Survey Info

Summary

The Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions is a congressionally mandated census completed by federal agencies that obligated money in the survey year for direct support of higher education and nonprofit institutions' research and development. As of the FY 2021 data collection, the survey was incorporated as the Federal Science and Engineering Support module within the Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development.

Areas of Interest

Survey Administration

Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc. performed the data collection under contract to the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics.

Survey Details

Status Active
Frequency Annual
Reference Period FY 2022
Next Release Date June 2025

Methodology

Survey Description

Survey Overview (FY 2022 survey cycle)

Purpose

The Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions (through the FY 2020 data collection) and the Federal Science and Engineering Support module within the Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development (Federal Funds for R&D) (as of the FY 2021 data collection) is the only source of comprehensive data on federal science and engineering (S&E) funding to individual academic and nonprofit institutions. The module is sponsored by the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) within the U.S. National Science Foundation.

Data collection authority

The information is solicited under the authority of the National Science Foundation Act of 1950, as amended, and the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010.

Major changes to recent survey cycle

There were no major changes to the FY 2022 data collection.

Key Survey Information

Frequency

Annual.

Initial survey year

FY 1963.

Reference period

FY 2022.

Response unit

Federal agencies.

Sample or census

Census.

Population size

Federal Funds for R&D is a census of all federal agencies that conduct research and development (R&D) programs, excluding the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Those that obligate money to higher education or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E R&D or for the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities completed the Federal S&E module. In the FY 2022 survey cycle, the population is 32 federal agencies.

Sample size

Not applicable.

Key variables

Key variables of interest are listed below.

Data are collected at the funding-agency level and provided in aggregated form for individual higher education institutions—1,089 in FY 2022. The survey provides data on federal funding by the following key variables:

  • Category of support
    • R&D conduct (research, development, test, and evaluation [RDT&E] for the Department of Defense [DOD])
    • R&D plant
    • S&E fellowships, traineeships, and training grants
    • Facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E
    • Other general support for S&E
  • Type of institution
  • Federal agency providing support
  • State
  • Higher education institution characteristics
    • Highest degree granted
    • Historically Black colleges and universities
    • High-Hispanic-enrollment institutions
    • Tribal institutions
    • High-American Indian-enrollment institutions
    • Minority-serving institutions
    • Type of control (public versus private)

Data are also collected at the funding agency level and provided in aggregated form for nonprofit institutions—1,001 for FY 2022. The survey provides data on federal funding to nonprofit institutions by the following key variables:

  • Category of support
    • R&D conduct (RDT&E for DOD)
    • R&D plant

Note that this survey uses definitions for R&D and R&D plant that are comparable to those used by the Office of Management and Budget.

Survey Design

Target population

The target population for the Federal S&E Support module was all federal agencies that conduct R&D programs, excluding the CIA. Those agencies that obligated money in FY 2022 to higher education or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E R&D or the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities completed the Federal S&E Support module.

The module collects data on federal agency obligations to institutions of higher education and nonprofit institutions in the United States that engage primarily in providing resident or accredited instruction for not less than a 2-year program above the secondary school level that is acceptable for full credit toward a bachelor's degree or that provide not less than a 1-year program of training above the secondary school level that prepares students for gainful employment in a recognized occupation. Included are colleges of liberal arts; schools of arts and sciences; professional schools, as in engineering and medicine, including affiliated hospitals and associated research institutes; and agricultural experiment stations.

Nonprofit institutions are private organizations, other than educational institutions, whose net earnings in no part benefit a private stockholder or individual. Nonprofits also include private organizations created for the exclusive purpose of turning over their entire net earnings to a not-for-profit organization. Consortia are organizations formed by the membership of institutions from one or more types of performers to promote and support efforts to enhance knowledge in one or more disciplines. NCSES has identified several consortia and classified them as either academic or nonprofit types based on the predominance of their membership at the time of identification. If a consortium's members are not primarily higher education or nonprofit but the consortium is legally organized as a nonprofit, NCSES classifies that consortium as a nonprofit institution.

Sampling frame

The agencies are identified from information in the president’s budget submitted to Congress. The Analytical Perspectives volume and the “Detailed Budget Estimates by Agency” section of the appendix to the president’s budget identify agencies that receive funding for R&D. As of the FY 2022 data collection, all respondents to Federal Funds for R&D were presented with the higher education and nonprofit institution questions, although some had no obligations to report for these two categories.

Sample design

Not applicable. This survey is a census.

Data Collection and Processing

Data collection

Data for FY 2022 were collected by Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc. under contract to NCSES. Data collection began with an e-mail to each agency to verify the name, phone number, and e-mail address of each agency-level survey respondent. A Web-based data collection system is used to collect the data, and that system was redesigned for the volume 71 survey.

For the Federal S&E Support module, information was collected for federal FY 2022 (i.e., 1 October 2021 through 30 September 2022). Data collection began 10 May 2023, and the requested due date for data submissions was 21 July 2023. Data collection was extended until all surveyed agencies provided complete and final data.

Data processing

A Web-based data collection system is used to collect and manage data. This Web-based system was designed to help improve survey reporting and reduce data collection and processing costs by offering respondents direct online reporting and editing. However, some agencies submit their data in alternative formats.

