Engineers stacking NSF awards
Five faculty members in the Jerome J. Lohr College of Engineering have received awards from the National Science Foundation in recent weeks.
³ÉÈËÊÓƵ shatters research expenditures record for second consecutive year
For the second consecutive year, South Dakota State University has broken its research expenditures record. Research expenditures for fiscal year 2024 reached $84 million — a 13.5% increase from last year's record of $74 million.
Supporting counselors and the agricultural workforce
A new project from South Dakota State University's School of Education, Counseling and Human Development will provide professional development opportunities to rural school counselors in support of careers in food and agriculture.
³ÉÈËÊÓƵ faculty member receives second Fulbright Scholar Award to Senegal
Molly Krueger Enz, a Distinguished Professor in the School of American and Global Studies at South Dakota State University, has received a 2024-25 Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program award to Senegal where she will teach and conduct research.
³ÉÈËÊÓƵ researchers to develop soil moisture mapping capabilitiesÂ
A collaborative project from South Dakota State University, South Dakota Mines and Oglala Lakota College will develop novel algorithms needed for soil moisture mapping — an essential tool for helping farmers with their agricultural management decisions.
Researchers to improve nitrogen-fixing capabilities in soybeans
A new project from South Dakota State University's College of Natural Sciences looks to improve the soybean plant's ability to naturally fix nitrogen, reducing the need for synthetic fertilizers.
³ÉÈËÊÓƵ's Basu receives NSF funding to kickstart a European collaboration
Saikat Basu, assistant professor of mechanical engineering in South Dakota State University's Jerome J. Lohr College of Engineering, has received a supplemental National Science Foundation grant to establish a new collaboration Simon Jochems, assistant professor of infectious diseases at the Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands.