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Intel announces $50 million investment in Ohio higher education

Intel announces $50 million investment in Ohio higher education



The Ohio State University is among the Ohio educational institutions that will collaborate with Intel and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) on a $100 million investment over the next decade to establish semiconductor manufacturing education partnerships.To get more latest news about intel, you can visit shine news official website.

Ohio State President Kristina M. Johnson joined Gov. Mike DeWine, Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, leaders from Intel and the NSF, and Columbus State Community College President David Harrison for the March 17 announcement at Columbus State.

Intel’s education financing is part of the company’s recent announcement that it will invest more than $20 billion to construct two new leading-edge chip factories in Ohio. Intel will invest $50 million directly in Ohio higher education institutions. An additional $50 million from Intel will be matched by $50 million from the NSF in national funding opportunities.

Ohio’s educational institutions are well-situated to develop the highly skilled workforce necessary to staff the new chip factories, said Keyvan Esfarjani, Intel’s executive vice president of manufacturing, supply chain and operations.

“It really comes down to three things: It’s really about land, infrastructure and, most importantly, is talent,” he said. “Ohio meets all of that.”

Through its investment, Intel will establish comprehensive and collaborative programs with higher education institutions to accelerate readiness and enable the workforce needed for operations of its new semiconductor fabrication facilities and of ecosystem partners. The investments will provide resources for creating new curriculums for associate and undergraduate degrees, certifications, faculty training, reskill and upskill programs for the existing workforce, laboratory equipment upgrades and research supporting semiconductor fabrication innovation.

“When we first started talking with Intel, one of the things that they asked us about and we talked about was employees, people who would join them when they got here,” DeWine said. “One of the things that I think they valued in Ohio was our two-year university system, our four-year university system. They made it very, very clear that they intended to work with our colleges and with our universities.”

Part of Intel’s $50 million investment will establish the Intel Semiconductor Education and Research Program for Ohio to fund a collaborative, multi-institution research and education program that will emphasize gaining real-world experience and innovating in semiconductor fabrication.

“When you think about what we’re doing, it’s about how we’re working together,” Husted said. “It’s about how our high schools and career centers and our community colleges and our universities, how we all collaborate on a common mission of delivering a winning team. And that’s exactly what we intend to do in Ohio. That’s what we have been doing in Ohio.”

Intel will accept proposals from Ohio-based academic researchers, technical centers, faculty and educators to address curriculum development, faculty training, laboratory equipment upgrades, novel research to advance semiconductor fabrication and student opportunities, including internships.

“Cutting-edge research will be critical to the long-term success of this industry. We’re blessed in our state to have top-tier universities to lead the way,” Harrison said. “At Columbus State, we’re really lucky to work closely with President Kristina Johnson and her great team at The Ohio State University. This strong partnership will grow even stronger as we work together in new ways. And similar relationships exist around Ohio, providing workforce and research infrastructure that is second to none.”

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