The data are checked through both manual reviews and automated data checks that include a comparison of current year obligations by category of support and the corresponding prior year obligations. Problems are referred to the agency that submitted the data for correction; respondents' data are not changed by the survey contractor or NCSES.

Estimation techniques

There is no unit nonresponse or known item nonresponse; therefore, weighting or imputation techniques are not used. All survey fields must be populated with data, and agencies input $0 if no funds are obligated.

Survey Quality Measures

Sampling error

Not applicable.

Coverage error

There is no coverage error because agencies that conduct R&D programs are identified from the president’s budget.

Nonresponse error

There is no unit nonresponse error as all agencies responded to the survey this year. Agencies are encouraged to estimate information when actual data are unavailable. The data collection instrument allows respondents to enter data, and agencies input $0 if no funds are obligated. Although respondents are required to complete all fields and are not permitted to submit the survey unless all fields are completed with either data or $0, there may still be some item nonresponse error by respondents. For example, respondents may inadvertently report $0 in a field when data are unavailable.

Measurement error

The major source of nonsampling error in this survey is measurement error. Agencies are not always able to provide the precise information requested. For example, federal agencies are not always able to identify which branch of a university receives funding from them. Thus, complete disaggregation by actual university branch may not be feasible for some universities. Occasionally, small amounts (less than $100,000) of R&D may be obligated to a university or college by an agency other than the ones included in the survey, and these amounts are not captured.

Other problems include agency difficulties in matching program descriptions with the proper funding category (e.g., R&D, facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E) in the database. At least one agency stated in the past that the "General support for S&E" and "Other S&E" categories are a catchall for programs that do not fit anywhere else. (These two categories were combined as “Other general support for S&E” in the FY 2021 data collection.)

Data Availability and Comparability

Data availability

Annual data are available for FYs 1963–2022.

Data comparability

Eight federal agencies supplied data for FYs 1963–67 (data collection began in 1965). The initial survey elicited information about higher education institutions only. Additional agencies have been included in the years since then. The survey has been conducted annually since 1968. Information on nonprofit organizations was added in 1968.

In some instances, prior year data have been modified based on discrepancies noted during the consistency reviews of the data across years. To obtain accurate historical data, data users should use only the most recent publication, which incorporates corrections agencies have made in prior year data.

Data Products

Publications

NCSES publishes data from this survey annually in the detailed tabular data series Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions. Data for major data elements are available for FY 1963 onward.

Electronic access

Access to the data for major data elements is available for FY 1963 onward in NCSES's interactive data tool. Users can create custom tables about federal S&E funding to higher education and nonprofit institutions by federal agency.

 

Technical Notes

Survey Overview

Purpose. The Federal Science and Engineering Support module within the Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development (Federal Funds for R&D) is the only source of comprehensive data on federal science and engineering (S&E) funding to individual academic and nonprofit institutions. The survey was a separate survey called the Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions (Federal S&E Support Survey) through the FY 2020 data collection, but it became a module within Federal Funds for R&D as of the FY 2021 data collection.

Data collection authority. The information is solicited under the authority of the National Science Foundation Act of 1950, as amended, and the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010.

Survey contractor. Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc.

Survey sponsor. The National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) within the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF).

Key Survey Information

Frequency. Annual.

Initial survey year. FY 1963.

Reference period. FY 2022.

Response unit. Federal agencies.

Sample or census. Census.

Population size. Federal Funds for R&D is a census of all federal agencies that conduct research and development (R&D) programs, excluding the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The Federal S&E Support module targets all agencies that obligate money to higher education or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E R&D or the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities. In the survey cycle for data collection on FY 2022, the population is 32 federal agencies.

Sample size. Not applicable; the survey is a census.

Survey Design

Target population. The target population for the Federal S&E Support module was all federal agencies, excluding the CIA, that obligated money in FY 2022 to higher education or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E R&D or for the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities within the population of federal agencies that conduct R&D programs.

For the FY 2022 Federal Funds for R&D, 32 federal agencies (14 federal departments and 18 independent agencies) were surveyed. Because multiple subdivisions of some federal departments completed the survey, there were 72 agency-level respondents: 6 federal departments, 48 agencies (within another 8 federal departments), and 18 independent agencies. (Note: The Department of Agriculture’s Rural Business-Cooperative Service, the Department of Treasury’s Mint, and the National Archives and Records Administration submitted surveys but reported no R&D funds.) However, lower offices could also be authorized to enter data: in survey nomenclature, agency-level offices could authorize program offices, program offices could authorize field offices, and field offices could authorize branch offices. When these suboffices are included, there were 725 total respondents: 72 agencies, 95 program offices, 178 field offices, and 380 branch offices. Of these, 47 agencies, 59 program offices, 72 field offices, and 22 branch offices reported obligations within the Federal S&E Support module.

