| | To
stay up-to-date on the latest TAP news, subscribe to our RSS feed by clicking
on the icon (left) and copying the URL into your RSS reader. |
Editorial and Op-ed Support October 2007
October 24, 2007 – Wall Street
Journal - “The Myth of Middle-Class Job Loss”
Economic change is a messy process. New technologies open up many
opportunities for those prepared to take advantage of them. At the same
time, old firms and their workers are displaced and forced to start over.
In 1900, for example, 40% of the U.S. work force was involved in agriculture.
Today, that figure is less than 2%, and no serious observer would argue
that we are worse off as a result of this transformation. Yet many of
today's most prominent politicians and pundits are making an updated version
of precisely this argument. They claim that the decline in the number
of manufacturing jobs has led to the replacement of good middle-class
jobs by low-skill, low-pay "hamburger-flipping" service jobs.
October
22, 2007 – Newsweek - “Education
Around the World”
Your cover package on global education
(Aug. 20/Aug. 27) pointed out critical issues in America's school system.
Maintaining U.S. scientific and technological leadership is essential
to the future of our country and work force; however, the United States
is not keeping pace with foreign competition. Fewer American students
are pursuing careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics,
and they are performing at levels far below students in competitor nations
on international standardized tests in these subjects. Meanwhile, international
students educated in America are facing misguided immigration policies
that hamper their ability to apply their skills and knowledge in the United
States. That is why businesses and technology associations are working
to double the number of science, technology, engineering and math graduates
with bachelor's degrees by 2015. Investing in basic research and increasing
funding for math and science education can help reverse current trends.
(John J. Castellani, President, Business Roundtable)
October
10, 2007 – DISCOVER Magazine – “Making the
Grade”
U.S. students may be holding their own in math and science
at the elementary level, but international comparisons indicate they are
falling behind most of their global peers as they progress through the
system. And what they do know is often inadequate. The National Assessment
of Educational Progress, sometimes called the nation’s report card,
reveals that nearly one-third of eighth graders don’t possess even
the most basic math skills, a fraction that rises to nearly two-fifths
for high school seniors. The staggering number of teachers with STEM class
assignments outside their field of expertise certainly doesn’t help:
In middle schools, 51.5 percent of math teachers and 40 percent of science
teachers lack a major or minor in the subject.
Use the links below to read more news about TAP2015:
top
Copyright
Tapping America's Potential. About this Campaign
| Resource Center | Take
Action | Latest News | Contact
Us | Home |