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SEPA programs since 1991
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SEPA was created to encourage active biomedical and/or behavioral scientists to work as partners with educators, media experts, community leaders, and other interested organizational leaders on projects that improve student understanding of the health sciences in K-12 education, and increase the public's understanding of science.  Since 1991, the program has been administered by the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health. To date, 150 SEPA awards have been distributed across the United States.

Explore SEPA Programs by:
Funding Year (first year of program funding)
State
Formal Educational Programs (classroom curricula)
Informal Educational Programs (museum exhibits, workshops, educational videos, websites)
Actively Funded Programs (excludes programs whose SEPA funding has expired)

"Programs like I.N.Q.U.I.R.E. allow us to learn from the BEST and then transfer that knowldge into usable lessons and activities for our kids."
Lee Ann Young - a Biology teacher from Hondo High School, TX in Positively Aging: Optimizing Mobility Across Life program
"Our Coordinator was delivering a biotech kit to a teacher and her comment was 'here comes the ice cream truck for science teachers.'”
Charlotte Mulvihill - Project Investigator for Biotechnology/Bioinformatics Discovery!
This website is supported by a Science Education Partnership Supplement to West Virginia Health Sciences and Technology Academy Student Design Public Health Clinical Trials (R25RR23274) which funded from National Center For Research Resources a component of the National Institutes of Health, developed in the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Its content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of NCRR or NIH.