Assistant Professor of Geography has won a National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) award, which recognizes junior faculty who exemplify the role of teacher and researcher and who have the ability to integrate the two.
The award provides $500,000 in funding over five years for Winter鈥檚 project investigating how climate change and water scarcity will affect the future of irrigated agriculture in the United States.
Professor , chair of the , says, 鈥淛onathan Winter is a superb example of an early-career scholar who combines thorough investigation of biophysical systems with pressing environmental and social concerns.鈥
Winter鈥檚 project will create and improve computer models that simulate irrigated agricultural production in the U.S. over the next 30 years, factoring in the effects of changing climate and water resources. Winter will then use that data to develop strategies for enhancing future irrigation management in the U.S.
鈥淭he questions are, for the irrigation we have in the U.S. today, will it be there in the future, and if it鈥檚 not, how might that impact the global food supply?鈥 Winter says.
The project also has a strong teaching component. In addition to a graduate student, Winter鈥檚 team will include five undergraduate researchers from the over the five years of the grant.
鈥淭he undergraduate researchers working on this project will be directly involved in the development and evaluation of agricultural models, as well as have the opportunity to present their research at national academic conferences,鈥 Winter says.
In the later years of the grant, Winter and his team will develop a simplified version of the agricultural model for use in high schools. The team will work with a Vermont high school science teacher to integrate the simplified model into high school science curriculum and offer training for high school teachers to help them incorporate the simplified model into their classrooms.
鈥淭his grant鈥檚 educational component will inspire a new generation of young climate scholars as they begin their academic careers in science and technology,鈥 says Sneddon. 鈥淭he geography department is thrilled to have such a broad-minded teacher-scholar in our midst and anticipate great accomplishments in the future.鈥
Winter says he is grateful for the opportunities the CAREER award provides. 鈥淚t鈥檚 rare to have a grant that not only funds a comprehensive research effort, but also supports extensive teaching activities and engagement with the broader community.鈥
William Platt can be reached at william.c.platt@dartmouth.edu.