To revitalize American STEM education we should emphasize, early and often, the importance of a solid education, especially in STEM, for all of our students. The need is such that it calls for a public awareness campaign similar in scale to those in the past on public health issues (e.g., the food pyramid, physical fitness, anti-smoking, etc.).
It is particularly important that parents understand this need. All parents should use their influence at all levels—home, school and community; Coalitions among parents, government, business and industry, private and corporate foundations, public figures, scientists and engineers, the media, and other stakeholders should be used to draw attention to the need and collectively develop locally relevant strategies to foster high quality STEM education for all students.
(2) Clear educational goals and assessments:
The distributed nature of America’s educational system has led to great curricular variability across school districts. Although it is, on the one hand, a strength of the U.S. educational system, this lack of consistency can also lead to great inequalities across locales and disruptive set-backs for those students who move into and out of multiple school districts. We should articulate the core concepts and skills that all students should master and how to respond to individual differences in the ways in which students learn. State and local school districts can then adapt detailed curricula to best reflect the local context and individual student needs but ensure that their students have mastered the core skills and concepts. We should help develop assessments that promote student learning in STEM and encourage critical thinking, communication, and problem-solving skills. We should include enough challenging questions that they also can measure learning among highly able students. These STEM assessment tools can be used to assist state and local educational agencies in measuring progress in student learning. We should ensure that we are developing the talents of all children who have the potential to become STEM innovators or excellent STEM professionals.
(3) High quality teachers:
Dedicated, high quality teachers are central to ensuring high quality STEM education for all students. We will continue to lose the best and brightest potential STEM teachers from our schools until we pay them at a level more closely aligned with salaries available to them in STEM areas. The labor market provides those with STEM training greater compensation in occupations other than teaching—a fact that is driving STEM teachers out of teaching. Innovative mechanisms must be developed, to allocate resources for appropriate pay for STEM teachers in response to the labor market for STEM professionals. Stable support should continue for programs such as NSF’s Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship program that help prepare STEM undergraduate majors and STEM professionals to become K-12 science and mathematics teachers in the neediest schools.
(4) World-class resources and assistance for teachers:
Even the best teachers need instructional materials, technology, and resource specialists to assist them. A teacher should not have to develop all of his or her own tools for teaching STEM. Advanced technologies offer many tools that can augment the classroom experience. Local initiatives should be mounted to examine the best ways to use technology in education. “Science Corps” should be established, of active and retired STEM professionals, to assist teachers in classrooms, schools, and at district levels. Summer and after-school programs that reinforce classroom learning might also utilize this supporting Science Corps. A web-accessible resource of peer-evaluated STEM instructional materials and best practices should be developed that identifies those materials and best practices that have been proven to be valuable and effective. This resource could include those materials and best practices developed in other countries that have been shown to be effective. A web resource that compiles research from the cognitive sciences and STEM education fields that is relevant to educational practice should be developed to inform educators and policy-makers. Research on how children learn and on good teaching has yielded many insights. However, as with other critical issues, much more is needed. Therefore, funding for peer-reviewed and competitively-funded research on both learning and STEM teaching must be increased.
(5) An early start in science:
The earlier children are exposed to STEM concepts, the more likely they are to be comfortable with them later in life. • STEM core concepts and ideas should be included in Head Start and other early education programs. Improving the extent and quality of elementary school STEM education should become a priority. Parents should be motivated and other members of the community to support these goals.
(6) Communication, coordination, and collaboration:
Local excellence, national coherence, and global relevance in STEM education can only be achieved if all relevant stakeholders - including, most importantly, parents—are involved in achieving these goals. Coalitions, like some of the state P-16 councils that have effectively addressed STEM education issues, should be encouraged and funded everywhere. Such coalitions should promote interactions among K-12 school systems; 2- and 4-year colleges and universities; informal science education organizations; and business and industry to promote learning and the development of the STEM skills needed for the 21st century. Mechanisms should be strengthened and expanded to coordinate STEM education research and scale-up successful STEM educational activities for dissemination to state and local educational agencies.
Our Education Team stands ready to work with you to promote the progress of science and to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare.