Special Report #57
Special Report- Heritage Foundation Special Reports are extensive, in-depth, often interdisciplinary studies on complex policy issues that demand detailed analysis.
From October 21 to 23, 2008, The Heritage Foundation, supported
by the McCormick Tribune Foundation, convened leading education and
national security experts as well as private-sector representatives
to discuss methods for strengthening America's competitiveness
by improving its performance in science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics (STEM) education. This report attempts to describe
the current state of STEM education, summarize the main points
discussed at the conference, and present the conference attendees'
conclusions on how to improve STEM education and advance America's
defense capabilities and economy.
This report is aimed at education and private-sector leaders as
well as at national defense strategists, but can also be useful to
other interested parties. The private sector and defense industry
will need to work closely with education reformers to create a
feasible plan for improving the current state of STEM education:
Success in both industry and defense is vitally linked and
inextricably tied to the capabilities of the STEM workforce.
Overview
In order for the United States to be globally competitive,
innovative, and prepared for new economic and security
challenges, the U.S. must have a competitive and innovative
educational environment that encourages entrepreneurship and
excellence in STEM subjects. Doing so will require federal and
state policymakers, as well as the private sector, to take the
following steps:
- Strengthen the quality of the elementary and secondary
teacher workforce, particularly in STEM subjects. Encourage
industry and the national security community to get involved in the
classroom through innovative partnerships with educators and
schools. Schools need the financial flexibility to provide
differential pay and performance bonuses for excellent
teaching.
- Reform the traditional public school system to encourage
greater innovation and superior instruction. Legislation and
old habits need to change so that funding can be allocated to where
it has the biggest impact. School choice, charter schools, online
classes, and online learning communities hold promise for
encouraging innovation and better learning opportunities for
American students and should be funded.
- Implement aggressive reforms to change the governance of the
traditional public school system. Given that states have the
greatest authority for funding and regulating public education,
state leaders are in the best position to implement aggressive
reforms to change the governance structure of the traditional
public school system. Experience has shown that aggressive
state-level reforms can spark improvement in students'
learning.
- Resolve the H-1B visa shortage. To ameliorate the
effects of the current STEM crisis, the cap on H-1B visas should be
raised from the current level of 65,000 to its pre-9/11 level of
195,000 visas a year. Eventually, the number of H-1B visas
granted should be flexible and correlate to the needs of the
marketplace of the time. To enhance cultural relations and to
regain the U.S.'s position as a leader in STEM, visa-eligible
foreign students with American degrees should be allowed to stay in
the U.S. and work for the duration of their visa.
Read the entire report (PDF)