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‘It’s hard, but it’s fun’

Project seeks to enlarge ranks of scientists, engineers

Tue., July 15, 2008

"Yes!"

Kendreah Weber, left, and Austin Frank design and build a working model of an elevator. The project requires them to add circuitry to the model and write a computer program instructing the elevator when and how to operate.

Mark Kotula’s fist pumps the air as he announces his accomplishment to his fellow sixth-graders.

Gently rotating on the computer screen in front of him is the 3D image of a wooden mallet, the kind toddlers use in pound-the-peg games. To Kotula, the mallet is one more mission accomplished in technology class. To teacher Bill Rae, it’s one more seed planted in the effort to interest middle-schoolers in science, engineering, math and technology.

A teacher at Lake Fenton Middle School near Flint, Rae also is a master teacher in Project Lead the Way, a nonprofit educational program working to increase the number and diversity of students in engineering and related fields. With corporate partners, Project Lead the Way has developed a curriculum package for middle and high school classrooms with courses ranging from robotics to civil engineering to architecture.

The program uses a hands-on, problem-solving approach that Rae said appeals to students across the board. About 80 Michigan schools will have all or part of the Lead the Way curriculum in place by this fall, and Rae spends part of each summer teaching fellow educators how to implement the program in their classrooms.

Sydney Scott, Becky Copeland and Jordan Paull take on the roles of mechanical engineer, electrical engineer and computer program engineer to design and build a working model of a traffic signal.

"This was designed because kids weren’t taking classes to become engineers," he said.

That’s become a familiar cry among "STEM" — science, technology, engineering and math — advocates. Some say that the field suffers nationally from lack of rigor in K-12 programs, shortages of qualified teachers and declining enrollment in college programs. At worst, they say, America’s preeminence in engineering and technology are threatened.

Others disagree, saying that while K-12 programs need improvement, America remains the dominant force in science and technology worldwide. One question is how much of that dominance rests on foreign-born talent.

"We import a lot of our scientists and engineers from Third World countries," said Dr. Paul Kuwik, state director of Michigan’s Project Lead the Way affiliate, headquartered at Eastern Michigan University. "They realized the only way to turn this around was to make it an issue in K-12 public education. … There is a significant need for some kind of program to provide encouragement and preparation for STEM."

Hannah Meier, Kyle Duey and Wayne Ferris test the circuitry on their traffic signal. Like others in the seventh-grade class, they say Project Lead the Way is challenging, but fun.

SCHOOL COMMITMENT

Project Lead the Way’s approach is to offer what it says is a rigorous, relevant curriculum to schools willing to make a commitment of time and funding. Participating schools must agree to provide specific computer software and hardware as well as supplies for hands-on projects. They also must send classroom teachers to a training institute, spend adequate time teaching the material, enforce math prerequisites, and track participating students’ postsecondary enrollment choices.

"The summer training institutes (for teachers) are very intensive," Kuwik said. "They’re what we call boot camps."

More than 75 teachers are expected to attend this summer’s institutes at EMU, studying under master teachers like Rae as well as professors from the university’s own engineering technology program.

Start-up costs vary, depending on how much and what type of computer equipment schools already have on hand, Kuwik said. A "bare room" start-up might run $60,000 to $70,000, he estimated, but the average cost is closer to $12,000 to $15,000. The summer institute costs $3,000 per teacher, with some scholarships available.

In Lake Fenton, Rae’s sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders complete nine-week units in Design and Modeling, Automation and Robotics, and Science of Technology, respectively. The high school program includes Introduction to Design, and Digital Electronics.

"It’s fun when we get it. Once we get it, we’re all happy," said seventh-grader Angela Young as she and two fellow students worked to build a magnet-activated traffic signal.

Each member of the trio has a job: the mechanical engineer builds a working model of the signal; the electrical engineer wires the model to a computer and the computer engineer writes a program telling the signal when to turn from red to green.

"I like this class. It’s hard, but it’s fun," says Austin Frank, a sentiment echoed by a number of other students.

‘WHY DO I HAVE TO KNOW THIS?’

Rae, a former drafting teacher, said that by challenging students to solve everyday problems, Project Lead the Way courses answer the question, "Why do I have to know this?"

For example, to use Autodesk Inventor software to design a round peg with a 1-inch diameter, the students must know what "diameter" is. To use a formula that automatically calculates diameter, given the radius, a student must know both terms and how they relate.

In Rae’s classroom, Project Lead the Way is a hit. Nationally, it’s too early to say precisely what impact the program is having.

