A message from NSF MPS leadership on reorganization and merit review changes
Dear Colleagues,
The U.S. National Science Foundation serves the American public as an engine of our nation's research enterprise. NSF's mission is the same today as it was in 1950: to advance the progress of science and enable better quality of life, greater economic opportunities and stronger national security.
Today, NSF is continuing to invest in bold research and innovation in service to the American people.
To help keep America at the forefront of science, engineering and technology, NSF is making changes to our organizational structure and merit review processes. These changes are designed to increase our agency's efficiency and effectiveness by reducing administrative burdens both inside the agency and externally, while maintaining our strong commitment to scientific rigor.
Rest assured that the NSF Directorate for Mathematical and Physical Sciences (NSF MPS) will continue to support research in astronomical sciences, chemistry, materials research, mathematical sciences and physics. The five divisions previously within NSF MPS have been realigned into sections grouped according to those scientific areas.
NSF MPS will continue to support interdisciplinary efforts, including quantum information science, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, microelectronics and other national priorities. The reorganization will empower our staff to seize emergent opportunities and enable more rapid engagement with both the U.S. research community and NSF leadership.
The changes to NSF's proposal review processes maintain our existing merit review criteria while providing our program officers with new flexibilities to help them support and respond to the specific needs of their scientific disciplines. The goal is to reduce the workload of our program staff and increase our responsiveness agency-wide — so researchers can spend more time on research and collaboration and less on compliance and paperwork.
In the coming months, additional information will be communicated and posted on NSF's website as these organizational changes and processes take effect.
America's science and technology ecosystem is built on a remarkably successful partnership among government, academia, industry and nonprofits. Together, we will continue to foster discoveries, support the next generation of researchers and deliver innovations that benefit all Americans.
| Tie Luo NSF MPS Directorate Head | David B. Berkowitz NSF MPS Assistant Director |