Nearly 50 years ago, Russia's launch of the Sputnik satellite threw a major scare into public officials in the United States, prompting a flurry of policy making aimed at ensuring that the country's chief rival did not get a leg up in the competition for global economic, technological, political and military dominance.
Among the results were the National Defense Education Act of 1958 -- which focused the federal government's attention and resources like never before on improving the quality of science and language education and getting more students into college generally and into those fields -- and a staggering influx of federal funds into scientific research and development. The changes entrenched the United States as the leading global power in the second half of the 20th century, and fully established American higher education as the envy of the world.
Today, as a slew of recent reports have argued, the country's economic and technological dominance is waning, undermined by flaws in its own educational system and declining interest in the sciences at a time when existing and emerging world powers are pouring billions into technology and education and catching up to (and sometimes surpassing) the United States on key indicators. The situation has led to a chorus of calls for a response similar to that of the post-Sputnik era -- and a group of leading research universities added its voice Thursday, one day after a bipartisan group of U.S. senators introduced a package of legislation on just this topic.
The Association of American Universities' white paper, "National Defense Education and Innovation Initiative: Meeting America’s Economic and Security Challenges in the 21st Century," urges a partnership in which the government and higher education would step up their spending on and attention to improving science education, bolstering scientific research and development, and strengthening the R&D work force. Although officials of the group had originally contemplated proposing the creation of a new federal agency or promoting a new law on the scale of the NDEA, they have emphasized instead a partnership in which America's colleges and universities have as big a role to play as the government does.
“While the federal government must play a leading role in addressing these challenges, the AAU white paper makes clear that an effective response needs to employ the teaching and research capacities of America’s universities and colleges,” said Martin Jischke, president of Purdue University and chair of the board of AAU, which represents 62 leading research institutions. “Higher education, and particularly research universities, must reexamine the way we train students in these critical disciplines in order to ensure that we produce the scientists, mathematicians, engineers, linguists, and cultural experts our country needs.”
Added Nils Hasselmo, the association's president: "We want to make sure to look at this as a partnership between government and research universities, with the business community as a third component. We're not just coming and asking for more money from the federal government. We're doing that, but we're also committing ourselves to doing things in the most effective way."
Citing an array of statistics and measures that by and large show the United States losing ground to other countries, the association's report cites three key challenges: "serious problems in our educational system; decreasing incentives for students to study critical scientific, engineering, and language fields; and insufficient funding for research, particularly basic research in the physical sciences and engineering."
Combatting those problems, the AAU report argues, will require work on several fronts: enhancing the country's research capacity, cultivating American talent in math, science, engineering and foreign language fields, improving elementary and secondary science education, and continuing to attract to the United States the best students and scholars from around the world. In each of those areas, the report asks for action by both the federal government and by universities themselves. Selected recommendations follow.
To strengthen the country's research capacity, AAU argues, universities should:
The government should:
To cultivate more scientists, engineers and language experts among American citizens, universities should:
The government should:
To improve elementary and secondary science education, universities should:
The government should:
To attract talented foreign students and scientists, universities should:
The government should: