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NSF RED Program: Revolutionizing Engineering Departments, $50k-$2M

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Summary

The National Science Foundation announced funding opportunities through the Revolutionizing Engineering Departments (RED) program, supporting four tracks for engineering education reform: RED Planning (Track 1), RED Adaptation and Implementation (Track 2), RED Innovation (Track 3), and RED Innovation Partnerships (Track 4). Funding ranges from $50,000 to $2 million for projects at two-year and four-year institutions aimed at transforming undergraduate engineering education through organizational and cultural change.

What changed

The NSF has published funding opportunities for the Revolutionizing Engineering Departments (RED) program, which supports innovative approaches to undergraduate engineering education reform. The program offers four tracks: Track 1 provides planning grants for institutions seeking to develop competitive RED proposals; Track 2 supports adaptation and implementation of evidence-based organizational change strategies; Track 3 funds development of revolutionary new approaches to engineering education; and Track 4 supports partnerships for innovation in engineering education. Two-year and four-year institutions, including PUIs and EPSCoR jurisdictions, are encouraged to apply.

Engineering departments at higher education institutions should review the program tracks to identify the most appropriate funding pathway for their reform goals. Planning grants (Track 1) offer a lower $50,000 ceiling for capacity-building, while other tracks support larger implementation and innovation projects up to $2 million.

What to do next

  1. Monitor Grants.gov for application deadlines and submission requirements

Archived snapshot

Apr 11, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

IUSE/Professional Formation of Engineers: Revolutionizing Engineering Departments

Agency: U.S. National Science Foundation

Assistance Listings: 47.076 -- STEM Education (formerly Education and Human Resources)

47.041 -- Engineering

Last Updated: September 18, 2025 View version history on Grants.gov

Description

Revolutionizing Engineering Departments (hereinafter referred to as RED) is designed to build upon previous efforts in engineering education research. Specifically, previous and ongoing evaluations of the NSF Engineering Education and Centers Division program and its predecessors, as well as those related programs in the Directorate for STEM Education, have shown that prior investments have significantly improved the first year of engineering students’ experiences, incorporating engineering material, active learning approaches, design instruction, and a broad introduction to professional skills... and a sense of professional practice – giving students an idea of what it means to become an engineer. Similarly, the senior year has seen notable change through capstone design experiences, which ask students to synthesize the technical knowledge, skills, and abilities they have gained with professional capacities, using reflective judgment to make decisions and communicate these effectively. However, this ideal of the senior year has not yet been fully realized, because many of the competencies required in capstone design, or required of professional engineers, are only partially introduced in the first year and not carried forward with significant emphasis through the sophomore and junior years.

The Directorates for Engineering (ENG) and STEM Education (EDU) are funding projects as part of the RED program, in alignment with the Improving Undergraduate STEM Education (IUSE) framework and Professional Formation of Engineers (PFE) initiative. These projects are designing revolutionary new approaches to engineering education, ranging from changing the canon of engineering to fundamentally altering the way courses are structured to creating new departmental structures and educational collaborations with industry. A common thread across these projects is a focus on organizational and cultural change within the departments, involving students, faculty, staff, and industry in rethinking what it means to provide an engineering program.

In order to continue to catalyze revolutionary approaches, while expanding the reach of those that have proved efficacious in particular contexts, the RED program supports four tracks: RED Planning (Track 1), RED Adaptation and Implementation (Track 2), RED Innovation (Track 3), and RED Innovation Partnerships (Track 4). Two- and four-year institutions are encouraged to submit to any track as appropriate for their goals and context.

RED Planning (Track 1) projects will support capacity-building activities at institutions of special interest to NSF’s mission, specifically two-year engineering-centered programs building transfer partnerships, two-year or four-year institutions in EPSCoR jurisdictions, Primarily Undergraduate Institutions (PUIs), and Institutions of Higher Education (IHEs)seeking to level the number of degrees acrossof the full spectrum of diverse talent in engineering. Planning projects should provide the support for such institutions to explore the development of a RED Projects in Tracks 2, 3, & 4.

RED Adaptation and Implementation (Track 2) projects will adapt and implement evidence-based organizational change strategies and actions to the local context, which helps propagate this transformation of undergraduate engineering education.

RED Innovation (Track 3) projects will develop new, revolutionary approaches and change strategies that enable the transformation of undergraduate engineering education.

RED Innovation Partnerships (Track 4) projects will achieve the same goals as Track 3 projects across multiple institutions. Of particular interest to this track are projects partnering two-year institutions with other eligible institutions.

Projects in tracks 2, 3, & 4 will include consideration of the cultural, organizational, structural, and pedagogical changes needed to transform one or more departments to ones in which students are engaged, develop their technical and professional skills, and establish identities as professional engineers or technologists. The focus of projects in these tracks should be on the department’s disciplinary courses and program. RED project initiatives are expected to be institutionalized at the end of the funding period.

Proposals are especially encouraged that address areas of increased national interest including but not limited to advanced manufacturing, advanced wireless, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, microelectronics and semiconductors, net zero technologies, sustainability, systems engineering, and quantum engineering. Show full description

Eligibility

Eligible applicants

Miscellaneous

  • Other

Additional information

*Who May Submit Proposals: Proposals may only be submitted by the following:
-Institutions of Higher Education (IHEs): Two- and four-year IHEs (including community colleges) accredited in, and having a campus located in the US, acting on behalf of their faculty members. Special Instructions for International Branch Campuses of US IHEs: If the proposal includes funding to be provided to an international branch campus of a US institution of higher education (including through use of sub-awards and consultant arrangements), the proposer must explain the benefit(s) to the project of performance at the international branch campus, and justify why the project activities cannot be performed at the US campus.

*Who May Serve as PI:

For all tracks, the Principal Investigator (PI) must be a Department Chair/Head (or equivalent) of a department for whom a significant percentage of students will graduate or transfer to a program with a bachelor’s degree in engineering or engineering technology. The PI must be empowered to provide leadership for the proposed change process. In cases where the institutional responsibilities of a Department Chair/Head do not enable them to support the degree of change being sought, a Dean, Provost, or other senior leader may serve as PI, provided they will be responsible for the active leadership of the RED project. The qualifications of the PI can be justified in the required letter from senior institutional leadership.

It is recommended that projects consider including individuals with expertise in (a) engineering education research and (b) organizational change on the leadership team.

Grantor contact information

Description

NSF grants.gov support
grantsgovsupport@nsf.gov

Email

If you have any problems linking to this funding announcement, please contact the email address above.

grantsgovsupport@nsf.gov

Documents

No documents are currently available.

Link to additional information

NSF Publication 24-564

Closing: April 14, 2026

Planning (Track 1), Adaptation & Implementation (Track 2), Innovation (Track 3), and Innovation Partnerships (Track 4) proposals;...

Planning (Track 1) proposals

Show full description Application process

This site is a work in progress. Go to www.grants.gov to apply, track application status, and subscribe to updates. View on Grants.gov

Award

$8,000,000

Program Funding

19

Expected awards

$50,000

Award Minimum

$2,000,000

Award Maximum

Funding opportunity number:

24-564

Cost sharing or matching requirement:

No Funding instrument type:

Grant

Opportunity Category:

Discretionary

Opportunity Category Explanation:

-- Category of Funding Activity:

Science technology and other research and development

Category Explanation:

--

History

Version:

4

Posted date:

April 5, 2024

Archive date:

October 11, 2029

Named provisions

RED Planning (Track 1) RED Adaptation and Implementation (Track 2) RED Innovation (Track 3) RED Innovation Partnerships (Track 4)

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NSF
Published
September 18th, 2025
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
47.076 -- STEM Education; 47.041 -- Engineering
Docket
8cdbfe4b-7ea9-49f8-9497-9dc2021866a3

Who this affects

Applies to
Educational institutions
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Grant funding Engineering education Research partnerships
Threshold
Funding range: $50,000 to $2,000,000
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Education
Operational domain
Government & Public Administration
Topics
Higher Education Employment & Labor

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