The National Science Foundation’s Advisory Committee for Environmental 
Research and Education (AC ERE - 
https://www.nsf.gov/ere/ereweb/advisory.jsp) invites your input on 
possible environmental research and education directions to further 
advance national security and economic competitiveness. The purpose of 
the AC ERE is to:
 
• Provide advice, recommendations and oversight concerning support for 
the NSF's environmental research and education portfolio;
• Be a base of contact with the scientific community to inform NSF of 
the impact of its research support and NSF-wide policies on the 
scientific community;
• Serve as a forum for consideration of interdisciplinary environmental 
topics as well as environmental activities in a wide range of 
disciplines;
• Provide broad input into long-range plans and partnership 
opportunities; and
• Provide advice about program management, overall program balance, and 
other aspects of program performance for environmental research and 
education activities.
 
The Committee has been interested broadly in fundamental environmental 
research and education that also has societal utility. It has recently 
focused its attention on two major topics where there is broad consensus 
on the importance of the research to date, but where significant 
research questions remain.

These topics are at the nexus of environmental science and engineering 
with economic growth and competitiveness, and the relationship of 
environmental factors to national and human security. The Committee is 
particularly interested in approaches that promote convergent research 
across disciplines and sectors to address economic competitiveness and 
economic security.
 
To identify emerging research questions in these areas, the committee is 
reaching out to interested and knowledgeable members of the scientific 
community in all disciplines and interdisciplinary areas for their 
views. The AC ERE is also interested in the views of professionals who 
are directly involved in decision-making or operational activities in 
these areas, and who therefore can provide a very practical perspective 
on high-priority research and education topics.
 
The AC ERE invites individuals and groups of individuals to provide 
input on one or both of the topics described above via this link:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/ACERE-RFI-2018
 
The online submission form requires the following information:
 
1. Author name(s) and affiliation(s);
2. Valid contact email address;
3. Title of the response;
4. An abstract (200 words or less) summarizing the response; and
5. Checkbox to consent to allow the AC ERE to display the submitted 
information, consistent with the Creative Commons Attribution-
NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License 
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode).
 
You will also be asked to identify whether your response focuses on 
questions in environmental research and education that are pertinent to 
a) economic growth and competitiveness, b) national and human security, 
or c) both topics. The submission form includes the following question 
prompts. Respondents may respond to all or any subset of these 
questions.  
 
• What are the major environmental research priorities with the greatest 
potential to contribute to economic growth and competitiveness and/or 
national or human security/wellbeing? Priorities could, for example, 
include empirical, theoretical, or qualitative analyses, establishing 
baselines, and/or experimental studies. (500 words or less)
 
• What methodologies should be used for conducting such studies? 
Methodological recommendations could include the prospects for 
interdisciplinary and/or convergent research approaches, including 
modeling, theory, empirical, qualitative, and/or experimental studies. 
Methodological recommendations could also discuss the scope of studies, 
e.g. the balance between single-investigator studies and large teams. 
(500 words or less)
 
• What education (including formal and informal), research, and training 
opportunities - for students, postdoctoral researchers, and mid-career 
scientists - are needed? Opportunities might include interdisciplinary, 
team-based, or other innovative, value-added strategies for realizing 
higher levels of depth and breadth at the individual level, and/or 
expansion of the current environmental research community through 
inclusion of currently under-represented groups. (500 words or less)
 
• Beyond economic competitiveness and national security, what other high 
priority drivers of environmental science and education need attention? 
(200 words or less)
 
Submissions must be received by 5:00 PM Eastern Time on August 20, 2018. 
Respondents may edit their responses while completing the survey, but 
will not be able to save work in progress to complete later. Respondents 
will see a confirmation screen upon successful submission responses.   
 
The committee and associated staff will read and analyze all responses 
received, and use them, in addition to its own background work, to 
develop a report on these topics to inform NSF and the community. It 
intends to publish this report by the end of 2018. 
 
The AC ERE also anticipates making submissions publicly accessible 
through its website (https://www.nsf.gov/ere/ereweb/advisory.jsp). 
Authors who do not wish to have their full responses posted online may 
restrict access to the AC ERE and associated staff. However, the 
author(s) name and affiliation, submission title, and abstract will be 
included in the publicly accessible list of responses regardless.  
 
The AC ERE invites you to step outside of the immediate demands of your 
current research and to think boldly about the opportunities for 
advancing environmental research and education into its next stage 
through a lens focused on economic competitiveness and/or national 
security. The Committee looks forward to your contributions.
 
For questions concerning this effort and submission of input, please 
contact Leah Nichols, Executive Secretary for the AC ERE, at 
lenic...@nsf.gov.

Reply via email to