Still in the middle of a five-year independent assessment, findings to date show that the project appears to attract proportionately more minority students than college engineering programs do, but no more females. A study of college transcripts of former PLTW students showed that 40 percent of them chose engineering as a major, but without a control group of non-PLTW students for comparison, it is hard to determine if PLTW was the reason for those choices.

There are hundreds of programs at the state and national level — public, private and hybrid — that promote STEM education. Texas Instruments and Southern Methodist University in Texas collaborated on an engineering curriculum called The Infinity Project, now in use in 300 schools nationwide. The Ford Partnership for Advanced Studies, or Ford PAS, is a high school curriculum developed by The Ford Motor Company Fund and Education Development Center Inc. That program is in use at 300 sites in 26 states.

Public programs, too, play a role in STEM efforts. There are 33 regional science and math centers in Michigan, established by the state legislature to support K-12 science and math programs in local schools.

There also were more than 100 federally funded STEM education programs spread among 12 federal departments as of 2006, according to a report by the American Competitiveness Council. Created by Congress in 2005 to study STEM efforts, the council found that funding for those efforts totaled $3.47 billion in 2007, but that there was a "general dearth of evidence" about which programs were effective, since only 10 had undergone scientifically rigorous impact evaluations.

K-12 RIGOR

American students who enroll in STEM fields in college tend to drop out more than students in other disciplines, Kuwik said.

"I think it’s the rigor (of college) and the lack of preparation at the K-12 level," he said.

Scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, the national testing program conducted by the U.S. Department of Education, showed that 40 percent of fourth-graders nationwide and 31 percent of eighth-graders were proficient in math in 2007. Michigan’s numbers were 37 percent and 29 percent, respectively. In science, 27 percent of both fourth- and eighth-graders earned proficient scores nationally in 2005, the most recent year that test was given. Michigan’s numbers were 30 percent and 35 percent.

The STEM Coalition, an advocacy organization representing both education and industry groups, has asked Congress to give science equal status with reading and math under the No Child Left Behind Act, meaning schools would face sanctions if students didn’t meet science proficiency targets.

Project Lead the Way offers students a chance to demonstrate proficiency in the form of a two-day examination given at the conclusion of each high school course. Five Michigan universities with engineering programs are considering granting college credit to students who pass those tests, Kuwik said.

"Our goal is to have most universities in the state accept articulated credit," he said.

Of course, sometimes knowledge is its own reward, pointed out middle-schooler Shelby Beckman. When a seventh-grader can successfully design a sensor-driven traffic signal, "It makes you feel really smart."

TOO FEW ENGINEERS?

Are there too few scientists and engineers in the United States? Maybe. Or, maybe not.

Some say the current supply is sufficient, but that there are not enough students in the pipeline to meet future demand. Others say that the United States relies too heavily on importing engineers from abroad. Still others report spotty problems in specific industries, but not a general shortage. And yet others say the workforce is large enough, but does not include enough women or minorities.

The National Science Foundation’s "Science and Engineering Indicators 2008" stated that:

  • Overall growth in the science and engineering labor force in the United States has been steady for 50 years, though growth in individual occupations has varied.

  • The number of bachelor’s and master’s degrees granted in science and engineering declined in the late 1990s, but has increased steadily since.

  • Women earned approximately 50 percent of all bachelor’s degrees granted in psychology, agricultural sciences, chemistry and biological sciences in 2005. Men earned about 80 percent of all bachelor’s degrees in physics, engineering and computer science.

  • Twenty-five percent of college-educated scientists and engineers in the labor force as of 2003 were foreign born.

  • Forty percent of scientists and engineers who hold doctoral degrees are age 50 or older.

Read the full report at: http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind08/start.htm

###

Lorie Shane is the managing editor of the Michigan Education Report, the Mackinac Center’s education policy journal. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided that Michigan Education Report is properly cited.