The module collects data on federal agency obligations to institutions of higher education and nonprofit institutions in the United States that engage primarily in providing resident or accredited instruction for not less than a 2-year program above the secondary school level that is acceptable for full credit toward a bachelor’s degree or that provide not less than a 1-year program of training above the secondary school level that prepares students for gainful employment in a recognized occupation. Included are colleges of liberal arts; schools of arts and sciences; professional schools, as in engineering and medicine, including affiliated hospitals and associated research institutes; and agricultural experiment stations. Nonprofit institutions are private organizations, other than educational institutions, whose net earnings in no part benefit a private stockholder or individual. Nonprofits also include private organizations created for the exclusive purpose of turning over their entire net earnings to a not-for-profit organization. Consortia are organizations formed by the membership of institutions from one or more types of performers to promote and support efforts to enhance knowledge in one or more disciplines. NCSES has identified several consortia and classified them as either academic or nonprofit types based on the predominance of their membership at the time of identification. If a consortium’s members are not primarily academic or nonprofit but the consortium is legally organized as a nonprofit, NCSES classifies that consortium as a nonprofit institution. For FY 2022, there were 1,089 higher education institutions and consortia and 1,001 nonprofit institutions and consortia.

Sampling frame. The agencies are identified from information in the president’s budget submitted to Congress. The Analytical Perspectives volume and the “Detailed Budget Estimates by Agency” section of the appendix to the president’s budget identify agencies that receive funding for R&D. As of the FY 2022 data collection, all Federal Funds for R&D respondents are presented with the Federal S&E Support module.

Sample design. Not applicable. This survey is a census.

Data Collection and Processing Methods

Data collection. The survey uses a Web-based data collection system.

The FY 2022 survey cycle began with an e-mail to each agency to verify contact information for each agency-level survey point of contact. Data collection began 10 May 2023, and the requested due date for data submissions was 21 July 2023. Data collection was extended until all surveyed agencies provided complete and final survey data. Information was collected for federal FY 2022 (i.e., 1 October 2021 through 30 September 2022).

Mode. Web-based data collection system.

Response rate. 100%.

Data editing. Neither data editing nor coding is used for Federal S&E Support module data. The data are checked through both manual reviews and automated data checks that include a comparison of current year obligations by category of support and the corresponding prior year obligations. Problems are referred to the agency that submitted the data for correction. Respondents’ data are not changed by the survey contractor or NCSES.

Imputation. None.

Weighting. None.

Variance estimation. Not applicable.

Survey Quality Measures

Sampling error. Not applicable.

Coverage error. There is no coverage error because agencies that conduct R&D programs are identified from the president’s budget.

Nonresponse error. There is no unit nonresponse error as all agencies responded to the survey this year. Agencies are encouraged to estimate information when actual data are unavailable. Although every attempt has been made to ensure complete response from the survey universe and for all items, it is possible there may be some item nonresponse. The data collection instrument allows respondents to enter data, and agencies input $0 if no funds are obligated. Although respondents are required to complete all fields and are not permitted to submit the survey unless all fields are completed with either data or $0, there may still be some item nonresponse error by respondents. For example, respondents may inadvertently report $0 in a field when data are unavailable.

Measurement error. The major source of nonsampling error in this module is measurement error. Agencies are not always able to provide the precise information requested. For example, federal agencies are not always able to identify which branch of a university receives funding from them. Thus, complete disaggregation by actual university branch may not be feasible for some universities.

Other problems include agency difficulties in matching program descriptions with the proper funding category (e.g., R&D, facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E) in the database. At least one agency stated in the past that the “General support for S&E” and “Other S&E” categories are a catchall for programs that do not fit anywhere else. (These two categories were combined as “Other general support for S&E” in the FY 2021 data collection.)

Differences in agency and NCSES classification of some performers will also lead to some degree of measurement error. For example, although many university research foundations are legally organized as nonprofit organizations and may be classified as such within a reporting agency’s own system of record, NCSES classifies these as component units of higher education. These classification differences may contribute to differences in findings between the higher education and nonprofit data presented in the Federal Funds for R&D and those presented in the Federal S&E Support data.

Data Comparability

Data revisions. Annual data are available for FYs 1963–2022. In some instances, prior year data have been modified based on discrepancies noted during the consistency reviews of the data across years. To obtain accurate historical data, data users should use only the most recent publication, which incorporates corrections agencies have made in prior year data. Do not use previously published data.

Changes in survey coverage and population. Eight federal agencies supplied data for FYs 1963–67 (data collection began in 1965). The initial survey elicited information about higher education institutions only. Additional agencies have been included in the years since then. The data have been collected annually since 1968. Information on nonprofit organizations was added in 1968.

