Saima Shabbir

Associate Professor (Tenured)
Institute of Space Technology

Region: Asia-Pacific

Country of residence: Pakistan

Contact me for

  • Mentoring
  • Sitting on boards or committees
  • Providing an expert opinion
  • Outreach activities
  • Conference presenting
  • Opportunities to collaborate

Biography

Dr. Shabbir is currently working as an Associate Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the Institute of Space Technology and was the Fulbright Postdoctoral Fellow at the Pennsylvania State University, USA. She has many international publications in renowned peer reviewed ISI indexed Journals and was selected in a competition among young scientists worldwide to participate in the Nobel Laureates Meeting (2006) in Germany. Dr. Shabbir was a recipient of Early Career Scientist Award from the Royal Society, UK and was conferred the Research Productivity Award for two consecutive years, 2011 and 2012, by the Pakistan Council for Science and Technology. Besides, winning three research grants from the Higher Education Commission of Pakistan, she was also honored as the Affiliate Fellow of International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), USA. A recipient of Excellence in Research Award (New York Academy of Sciences NYAS, USA), she was approved as Full Member of OWSD under The World Academy of Sciences (Italy). She was selected as TechWomen Emerging Leader and completed her mentorship project at Draper University in Silicon Valley. Dr. Shabbir is a Publons verified reviewer for many international journals and supervises research projects at BS, MS and PhD levels and has volunteered for outreach activities with AuthorAID, Commonwealth, NYAS and British Council. Dr. Shabbir along with her team of five women from Pakistan won a seed grant in Silicon Valley to pilot “STEM for Change”. It is an impact and outreach community that endeavors to address Pakistan’s severe gender inequality, in STEM careers and leadership, by working towards inclusive quality STEM education for girls in Pakistan.