For women STUDENTS in science, engineering and math:
Ever wonder…
…what working in industry is like?
…about grad school?
…how you’ll manage a career and a life?
Find out!
MentorNet’s award-winning One-on-One Mentoring Programs pair women engineering and science students with professionals in their field |
For FACULTY in science, engineering and math:
· You can encourage undergraduates and graduate students to participate in MentorNet.
· You can also mentor graduate students and early career faculty pursuing careers in academia.
· Use the following resources:
Ø Flyer for your students
Ø Letter to faculty and Statistics
Ø MentorNet fact sheet
· More info at
www.MentorNet.net
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Through a grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation’s Engineering Schools of the West Initiative, Boise State University has partnered with MentorNet to provide this service at no fee to you.
Two MentorNet programs are:
Industry E-Mentoring: Student protégés are first-year undergrads through grad students
who are interested in careers in industry and government. The program is intended for students
majoring or considering majoring in engineering, math, technology, and sciences, but not pursuing
pre-medical, pre-dental, nursing or pre-veterinary studies. (Enrollment equity is less of an issue in
those fields.) Mentors are women and men working in industry or government.
Academic Career E-Mentoring: Student protégés are graduate students, postdocs, and
early faculty interested in or pursuing a faculty career. Mentors are tenured faculty.
MentorNet’s sponsors include 3M Company, Alcoa Foundation, Apple Computer, Inc., AT&T Foundation, Bechtel Foundation, Cisco Systems, Guidant Corporation, IBM Corporation, Intel Foundation, Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Microsoft Corporation, National Science Foundation, Naval Research Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, SAP, Schlumberger, Symantec, and Affiliated Partners National Society of Professional Engineers, Sigma Xi, and WEPAN.
It's Free - Sign up today @ www.MentorNet.net
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