Michigan Education Daily
"Sara McLaren is taking a once-in-a-decade opportunity to tie the U.S. Census directly to her civics and social studies curriculum at Niles High School." >>
"Research done by the dean of the University of Michigan school of education was featured at length in a New York Times magazine article recently about training effective teachers." >>
"A public education advocacy group said Monday that Michigan should begin taxing consumer services at 5.5 percent, while reducing the existing sales tax from 6 to 5.5 percent, as a way to generate $550 million for schools in 2011." >>
"Michigan Future Inc. has awarded an $850,000 grant to Detroit Edison Public School Academy to help it open a new high school this fall, the first in a planned series of grants." >>
"Members of the Fenton Education Support Personnel have voted to leave the Michigan Education Association and join Teamsters Local 214, saying they want better representation." >>
"The Kent County Circuit Court has upheld an arbitrator's decision that Grand Rapids Public Schools did not violate a labor contract when it privatized transportation workers in 2005, even though their contract with the district had not expired." >>
"The Detroit school board and its emergency financial manager must work together on a school redesign plan if they want to receive federal funding intended for low-achieving Michigan schools." >>
User Comments
Is it true that young ones today are losing interest on these subjects? Obviously, the White House is promoting programs that will help students on coping up with math and science subjects. But, The federal government thinks that the quality of math and science education can repair credit with the scientific community and improve US education with a few <a rev="vote for" title="U.S. Government Spends $250 Million on Science and Math" href="http://personalmoneystore.com/Payday-Loans/ ">payday loans</a> of sorts. In reality, it will take far longer to accomplish than they might think – US educators can't even get students to accept that "irregardless" isn't a word, and the difference between their, they're, and there – our students can't even learn their own language! It's a noble aim, to be sure, but throwing money at it may not work in the long run. >>
I am a teacher in the same county who is presently trying to quit the union. Like Caldwell, I strongly disagree with the MEA.

This article was timely.

Rob Olson
Pittsford Area Schools

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I agree this is a change worth making. I describe some of the uneven effects of the idea on my blog at http://rickolson.blogspot.com/2009/08/statewide-health-insurance-plan-for.html which you may also wish to read.

The devil will be in the details, so this is one we will need to monitor closely.

Rick Olson from Saline, former school Business Manager >>

Nowadays, saving money is very crucial and properly investing the money can keep you and your family away from the effect of the financial crisis. The sad news is that a lot of the options for short term funding have been drying up. Short term funding is a necessary thing to have around, and going through traditional channels such as banks isn't an option for a lot of people anymore – basically it's only open to Ken Lewis. Installment loans are an option, but some people, including senior citizens, have been thinking about raiding their retirement fund. Getting into your pension retirement plan or 401(k) funds is the last thing you want to do if you don't qualify for any withdrawals yet. The penalties are substantial, and you'll end up needing installments loans to pay them if you use retirement funds for <a rev="vote for" title="Installment Loans Reliable Option As 401(k)s are Dwindling" href="http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/05/17/installment-loans-reliable-option-401ks-dwindling/">short term funding</a>.


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I AGREE >>
Godfrey-Lee on the west side of the state has been running all-day, every-day kindergarten for several years. >>
We have a problem in Detroit Public School, their system had cash flow problem for years now. And honestly it getting worst in terms in progression with more children leaving to charter their schools almost every year. The state decided to give the Detroit school districts cash advance of $70 million so they would meet the schools expenses, as well as payment for teachers. Robert Bobb, the newly appointed emergency financial manager, requested the funds early in order for him to get the house in order before he had to start panicking. President Obama has been giving out large sums of money for troubled school districts, perhaps that’s where a generous portion of the aid came from. Getting Detroit Public Schools in working order is a worthy cause.

LINK TO READ FOR MORE INFO:
http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/03/10/state-advance-detroit-public-schools-70m/


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I am all for school choice and think its great that charters are finally moving forward. However, I'm wondering if the research accounts for a playing field that is not level. I can't take my school buildings and move them anywhere I want, nor can I simply slap up a pole building and make it a school. If anything, public schools need less state regulation and oversight so we can play by the same minimal rules charters do. If you want public schools to compete to improve, remove the barriers to doing so. I will gladly except less funding per pupil if the playing field is level.
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The purpose is to encourage non excercising children to excercise but my daughter's highschool gave her an improper body fat percentage and made my healthy daughter who trains 20 hours a week in tap jazz and ballet believe she was overweaghit instead of a person with muscles.
I believe the public schools do not have the right to make the diagnoses with these kids because they are using one measurement and recording it from their arms that they have a certain percetnage of body fat with one arm caliper test.
Does any one have feed back?
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Specifically, 81 percent of students in religiously affiliated schools and 82 percent of students in other private schools have parents who report being "very satisfied" with their schools, compared to 55 percent of students in assigned public schools and 63 percent of students in chosen public schools.

High levels of satisfaction among private school parents also extend to opinions about their children's teachers, academic standards of the school, order and discipline at the school, the amount of homework assigned, and interactions with school personnel.

http://fitt.in >>