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- <text id=89TT2337>
- <link 93TG0023>
- <title>
- Sep. 11, 1989: A Crisis Looms In Science
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 11, 1989 The Lonely War:Drugs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 68
- THE FUTURE OF U.S. SCHOOLS
- A Crisis Looms In Science
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Without a drastic improvement in funding and teaching methods,
- the U.S. will soon fall behind
- </p>
- <p>By Susam Tifft
- </p>
- <p> Moon landings. The computer chip. Genetic engineering. The
- artificial heart. The achievements of American scientists are
- known and admired throughout the world. But whether American
- supremacy in research and technology will continue into the 21st
- century is far from certain. Thirty-two years after the Soviets
- launched Sputnik, setting off a frantic race to produce more and
- better U.S. physicists, chemists, mathematicians, aeronautical
- engineers and medical researchers, the scientific pipeline is
- drying up. The reason for this crisis: American science
- education is a shambles. Items:
- </p>
- <p> In an Educational Testing Service study of five countries
- and four Canadian provinces, American 13-year-olds ranked last
- in math and nearly last in science.
- </p>
- <p> In a survey of 17 countries published last year by the
- International Association for the Evaluation of Educational
- Achievement, U.S. ninth-graders tied with Singapore and
- Thailand for 14th place in science.
- </p>
- <p> In 1988 fewer than 1% of college freshmen said they
- intended to major in math, compared with 4% two decades ago.
- Physics and chemistry concentrators fell from 3% to 1.5%; 1 out
- of 3 Ph.D.s awarded in the natural sciences and engineering last
- year went to foreigners, compared with 1 in 4 a decade ago.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond these grim statistics lurks a web of equally
- disquieting trends: the imminent retirement of aging scientists,
- a shortage of new students because of the "baby bust," the
- homeward migration of many U.S.-educated foreigners and the
- burgeoning numbers of minorities and college-educated women--two groups that have generally shown less interest in science
- than white males. The result could be a critical shortfall of
- American scientists and mathematicians as the world becomes more
- reliant on technology. By the year 2000, the U.S. will need
- between 450,000 and 750,000 more chemists, biologists,
- physicists and engineers than it is expected to produce.
- </p>
- <p> The science deficit threatens America's prosperity and
- possibly even its national security. Economically, the nation
- will be unable to compete with rising technological giants like
- Japan, South Korea and West Germany. "After the war and Sputnik,
- we were the pre-eminent economic power in the world," says John
- Fowler, executive director of the Triangle Coalition for Science
- and Technology Education. "We aren't any longer." The U.S. may
- also be in grave danger if its scientists cannot match those of
- the Communist world in developing advanced weaponry and
- intelligence-gathering devices.
- </p>
- <p> How did America--birthplace of Thomas Edison, the Wright
- brothers, Jonas Salk and Sally Ride--come to such a pass? One
- reason is lack of consistent financial support for science
- education. After Sputnik, funding for the National Science
- Foundation, the leading federal sponsor of scientific research,
- shot up from $18 million to $130 million in 1968. By 1982
- financing for NSF's education division had plummeted to zero,
- and Congress had to fight to revive it over the protests of the
- Reagan Administration.
- </p>
- <p> Even now, federal support for the NSF has yet to match the
- level of the go-go '60s when measured in constant dollars. For
- fiscal 1990 the NSF is expected to get $210 million, of which
- $147 million will go for science and engineering education from
- kindergarten through high school. The amount does not begin to
- approach the magnitude of the problem. "We are devoting less
- than half the resources today to precollege educational support
- that we did at the post-Sputnik peak," says Bassam Shakhashiri,
- the NSF's assistant director for science education. "Yet the
- crisis is fully as great, if not greater."
- </p>
- <p> Some experts--though probably a minority--argue that
- funding is not the critical problem. "Much of the needed
- investment has already been made," says U.S. Secretary of Energy
- James D. Watkins, one of the most active education advocates in
- the Bush Administration. "We have the technology. We have the
- teachers, and we have the organizations that know what works."
- </p>
- <p> Fickle funding, to be sure, is only one reason why U.S.
- scientists are becoming a scarce commodity. Telegenic Carl
- Sagan aside, the image of scientists today is less lustrous than
- it was in the '50s and '60s, when men and women in lab coats
- were seen as national heroes helping the U.S. beat the Soviets
- to the moon. In the money-mad, me-first '80s, the country's best
- and brightest aspire to be bankers and lawyers, not chemists or
- rocket designers.
- </p>
- <p> Elementary and secondary schools reflect these trends. In
- inner cities and rural areas, dilapidated or out-of-date
- equipment is the norm. Last year, for example, chemistry
- students in Chicago's DuSable High School had to make do with
- a 1962 periodic table that contained only 103 elements, although
- six more had been discovered in the intervening 26 years.
- </p>
- <p> Capable science teachers are also difficult to find, in
- part because public school salaries are no match for the incomes
- to be made at Monsanto, Procter & Gamble, and Exxon. As a
- result, the men and women who do choose the classroom over the
- corporate lab are often poor role models for potential young
- scientists. According to the landmark 1983 study A Nation at
- Risk, half of the country's newly employed math and science
- teachers are not qualified to teach their subjects.
- </p>
- <p> Many worried educators and business executives have
- concluded that America's shrinking scientific capital is too
- important a problem to be left to state legislatures and local
- communities. "In most other countries, this is a national issue
- and dealt with at a national level," says Bryn Mawr physics
- professor Peter Beckmann.
- </p>
- <p> The American Association for the Advancement of Science
- agrees. In 1985 it launched Project 2061, named for the year
- that Halley's Comet will next come close to the earth, and
- assigned it the task of designing models for a national science
- curriculum. With the help of working scientists and 150
- teachers, principals and curriculum specialists in six locations
- across the country, the A.A.A.S. and other scientific
- organizations hope to develop an approach that will blur the
- boundaries between traditional subjects such as geography and
- math.
- </p>
- <p> A basic premise of this campaign is that schools could
- teach science better if they emphasized concepts rather than
- rote memory. Today most children are subjected to unimaginative,
- mind-numbing approaches that cause them to decide by the fourth
- grade that science is not for them. "It's one of the earliest
- decisions they make in school," says Michael Minch, a chemistry
- professor at the University of the Pacific.
- </p>
- <p> In the absence of adequate federal funding or a national
- curriculum, private industry has been working with educators
- and scientists to boost the level of teaching. Companies have
- become increasingly alarmed at the number of workers, many of
- them high school graduates, who are unable even to add or
- subtract. "I have kids in ninth grade who can't read a ruler,"
- says Rick Ivik, a middle and high school teacher in McFarland,
- Wis.
- </p>
- <p> Across the country, private businesses are involved in some
- 100 projects to improve the level of science and math
- instruction. In Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Renaissance in
- Science and Mathematics program, supported by firms such as ARCO
- Chemical Co. and SmithKline Beckman Corp., provides elementary
- school teachers with prepackaged science kits--small bags of
- familiar items, like a flashlight and a ball--to demonstrate
- heat, gravity and other concepts. Such hands-on experiences whet
- youngsters' appetites for learning. "Kids have a lot of natural
- curiosity," says Denis Doyle, a senior fellow at the Hudson
- Institute. "But somehow it gets squelched. That's a failure of
- instruction."
- </p>
- <p> For women and minorities, the failure has been acute.
- Although female science majors represent 15% of undergraduates
- on U.S. college campuses, women constitute only 11% of all
- employed scientists and engineers. Minorities, especially blacks
- and Hispanics, are less visible. In 1987 blacks earned only 2.6%
- of the bachelor of science degrees awarded in the U.S. and 1.8%
- of the science and engineering doctorates; Hispanics earned 2%
- and 1%, respectively. With white males expected to become a
- minority of the work force by the turn of the century, more
- women and minorities must be persuaded to enter these fields if
- the nation is to sharpen its competitive edge.
- </p>
- <p> Too often, however, women are discouraged from pursuing
- math and science before they even dissect their first frog.
- Many teachers and parents tell them, in ways subtle or direct,
- that they simply "can't do" physics or calculus. Women's
- colleges offer a striking exception to this trend. Nearly 27%
- of the undergraduates at Smith and 30% of those at Bryn Mawr
- major in science, compared with Dartmouth, where only 14.2% of
- the women elect to concentrate in the field. Some coed schools,
- however, are actively grooming female scientists. More than 35%
- of M.I.T.'s freshman class is now female; at Cal Tech the figure
- is 30%.
- </p>
- <p> Minorities, like women, are handicapped by low
- expectations. But they also suffer from declining federal
- student aid, a scarcity of minority faculty and inadequate
- academic preparation. In Houston, where 82% of the public-school
- students are black or Hispanic, Baylor College of Medicine has
- worked hard to bolster early science instruction. The school now
- offers 16 science programs for teachers and students. It also
- helps operate the country's first comprehensive high school for
- health professionals.
- </p>
- <p> Baylor's programs, and hundreds like them around the
- country, give some modicum of hope to those who fear for the
- nation's scientific competitiveness. But there are other reasons
- for cautious optimism. Since 1980, 42 states have toughened
- math requirements for high school graduation, and 36 states have
- raised science requirements. At least twelve states have
- established special science and math schools for gifted
- students.
- </p>
- <p> Washington too seems to be getting the message. Earlier
- this year lawmakers in the House and Senate introduced
- resolutions calling for a high priority to be placed on science
- and math education. Later this month President Bush will convene
- an "education summit," intended to open a national dialogue on
- ways to improve education. Science instruction is sure to be a
- major topic of discussion.
- </p>
- <p> However, such tokens of high-level concern will mean little
- unless they are backed up with concrete programs and hard cash.
- If decisions are not made soon to replenish the country's
- scientific stock, America may one day find that it is a caboose
- being pulled behind an international economy led by such
- countries as Japan and West Germany. "Science and math are the
- substance of this age, just as exploration and warfare were the
- substance of other ages," says William Baker, former chairman
- of AT&T Bell Telephone Laboratories. "Science is the way to
- prepare Americans for the 21st century."
- </p>
- <p>-- Barbara Dolan/Chicago
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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