators. The grant is the latest in a growing number of collaborations between schools seeking additional funding and corporations eager to expand their products and technology into classrooms and research laboratories. "Microsoft views education as one of the great frontiers where information-based services and advanced technology can improve people_s lives," said Richard Rashid, vice president of Microsoft_s research division. Three Microsoft executives will sit on the six-member committee that awards the grants, giving the Redmond-based software giant a say over what research is funded. Funds won_t be funneled to projects that support only Microsoft products. The alliance will begin by researching how information technology can improve three MIT programs, including a graduate-level engineering course taught simultaneously in Singapore and at MIT. The project also is expected to focus on developing tools to aid student learning from a distance, Web-based virtual museums and "global classrooms." Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates has made education a top philanthropic goal. Gates pledged last month to donate $1 billion for college scholarships for minority students. The "Gates Millennium Scholars Program" will provide 1,000 scholarships each year for 20 years to Asian-American, African-American, Hispanic and Native American students.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The European Commission announced today the award of three of the six contracts for the procurement of Galileo’s initial operational capability.
more »
About 6,000 Russian teenagers and schoolchildren staged a noisy protest outside Latvia's parliament
more »
Working group proposes carrots and sticks to encourage early graduation
more »
The Diplomas of the Belarusian State University (BSU) do not require additional attestation abroad
more »
International Center of Knowledge Economy and Knowledge Management organised the celebration of the beginning of the academic year. More than a hundred of guests gathered to celebrate the event.
more »
All Lithuanian schools in Poland that have been risking closure due to insufficient funding will receive the necessary funding
more »
Russian-speaking students told a meeting of the Federation of Estonian Student Unions (EUL) on 21 April that their poor command of the Estonian language is in great part due to the low level of teaching Estonian in schools
more »
Company working with universities to create courses that teach students to write secure code
more »
The latest science and technology indicators for Europe show it's ahead of the United States and Japan in the number of students graduating in science and technology disciplines
more »
Handheld devices, once solely the province of CEOs needing a small electronic organizational device, are another step closer to being accepted as teaching aids in public schools
more »
Just three days after the launch of a 2,000-place, free-of-charge Latvian language training program on Sept. 19, almost all the places had been snapped up
more »