SLCC Receives $819K National Science Foundation Grant

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – Salt Lake Community College’s biotechnology program received an $819,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to further efforts in the area of competency-based education (CBE).

The CBE model allows students to demonstrate competencies at their own pace, moving on to the next course as soon as they are ready. Tuition is paid in an “all you can learn” subscription model, so students can save money if they accelerate their progress.  Aligning with and responding to workforce needs is a strategic priority for SLCC, and the College’s School of Applied Technology has already implemented CBE for non-credit workforce education courses. The National Science Foundation grant will allow SLCC to implement CBE on a wider scale to the academic side of its operations, starting with its biotechnology program.

“The Biotechnology program is uniquely positioned to accept this challenge. It has established two innovative internship programs—the InnovaBio® contract research organization and STUDENTfacturED® contract manufacturing organization — that already utilize informal competency-based practices and foster learning through engagement with actual problems and practices in the life science industry,” says Jean Bower, director of SLCC’s Biotechnology program. “Students who have participated in these programs are recognized as particularly adept in the lab by SLCC faculty, transfer institution faculty, and employers.”

The biotechnology program has partnered with Nelson Laboratories, BioFire Diagnostics and ARUP Laboratories, three local biotechnology companies that anticipate creating hundreds of new jobs in the next five years, for development of new curriculum. SLCC’s proposed “Competency-Based, Open Entry, Open Exit Biotechnology Education” format, which will benefit from the grant, will better accommodate the demands of employers and students.

“The Biotechnology program will pioneer conversion of an academic program to a competency-based format at SLCC, with the intent of establishing best practices for other academic departments at the College and throughout the nation,” says Nicole Omer, director of SLCC’s Office of Sponsored Projects. “The newly developed courses and delivery format will better serve non-traditional students, incumbent workers, high school students, and high school instructors seeking professional development.

Salt Lake Community College is an accredited, student-focused, comprehensive community college meeting the diverse needs of the Salt Lake community. Home to more than 61,000 students each year, the college is Utah’s leading provider of workforce development programs. SLCC is also the largest supplier of transfer students to Utah’s four-year institutions and a perennial Top 10 college nationally for total associate degrees awarded. The college is the sole provider of applied technology courses in the Salt Lake area, with multiple locations, an eCampus and nearly 1,000 continuing education sites located throughout the Salt Lake Valley. Personal attention from an excellent faculty is paramount at the college, which maintains an average class size of 20.

Featured

  • i-PRO, NovoTrax Partner for New School Emergency Response Solution

    i-PRO Americas, Inc., which manufactures edge computing cameras, recently announced a partnership with NovoTrax, provider of end-to-end life safety and mass notification solutions, to address gaps in emergency response workflows at K–12 schools, according to a news release.

  • Addressing the Housing Affordability Crisis Through Creative Campus Development

    Many Southern California college and university campuses are living amidst surging housing costs, driving the need to house more of their populations on campus. Especially for community colleges, the need to support millions of unhoused and housing insecure students has become a prominent issue that lawmakers and institutions alike are trying to solve.

  • California School District Starts Construction on Public Safety Center

    The San Bernardino City Unified School District (SBCUSD) recently announced that construction has begun on a new public safety center that will house the district’s safety and security programs. According to a news release, the James Ramos Center for Public Safety will measure in at 17,140 square feet and contain the district’s Police Department, Office of Emergency Management, and cadet program.

  • Texas K–12 District to Build New Elementary, High Schools

    The High Island Independent School District on the Bolivar Peninsula in Southeast Texas recently announced that construction on a new elementary school and a new high school will begin in January 2026, according to local news. Funding will come from a $27.9-million bond passed in May 2025.

Digital Edition