Smith School
Professor Receives $500,000 National
Science Foundation Award
Katherine
Stewart, an assistant professor in the
Decision and Information Technologies
Department at the Robert H. Smith School
of Business, has received a $500,000
Faculty Early Career Development
(CAREER) Program Award from the National
Science Foundation (NSF). The award,
which is for five years, will enable
Stewart to examine factors that
influence successful uses and
applications of Open Source Software
(OSS). The most commonly known OSS is
Linux, the operating system that is
considered a competitor to Microsoft's
Windows.
"One benefit of this research will be
identifying what contributes to the
adoption of Open Source Software," says
Stewart. "This information will help
companies and organizations that are
making decisions about investing their
time and money in an OSS program."
Stewart will also study how
organizations integrate OSS in their
systems and why some organizations are
more successful than others using OSS.
She will look at the development process
for OSS to see if it can be applied to
non-software products and services. OSS
development often depends on volunteers
who work in teams and coordinate their
activities without the oversight of one
major organization. Also, what they
produce is usually provided to others
for free.
The NSF grant includes integrating
OSS into Stewart's teaching activities
and the curriculum at the Smith School.
"I hope that more students will
graduate from the Smith School with a
greater understanding of OSS and how to
use it," says Stewart.
Although OSS has been around for
decades its use by software developers,
businesses, government, and academic
researchers has increased over the past
several years.
SourceForge.net, a Web site
dedicated to OSS development created
five years ago, now has more than
795,000 registered users and 76,000
registered projects. Additionally, IBM,
Dell, Netscape, and Oracle have publicly
committed to supporting OSS.
The
NSF CAREER Program recognizes and
supports the early career development
activities of teacher-scholars that are
most likely to become the academic
leaders of the 21st century. NSF selects
CAREER awardees on the basis of
creative, career development plans that
effectively integrate research and
education within their institution.
For more information on Katherine
Stewart, visit her
Web site.