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Ciencia Puerto Rico (or CienciaPR) is US-based non-profit organization that advocates for science in Puerto Rico and supports Puerto Rican researchers. Their online community of more than 14,000 researchers, educators, students, and allies work to show that science can empower people to improve their lives and society. [ 1 ]
The Puerto Rico Science, Technology and Research Trust is a private non-profit organization created in 2004 to encourage and promote innovation, transfer and commercialization of technology and creation of jobs in the technology sector, based in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
[4] In 2014, Díaz started working at the Puerto Rico Science, Technology and Research Trust, overseeing the organization's grants program. [2] She joined Ciencia PR in 2017 as Director of the Science Education Program, where she fosters the participation of STEM experts in K-12 education, focusing specifically on providing opportunities for ...
Ciencia Puerto Rico [ edit ] In 2006, during his postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford University, Colón-Ramos founded Ciencia Puerto Rico (CienciaPR) to connect Puerto Rican scientists across the diaspora to promote scholarly interaction, provide visibility for Puerto Rican scientists, and support research and education in Puerto Rico. [ 17 ]
The Puerto Rico Bureau of Forensic Science (Spanish: Negociado de Ciencias Forenses de Puerto Rico (NCF)) is the sole medical examiner of Puerto Rico and its municipalities. The bureau is headquartered in San Juan .
Clubes de Ciencia [1] is a non-profit organization founded in 2014 that organizes hands-on week-long workshops in STEM to kids in developing countries at no cost. [2] The instructors are PhD volunteers from top universities, such as Harvard , Princeton , MIT who organizes the workshops. [ 3 ]
Stahl wrote "Estudios sobre la flora de Puerto Rico" (A study of the Puerto Rican Flora), published in six fascicles from 1883 to 1888. Copies of his plant collection with approximately 1,330 plants can be found in various botanical gardens around the world.
Velasco went to high school at Academia Maria Reina in San Juan, Puerto Rico.She obtained her undergraduate degree from the University of Puerto Rico (Rio Piedras). She attended graduate school in physics at Northwestern University where she obtained her PhD in 1995 with Donald Miller and Ralph Segel as advisors.