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Secondary STEM Education: 'Designed by Apple in California, Assembled in China'. The Progress of Education Reform. Volume 9, Number 4

Authors :
Education Commission of the States
Zinth, Kyle
Source :
Education Commission of the States (NJ3). 2008.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

America's advantage has historically been its people's creativity, flexibility and entrepreneurship. But just as painters need to be proficient in technique and theory to produce great masterpieces, the next generation of Americans will likely require a solid grounding in mathematics and science for their creativity to be maximized in a world increasingly dependent on technological advances for prosperity and security. The challenge is not to simply increase the number of students graduating with college degrees in the STEM fields; it is to lift the overall understanding of science, technology, engineering and mathematics among the rest of the population as well. As the majority of Americans do not earn a postsecondary degree, it is essential that students be given this solid grounding during the elementary and secondary years. While establishing the expectation that all students complete challenging mathematics and science coursework is a good step, it cannot be the only step. This issue offers suggestions for policymakers. This issue also features two papers: (1) What Policymakers Need to Know About the Cost of Implementing Lab-Based Science Course Requirements (Mike Griffith); and (2) The Preparation Gap: Teacher Education for Middle School Mathematics in Six Countries (William Schmidt, Maria Teresa Tatto, Kiril Bankov, Sigrid Blomeke, Tenoch Cedillo, Leland Cogan, Shin Il Han, Richard Houang, Feng Jui Hsieh, Lynn Paine, Marcella Santillan and John Schwille). A list of resources is included. (Contains 6 endnotes.)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Education Commission of the States (NJ3)
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ED512137
Document Type :
Collected Works - Serial<br />Reports - Descriptive