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Preparing Students for 21st Century Global Economy

Published Friday Aug 10, 2012

Author US Senator Jeanne Shaheen

America's future depends on leading the world in science and technology. The United States makes the best, most innovative products and services, and that ingenuity and excellence is our chief economic strength as a nation. But we are in danger of losing that edge. Science, technology, engineering and math-what we call the STEM fields-are the skills that drive innovation.
 
Jobs in the STEM fields are expected to be the fastest-growing occupations of the next decade. By 2018, it is estimated that NH will need to fill 43,000 STEM-related jobs, yet last year the University System of NH and the Community College system of NH graduated only about 1,120 students in the STEM fields.

 

We all need to do our part to encourage students, as early in their education as possible, to learn to love the STEM fields. Programs like FIRST Robotics, headquartered in NH, are making tremendous strides in giving middle and high school students hands-on opportunities to learn from professionals in STEM fields.
 
Higher education also has a role to play. Across the country and in NH, colleges and universities have launched initiatives to attract students to their campuses to pursue study in the STEM fields. Mentoring partnerships and summer workshops with middle and high schools have proven successful at attracting students to campus. But once they arrive, the first two years of college are critical for retention. Currently, less than 40 percent of students who enter college intending to major in a STEM field graduate with a STEM degree. Programs that provide hands-on experience, a diversification of traditional teaching methods, access to faculty and professional mentors and strong career development programs have proven to be successful at keeping students engaged and graduating with a STEM degree.  
 
Our nation needs to set a STEM agenda that will preserve America as the most competitive and dynamic economy in the world. We should all work together to be sure the students of today get the tools they need to be the leaders of tomorrow.

 

U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), the only woman in U.S. history to be elected both a governor and a U.S. senator, has served in the U.S. Senate since 2009 and is a member of the Senate Committees on Armed Services, Foreign Relations, Energy and Natural Resources, and Small Business and Entrepreneurship. To contact her office, call 202-224-2841 or visit www.shaheen.senate.gov.

 

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