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MITRE's commitment to fostering strategic relationships with academic partners enables us to facilitate the innovation mindset on college campuses.
"MITRE's response to this pandemic has been inspirational, and I’m honored to be a leader in the COVID-19 Healthcare Coalition. We've engaged over 1,000 partners to build the capabilities needed so that we'll never again see what has played out this past year," says Monique Mansoura, who leads MITRE’s work in global health security and biotechnology.
Wen Masters will be responsible for developing a wide range of cyber capabilities and solutions, including programs that address key economic and national security challenges such as securing critical infrastructure against foreign exploitation and protecting American intellectual property from cyber theft by foreign adversaries.
Working with Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HCBUs) is a key part of our engagement with students and academic institutions. We’re honored to be named one of U.S. Black Engineer and IT Magazine's Top Supporters of HBCU Engineering Programs
Learn more about MITRE’s work in defense and intelligence—a foundational element of our mission of solving problems for a safer world.
"Because we’re bringing public and private capabilities into a shared environment, we’re fostering collaboration that will help maximize the impact of solutions," says Mike Lewis, a modeling and simulation engineer leading MITRE's team building a multi-use digital engineering modeling and simulation environment for the DoD.
"COVID-19 has highlighted how our healthcare system needs more tools to serve patients safely and conveniently, and telehealth, when done right, has firmly established itself as an effective option in the patient-care toolbox of today and the future," said Dr. Jay Schnitzer, MITRE’s chief medical and technology officer and co-chair of the COVID-19 Healthcare Coalition.
MITRE's award winning infrastructure powers the COVID-19 Healthcare Coalition. In under 30 days, we built a secure, cloud-based, scalable "virtual company" with 11 key partners who donated technology and expertise to enable the coalition's work.
Together, MITRE and March of Dimes are addressing the devastating fact that the United States “is among the most dangerous developed nations in which to give birth”—a reality particularly true for vulnerable populations. Non-Hispanic Black women remain three to four times more likely to suffer from maternal death or morbidity than white women.
"Because I got to work with software that I was unfamiliar with, I gained a better understanding of how useful these tools can be in the professional world," says Gianna Ciuffetelli, graduate student at Purdue University Northwest, about interning at MITRE.