"The results released today show that our nation's students aren't learning at a rate that will maintain America's role as an international leader in the sciences... When only 1 or 2 percent of children score at the advanced levels on NAEP, the next generation will not be ready to be world-class inventors, doctors, and engineers."[5]In what may not have been coincidence, US President Barack Obama emphasized education and innovation in his State of the Union Address on Tuesday night (January 25, 2011) and warned that our failure to properly prepare students for careers in these fields is a threat to US prosperity.[7] Said Obama, "If we want innovation to produce jobs in America and not overseas, then we also have to win the race to educate our kids."[4] In 2009, the Obama administration launched a small ($260 million) program to train 10,000 new math and science teachers and invigorate classroom science programs.[5] I, for one, don't think the problem is with teachers. It's with the current educational philosophy that emphasizes testing and reporting over teaching - An approach that ensures jobs for administrators, but gives no benefit to our children. Perhaps there's change in the air. Obama called this education challenge our "Sputnik moment."[8] I was a child of our first Sputnik moment, and somehow I became one of the scientists the government had hoped to create.
Sputnik (NASA replica) |