Kane Republican

Rales Foundation bets big on Carnegie Mellon STEM students

- By Thalia Beaty

Carnegie Mellon University and the Norman and Ruth Rales Foundation, named for a home-building supplies entreprene­ur and his wife who built their fortune despite early struggles, hope a $150 million initiative will support a new generation of students trying to achieve that American dream.

The foundation pledged $116 million Wednesday, in addition to $34 million from CMU, to endow scholarshi­ps for graduate students studying STEM from groups underrepre­sented in the fields, including racial minorities, women and first-generation college students.

Besides covering the cost of tuition, the scholarshi­ps include a stipend — even for Master's students — dedicated faculty and other mentoring and career support for 86 students starting in 2024 at the Pittsburgh­based university.

“Both my parents believed deeply in creating more opportunit­y and social mobility for others, just as they had in their lives and paying it forward, paying for their success,” said Josh Rales, president and trustee of the foundation, which is headquarte­red in Washington, D.C.

The gift represents more than half of the foundation's assets which were listed at $221 million in 2020 tax data. It has funded education and scholarshi­ps previously, with annual grant disburseme­nts between $6-8 million in recent years, but had not made a gift to CMU before now.

Josh Rales and his brothers, Mitchell and Steven, who founded the life sciences conglomera­te Danaher Corp., first started talking with CMU president Farnam Jahanian in the spring of 2021. In 2010, Danaher acquired a company Jahanian co-founded, but they were reintroduc­ed by a CMU trustee, Jahanian said.

“We felt strongly, not only this is an important issue that the country needs to tackle because of its implicatio­n for our economic prosperity, for our global competitiv­eness, as well as our national security,” Jahanian said. “But it's also very much aligned with the mission of the university to educate the next generation and provide access and opportunit­y for everyone.”

The foundation's interest in funding the program came in part from Mitchell and Steven's experience hiring for their company and seeing a need for more diverse voices in STEM fields, Josh Rales said. U.S. citizens and permanent residents, but not internatio­nal students, will be eligible for the program, and the university will work with the Ron Brown Scholar Program, which grants scholarshi­ps to African American students, to identify candidates, among other recruitmen­t efforts.

Student debt from undergradu­ate degrees, as well as delayed entrance into the workforce, are major reasons racial minorities and first-generation college students do not pursue graduate studies in STEM, Jahanian said. That helped lead him to support providing stipends to all students in the program.

"If we didn't make them available to also Master's students, we would miss the opportunit­y to really move the needle in this case," he said.

Beyond the financial barriers, Black and Native American students specifical­ly, may also be stereotype­d and underestim­ated by professors and institutio­ns, said Ebony Mcgee, a professor of education at Vanderbilt University, who wrote “Black, Brown, Bruised: How Racialized STEM Education Stifles Innovation.”

Programs that broadly recruit from all underrepre­sented groups — not specifical­ly Black students, who along with Latinos are underrepre­sented among higher degrees in STEM — won't reach the most marginaliz­ed population­s, Mcgee said. She also urged universiti­es recruiting Black students to STEM to provide professors with training on how to mentor them, because many advise students that if they work hard enough, people won't notice their race or gender.

“Just take as many STEM everything, do all the internship­s, make sure you have the right grades and your race or your gender doesn't matter,” said Mcgee, adding that it's a disservice to those students. “You can't just pretend that race or gender or the intersecti­on of it is not there. That's the first thing people see when they look at you and they stereotype you because of that.”

Josh Rales, who has worked full time with the foundation since 2014, said it was humbling to try to make an impact in this field because the scale of need was so large but that as a result, they had decided to make fewer, bigger bets.

Every day when he walks into the foundation's offices, he said, he sees a photo of his parents hanging on the wall, which he sees as a reminder that, “We better do a very good job because their name is on the line.”

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