  • Beginning with the FY 2022 survey, two agencies—the Federal Communications Commission and the Department of Treasury’s Internal Revenue Service—were dropped from the target population.
  • Beginning with the FY 2021 data collection, as a module within Federal Funds for R&D, the module’s population expanded to all the agencies, program offices, field offices, and branch offices that receive that survey. Prior to the FY 2021 data collection when the Federal S&E Support Survey was separate from the Federal Funds for R&D, the Federal S&E Support Survey only had two levels of respondents: agencies and program offices. Since the integration of the two surveys in FY 2021, these differences in reporting are no longer an issue.
  • Beginning with the FY 2021 survey, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) implemented a process improvement that increased the agency’s ability to improve the identification of their award recipients for S&E awards.
  • Beginning with the FY 2020 survey, the Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) Foreign Agricultural Service, the Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development were dropped from the target population, and the USDA’s Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry was added back. Two Department of Defense agencies were added, the Defense Health Agency and Space Force.
  • For the FY 2020 survey, the survey was modified to collect funding amounts from regular appropriations and from stimulus funds provided under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act plus any other pandemic-related supplemental appropriations (i.e., “Stimulus”) for each category of support.
  • For the FY 2020 survey, the Department of Defense (DOD) S&E support to higher education institutions and R&D to nonprofit organizations are known to be understated. However, the magnitude of the missing data is unknown, and DOD staff have been unable to revise the FY 2020 obligations for specific institutions. Data users should use caution when conducting any time series analysis that includes DOD obligations data for FY 2020.
  • Beginning with the FY 2019 survey, USDA’s Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry and the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS’s) Coast Guard were dropped from the target population; two Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) agencies were added, the Administration for Community Living and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority.
  • Beginning with the FY 2018 survey, this survey collects research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E) data from DOD for both higher education and nonprofit institutions using four categories: research (Budget Activities 1–2), advanced technology development (Budget Activity 3), major systems development (Budget Activities 4–6), and operational systems development (Budget Activity 7). DOD reported $5.3 million in operational systems development to higher education institutions and $4.8 million to nonprofit institutions for FY 2018; these data are excluded from major systems development totals. Although major systems development was redefined as Budget Activities 4–6 instead of Budget Activities 4–7 as of the FY 2016 survey, the FY 2018 survey was the first time that obligations were identified for Budget Activity 7, operational systems development.
  • Beginning with the FY 2018 survey, USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service and HHS’s Indian Health Service were dropped from the target population; Department of the Interior’s (DOI’s) Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement was added back to the target population after last reporting for FY 1995.
  • Beginning with the FY 2017 survey, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (PCORTF) was added to the target population. In FY 2017, PCORTF provided current year data for FY 2017 and past year data for FYs 2011–16.
  • Beginning with the FY 2016 survey, the National Archives and Records Administration was dropped from the target population.
  • Beginning with the FY 1999 survey, this survey no longer collects data for federally funded research and development centers (FFRDCs). Data on FFRDCs are available in the FFRDC R&D Survey, which is available at https://ncses.nsf.gov/surveys/ffrdc-research-development.
  • Beginning with the FY 1998 survey, this survey collects S&E obligations for U.S. service schools.
  • Beginning with the FY 1993 annual report, data collected for non-S&E support to universities and colleges are no longer published.
  • Since FY 1990, DOD has reported research obligations separate from development obligations.
  • Since FY 1990, data are no longer published on detailed field of S&E for obligations in R&D and fellowship, traineeship, and training grant programs (FTTGs) to higher education institutions.

Changes to the questionnaire. A Web-based data collection system was developed for the FY 1998 survey cycle. The data collection system was revised for the FY 2021 survey cycle.

Changes in reporting procedures or classification.

  • As of the FY 2021 cycle, two categories of support (General support for S&E and Other activities related to S&E) were combined into one category: Other general support for S&E.
  • NCSES has classified several consortia as either academic or nonprofit types based on the predominance of their membership at the time of identification. As of the FY 2017 cycle, NCSES further decided that if a consortium’s members are not primarily associated with academic or nonprofit institutions but the consortium is legally organized as a nonprofit, the consortium will be classified as a nonprofit institution.
  • As of the FY 2016 cycle, the method of determining high-American Indian-enrollment (HAIE) institutions and high-Hispanic-enrollment (HHE) institutions was corrected to use the official definitions per the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. Therefore, HAIE institutions include institutions of higher education that are not tribal colleges or universities and that have an enrollment of undergraduate students that is not less than 10% Native American students, and HHE institutions include those institutions of higher education whose full-time-equivalent (FTE) enrollment of undergraduate students is at least 25% Hispanic. (Note: NCES determines FTE enrollment by calculating that approximately three part-time students are equivalent to one full-time student.) In FY 2015, the calculations were based on institutions’ total enrollment.
  • As of the FY 2013 cycle, the criteria used to determine nonprofit institutions for the Federal S&E Support Survey was broadened from Internal Revenue Code 501(c)(3) organizations to Internal Revenue Code 501(c) organizations.
  • Starting with the FY 2009 survey, survey information has been requested in actual dollars rather than rounded in thousands.

Changes in reporting.

Since data were first collected for FY 1963, there have been some changes in reporting. The most recent of these changes include the following:

  • As of the FY 2022 cycle, Boston Medical Center was changed to an academic institution as a child unit of Boston University and NYU Winthrop Hospital was changed to an academic institution as a child unit of New York University. These changes were applied retroactively, such that although these were previously classified as standalone institutions, they are now classified as child units. In addition, it was decided to report the University of Nevada-Las Vegas and the University of Nevada-Reno independently instead of as part of the Nevada System of Higher Education.
  • During the FY 2022 data processing, DOD and the Department of Energy provided revisions to the FY 2021 and FY 2022 obligations data for the University of Illinois, Chicago and the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
  • As of the FY 2021 cycle, the Tulane National Primate Research Center was changed to an academic institution, as a child unit of Tulane University. This change was applied retroactively.

Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute was given a second entry as an academic institution, as a child of Florida Atlantic University. This change was applied retroactively back to FY 2008. Prior to FY 2008, it retains its former status as a nonprofit institution.

Scripps Florida Research Institute was made inactive as of FY 2020, and a new entry, the Herbert Wertheim UF Scripps Institute for Biomedical Innovation and Technology, was added as a child of the University of Florida.

  • Data for FY 2020 include funding amounts from regular appropriations and from stimulus funds provided under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act plus any other pandemic-related supplemental appropriations (i.e., “Stimulus”).
  • As of the FY 2020 cycle, some organizations had status changes. Two nonprofit institutions were made branches: the ASME Innovative Technologies Institute LLC was made a branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and the United Nations Association of USA was made a branch of the United Nations Foundation Inc. One nonprofit organization, the Purdue Research Foundation, was reclassified as an academic institution and made a branch of Purdue University, West Lafayette. Another institution, High Desert Partnership, was mistakenly recorded as an academic institution when it was added during the FY 2019 cycle; it was changed to a nonprofit institution during the FY 2020 cycle. These changes were also applied retroactively; because of those changes, data were revised, replacing previously published data. For the FY 2020 cycle only, funds reported for the University of Wisconsin Colleges were included with the funds reported for the University of Wisconsin System: the organization known as the University of Wisconsin Colleges was dissolved in June 2018 and the individual colleges were affiliated with some of the 4-year University of Wisconsin institutions, but because the organization was still open in the Federal S&E Support Survey Codebook, respondents were still able to use it to report FY 2020 obligations.
  • The FY 2020 survey was modified to enable separate reporting of funding provided under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act plus any other pandemic-related supplemental appropriations from regular appropriations.
  • As of FY 2020, Georgia Gwinnett College was added to the University of Georgia System, and Blue Ridge Community and Technical College was added to the Community and Technical College System of West Virginia.
  • As of FY 2019, one academic consortium was reinstated after having been deleted during the FY 2017 cycle (the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium). This change was also applied retroactively, and data for FY 2017 and FY 2018 have been revised in this release.
  • During the FY 2019 cycle, DHS’s Countering Weapons of Mass Destructions Office revised its FY 2018 data.
  • As of FY 2018, several additions were made to systems of universities and colleges: West Hills College Coalinga was added to California Community Colleges; West Virginia University at Parkersburg was added to the Community and Technical College Systems of West Virginia; Allen County Community College, Barton County Community College, and Cowley Community College were added to the Kansas Board of Regents; Finger Lakes Community College was added to the SUNY (State University of New York) System; and Savannah Technical College was added to the Technical College System of Georgia.
  • As of FY 2017, a total of 19 nonprofit consortia were reclassified as nonprofit institutions, 4 nonprofit consortia were reclassified as academic consortia, 3 nonprofit institutions were reclassified as academic consortia, 1 nonprofit institution was reclassified as an academic institution, and 1 academic consortium was reclassified as an academic institution. The 19 nonprofit consortia that were reclassified as nonprofit institutions were AASP-The Palynological Society, the Cascadia Region Earthquake Workgroup, the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana, the Consortium for Mathematics and Its Applications, the Medical Device Innovation Consortium, the Montana Cancer Consortium, the National Alliance for Partnerships in Equity, the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium, the National States Geographic Information Council, the Nature Conservancy of Oregon, the New England Pediatric Device Consortium, the New Hampshire Lakes Association Inc., the North Central Emergency Medical Services Institute, the Northern Rockies Invasive Plants Council, the Ocean Foundation, the Open Geospatial Consortium, the Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture, the Peregrine Fund Inc., and the Southeast Clinical Oncology Research Consortium. The 4 nonprofit consortia reclassified as academic consortia were Five Colleges Inc., the Chesapeake Research Consortium Inc., the New Jersey Sea Grant Consortium Inc., and the New Mexico Consortium. The 3 nonprofit institutions reclassified as academic consortia were Northeast Radio Observatory Corp., UNAVCO Inc., and Universities Research Association. The nonprofit institution reclassified as an academic institution was Dallas International University. The academic consortium that was reclassified as an academic institution was the Dayton Area Graduate Studies Institute. All these changes were also applied retroactively; because of those changes, data were revised, replacing previously published data.
  • As of FY 2017, six universities formerly under the Tennessee Board of Regents were given independent governing boards. The six universities are Austin Peay State University, East Tennessee State University, University of Memphis, Middle Tennessee State University, Tennessee State University, and Tennessee Technological University. Also, as of FY 2017, Pulaski Technical College joined the University of Arkansas System.
  • DOI’s National Park Service submitted its FY 2016 data after the close of the FY 2016 data cycle; because of those changes, FY 2016 data were revised in the FY 2017 cycle, replacing previously published data.
  • As of FY 2017, PCORTF began reporting and provided past year data for FYs 2011–16; because of those changes, data were revised, replacing previously published data.
  • As of FY 2016, a total of 22 nonprofit institutions were reclassified as academic institutions, and 1 nonprofit institution was reclassified as an academic consortium. The 22 nonprofit institutions that were changed to branches of academic institutions were the California State University San Marcos Corporation, the Clemson University Research Foundation, the Florida Solar Energy Center, the Foundation for California Community Colleges, the Georgia Tech Applied Research Corporation, the Immune Disease Institute (from 1986–2012, when it closed), the Joint Oceanographic Institutions, the Michigan Biotechnology Institute (from 2007 on), the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, the Pennington Biomedical Research Foundation, the Research Foundation for the State University of New York, the Research Foundation of the City University of New York, the Rush University Medical Center, the San Jose State University Research Foundation, the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography (from 2013 on), the South Carolina Research Foundation, the Space Telescope Science Institute, the Texas A&M Research Foundation, the University Corporation at Monterey Bay, the Virginia Tech Applied Research Corporation, the West Virginia University Research Corporation, and the Western Kentucky University Research Foundation. The nonprofit reclassified as an academic consortium was the New York Structural Biology Center. One nonprofit institution (the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority, doing business as Carolinas HealthCare System) was deactivated because it is a special district local government public authority. Two nonprofit institutions were reinstated after having been deleted during the FY 2015 cycle (the Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference and the National Conference on Interstate Milk Shipments). All these changes were also applied retroactively; because of those changes, data were revised, replacing previously published data.
  • In a September 2015 agreement, Yeshiva University transferred financial and operational responsibility for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine to Montefiore Health System, a nonprofit institution; however, for the FY 2016 survey, the Albert Einstein College of Medicine is reported as an independent academic institution.
  • During the FY 2016 cycle, corrections for FY 2015 data were received from three agencies: the Administration for Children and Families reported corrections for one academic (Temple University) and one nonprofit institution (Child Trends), the National Institute of Standards and Technology reported correction for two institutions (Georgia Tech Applied Research Corporation and Georgia Tech Research Corporation), and the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office reported corrections for six institutions—in this case, the data for all six were reported under the wrong category of support and were revised. The six institutions were Georgia Tech Research Corporation, Alabama A&M University, Texas A&M University-College Station, University of California-Berkeley, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, and University of Texas at Dallas. As a result of those changes, data were revised, replacing previously published data.
  • As of FY 2015, two institutions were reclassified from nonprofit institutions to academic institutions (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and Erikson Institute), two institutions were reclassified from nonprofit institutions to academic consortia (Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy and Oak Ridge Associated Universities), five institutions were reclassified from nonprofit consortia to academic consortia (Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrologic Sciences, Consortium of Universities of the Washington Metropolitan Area, Marine Environmental Sciences Consortium, Southeastern Universities Research Association, and Southwestern Ohio Council for Higher Education), and six institutions were reclassified from nonprofit consortia to nonprofit institutions (Center for Regional Economic Competitiveness, International Anesthesia Research Society, Maricopa Integrated Health System, Patuxent Partnerships Inc., Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center, Inc., and Vaccine Research Institute of San Diego); these changes were also applied retroactively.
  • As of FY 2014, the obligations of the Department of Transportation (DOT), Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology’s University Transportation Centers were moved from R&D to Other S&E; this change was also applied to FYs 2005–13.
  • As of FY 2014, all data for Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station and Texas A&M AgriLife Research were moved from nonprofit institutions to academic institutions (set as branches of Texas A&M University).
  • After the close of the FY 2013 data cycle, HHS’s National Institutes of Health (NIH) revised its data for FYs 2009–12.
  • After the close of the FY 2013 data cycle, NSF revised its data for FYs 1999–2012.
  • MITRE Corp. data prior to FY 2011 include obligations for FFRDCs that it administers.
  • For FYs 2009 and 2010, data from HHS’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were excluded due to their poor quality.
  • After the close of the FY 2009 data cycle, HHS’s Health Resources and Services Administration revised its FY 2008 and FY 2009 data.
  • After the close of the FY 2009 data cycle, the Department of Education (ED) revised its FY 2008 and FY 2009 data.
  • Data for FY 2009 and FY 2010 include American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 obligations.
  • After the close of the FY 2007 survey cycle, DOD discovered a programming error that was made during the FY 2005 survey cycle and caused each advanced technology development dollar to be reported twice: as advanced technology development and as major systems development. Data for FYs 2005–07 were revised.
  • Between FY 2006 and FY 2007, NASA R&D obligations decreased for two reasons: (1) in FY 2007, NASA excluded projects that were operational in nature that were not excluded in FY 2006, and (2) there was an overall decrease in obligations between FY 2006 and FY 2007, which accounts for the remainder of the decrease.
  • In FY 2004, NASA implemented a full-cost budget approach, which includes all the direct and indirect costs for procurement, personnel, travel, and other infrastructure-related expenses relative to particular programs and projects. Data for FY 2004 and later years may not be directly comparable to data for FY 2003 and earlier years.
  • For the FY 2003 survey cycle, DHS could not provide S&E obligations (with the exception of the Coast Guard) broken down into the categories shown in this report.
  • Because the Coast Guard, formerly part of DOT, moved under DHS for FY 2003, its data were not part of the FY 2003 detailed statistical tables. The Coast Guard’s overall S&E obligations for FY 2003 are the following:
    • Total academic S&E, $2,159,000
    • Academic R&D, $1,824,000
    • Academic R&D plant, $335,000
    • Nonprofit R&D, $924,000
  • Beginning in FY 2000, NASA reclassified the Space Station as a physical asset and Space Station research as equipment and transferred funding for the program from R&D to R&D plant. According to NASA, this classification change had a negligible impact on the data reported in this report for FY 2000. However, this classification change was reflected in the FY 2001 academic totals, which showed an R&D plant increase for NASA nearly five times over the FY 2000 R&D plant total.
  • Beginning with the FY 1999 survey cycle, federal agencies no longer reported obligations to academic or nonprofit FFRDCs. Obligations to FFRDCs were deleted from all previous years shown in this report.
  • Beginning with the FY 1996 survey cycle, federal agencies no longer reported obligations for fields of S&E.
  • From FY 1994 through FY 2017, the survey collected data on DOD development dollars in two categories: advanced technology development and major systems development. These categories better differentiated between that part of the federal R&D budget that supports “science and key enabling technologies” (including military and nondefense applications) and the part that primarily concerns “testing and evaluation of large technical systems prior to production” (of mostly defense-related systems).
  • Before FY 1993, data were published on an obligations category covering non-S&E activity. At that time, however, ED made major software modifications to the automated system from which its federal S&E data were produced. The revamped coding structure introduced major trend differences for the department’s institution data. Consequently, because ED accounted for 91% ($5.9 billion) of the total federal support for non-S&E activity ($6.5 billion) for FY 1993, non-S&E totals are no longer published. To explain ED’s downward academic R&D trend between FY 1993 and FY 1994 (from $95 million to $49 million), the agency stated that academic R&D programs in FY 1994 either were not funded, did not have an S&E component, or received reductions in funding.
  • As of FY 1990, DOD reports research separately from development. DOD states that more than 90% of its development obligations reported for universities and colleges are performed at university-administered laboratories that are separate from academic departments. Furthermore, DOD states that much of its development obligations are for major systems development, that such obligations differ from its obligations for advanced technology development, and that DOD total development obligations are therefore not comparable with development obligations at other federal agencies.
  • During the FY 1987 survey cycle, DOD determined that some funds reported in prior years as R&D obligations to the Applied Physics Laboratory (Johns Hopkins University) were more appropriately classified as Other S&E. Data for FYs 1984–86 were revised, but DOD was unable to revise data for earlier years. In FY 2009, the Applied Physics Laboratory accounted for more than 90% of DOD’s total S&E funding of $522 million to Johns Hopkins University.
  • Beginning in FY 1978, two laboratories that were formerly considered academically administered FFRDCs became part of their respective institutions: the Applied Physics Laboratory (Johns Hopkins University) and the Applied Research Laboratory (Pennsylvania State University). Data for these laboratories are included in academic figures beginning in FY 1978.
  • Draper Laboratories separated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as of FY 1974 to become an independent nonprofit institution; data for this laboratory are included in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's figures prior to FY 1974.

Definitions

The terms used throughout the survey have remained relatively unchanged from the FY 1971 survey cycle to the present; however, for the FY 2016 cycle, the definitions of basic research, applied research, development, and R&D plant were aligned more closely to the definitions used by the Office of Management and Budget in the July 2016 version of Circular A-11.

Facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E include all programs whose principal purpose is to provide support for construction, acquisition, renovation, modification, repair, or rental of facilities, land, works, or equipment for use in instruction in S&E. If the facilities or equipment are used for mixed purposes, only the amount used for S&E instruction is included.

S&E FTTGs include all fellowship, traineeship, and training grant programs that are directed primarily for the development of the scientific or technical workforce. Excluded are projects that support research; these activities are to be reported as R&D conduct.

Other general support for S&E was introduced for the FY 2021 data collection and combines the former categories of General support for S&E and Other S&E activities. It includes activities that provide general or nonspecific support related to scientific research and education. These include projects awarded through the NIH Minority Biomedical Research Support for Undergraduate Colleges and NIH Biomedical Support Grants. It also includes S&E activities that cannot be assigned to the categories S&E FTTGs or Facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E, including support for scientific conferences, teacher institutes, and S&E activities for precollege and undergraduate students.

R&D conduct activities are defined as creative and systematic work undertaken in order to increase the stock of knowledge—including knowledge of people, culture, and society—and to devise new applications using available knowledge.

Includes

  • All of an agency’s R&D costs, regardless of whether the funding was from direct appropriations, trust funds, special account receipts, or fees and charges.
  • Agency R&D costs for non-U.S. performers.
  • Costs of performing, planning, and administering R&D conducted by an agency, including laboratory overhead and pay of military personnel.
  • For R&D contracts, includes all of an agency’s administrative costs.
  • Minor equipment purchases, such as personal computers, standard microscopes, and simple spectrometers.
  • Funds transferred to another agency for R&D.

Does not include

  • Reimbursable funds provided to an agency by another federal agency. The originating agency reports these.
  • For R&D grants, does not include an agency’s administrative costs.

Research is systematic study directed toward fuller scientific knowledge or understanding of the subject studied. Research is classified as either basic or applied according to the objectives of the sponsoring agency. Basic research is defined as experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of the underlying foundations of phenomena and observable facts. Basic research may include activities with broad or general applications in mind, such as the study of how plant genomes change, but should exclude research directed toward a specific application or requirement, such as the optimization of the genome of a specific crop species. Basic research represents DOD Budget Activity 1. Applied research is defined as original investigation undertaken in order to acquire new knowledge. Applied research is, however, directed primarily toward a specific practical aim or objective. Applied research represents DOD Budget Activity 2.

Experimental development is defined as creative and systematic work, drawing on knowledge gained from research and practical experience, which is directed at producing new products or processes or improving existing products or processes. Like research, experimental development will result in gaining additional knowledge.

Experimental development includes

  • The production of materials, devices, and systems or methods, including the design, construction, and testing of experimental prototypes.
  • Technology demonstrations, in cases where a system or component is being demonstrated at scale for the first time and where it is realistic to expect additional refinements to the design (feedback R&D) following the demonstration. However, not all activities that are identified as “technology demonstrations” are R&D.

Experimental development does not include

  • User demonstrations where the cost and benefits of a system are being validated for a specific use case. This includes low-rate initial production activities.
  • Pre-production development, which is defined as nonexperimental work on a product or system before it goes into full production, including activities such as tooling and development of production facilities. For example, it excludes activities and programs that are categorized as “operational systems development” in DOD’s budget activity structure. Activities and programs of this type should generally be reported as investments in other major equipment.
  • Note: Through the FY 2015 survey, amounts reported by DOD agencies included Budget Activities 1–7, which are classified as RDT&E. As of FY 2016, the Budget Activity numbers were added to the questionnaire to make it clear that the survey was requesting R&D data, which covered Budget Activities 1–6. The FY 2018 DOD questionnaire was revised to collect RDT&E again by adding operational systems development (Budget Activity 7) as a separate category of support.

R&D plant includes spending on both R&D facilities and major equipment as defined in Office of Management and Budget Circular A-11 Section 84 (Schedule C) and includes physical assets, such as land, structures, equipment, and intellectual property (e.g., software or applications) that have an estimated useful life of 2 years or more.

Reporting for R&D plant includes the purchase, construction, manufacture, rehabilitation, or major improvement of physical assets regardless of whether the assets are owned or operated by the federal government, states, municipalities, or private individuals. The cost of the asset includes both its purchase price and all other costs incurred to bring it to a form and location suitable for use.

Obligations for foreign R&D plant are limited to federal funds for facilities that are located abroad and used in support of foreign R&D.

Includes

  • Funding for the construction of facilities that are necessary for the execution of an R&D program. This may include land, major fixed equipment, and supporting infrastructure such as a sewer line, or housing at a remote location. Many laboratory buildings will include a mixture of R&D facilities and office space. The fraction of the building that is considered to be R&D may be calculated based on the percentage of square footage that is used for R&D.
  • Acquisition, design, or production of major moveable equipment, such as mass spectrometers, research vessels, DNA sequencers, and other moveable major instrumentation for use in R&D activities.
  • Programs of $1 million or more that are devoted to the purchase or construction of R&D major equipment.
  • Agency R&D plant costs for non-U.S. performers.

Does not include

  • Minor equipment purchases, such as personal computers, standard microscopes, and simple spectrometers (if part of an R&D activity, report these costs under R&D conduct, not R&D plant).

Data

Product ID  NSF 24-326
  |  
Published  June 2024

All S&E activities: FY 2022

 

General Notes

These tables present the results of the FY 2022 Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions (now the Federal Science and Engineering Support module within the Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development). The survey was designed in response to a congressional mandate to collect comprehensive data on federal obligations to higher education and nonprofit institutions for science and engineering research and development. Data include science and engineering support by type of activity, as well as rankings by state, agency, and individual institution. These data enable users to examine patterns of support for individual institutions over time and to compare such patterns with those of other institutions.

 

Acknowledgments and Suggested Citation

Acknowledgments

Christopher V. Pece of the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) developed and coordinated this report under the guidance of Amber Levanon Seligson, NCSES Program Director, and the leadership of Emilda B. Rivers, NCSES Director; Christina Freyman, NCSES Deputy Director; and John Finamore, NCSES Chief Statistician. Jock Black (NCSES) reviewed the report.

Under contract to NCSES, Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc. conducted the survey and prepared the statistics for this report. Synectics staff members who made significant contributions include LaVonda Scott, Elizabeth Walter, Peter Ahn, Suresh Kaja, and John Millen.

NCSES thanks the federal agency staff that provided information for this report.

Suggested Citation

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES). 2024. Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions: Fiscal Year 2022. NSF 24-326. Alexandria, VA: U.S. National Science Foundation. Available at https://ncses.nsf.gov/surveys/federal-support-survey/2022.

Analysis

Survey Contact

For additional information about this survey or the methodology, contact

Christopher V. Pece
Survey Manager
Phone
(703) 292-7788
E-mail
cpece@nsf.gov
Address
National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, 2415 Eisenhower Avenue, Suite W14200, Alexandria, VA 22314