290 likes | 402 Views
Office of the Director Defense Research and Engineering. National Security Workforce Challenges: Current Initiatives. Presented by. Dr. Bill Berry Acting Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Laboratories and Basic Sciences) 15 January 2005. A National Issue.
E N D
Office of the Director Defense Research and Engineering National Security Workforce Challenges: Current Initiatives Presented by Dr. Bill Berry Acting Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Laboratories and Basic Sciences) 15 January 2005
A National Issue • “An Emerging and Critical Problem of the Science and Engineering Workforce”1 • 12 Major studies (1999-2004) make essentially the same point • A few studies did not consider security clearance needs and rely on relaxation of immigration rules • Growing need for U.S. citizens in national security activities 1. National Science Board Companion Paper to “National Science and Engineering Indicators 2004”, National Science Foundation, April 2004
U.S. Production of S&E Graduates* U.S. College and University Graduates, 1966-2001 1.5 1.0 (Millions) Baccalaureates 2001 1994 0.5 0.0 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 Academic year ending in . . . *Source: Data provided by the NSF, September 2003
U.S. University Trends in Defense-Related S&E Graduate Student Enrollment (1994-2001) *Source: National Science Foundation – Graduate Students and Post Doctorates in Science and Engineering: Fall 2001 Science Disciplines Aliens with Temporary Visas U.S. Citizens + Permanent Resident Aliens U.S. Citizen + Perm8 Yr. Delta Physics Chemistry Math/Applied Computer Sciences 1994 / 2001 +14.1% -9.9% Physics Physics Chemistry Chemistry -25.3% Math/Applied Math/Applied -27.2% Computer Sci. Computer Sci. Table I-2
U.S. University Trends in Defense-Related S&E Graduate Student Enrollment (1994-2001) Aerospace Chemical Electrical Engineering Science Industrial/Manufacturing Mechanical Metallurgical/Materials Nuclear 1994 / 2001 *Source: National Science Foundation – Graduate Students and Post Doctorates in Science and Engineering: Fall 2001 Engineering Disciplines Aliens with Temporary Visas U.S. Citizens + Perm. Resident Aliens U.S. Citizen + Perm 8 Yr. Delta -18.9% -33.0% -29.7% -49.1% -26.2% -24.7% Electrical Electrical Chemical Chemical -32.1% Aerospace Aerospace EngineeringSciences Industrial/Mfg. Metallurgy/Materials EngineeringSciences Industrial/Mfg. Metallurgy/Materials Mechanical Nuclear Mechanical Nuclear -21.7% Table III
DoD Scientists & Engineers (S&E) • “Attrition” in DoD labs: ~13,000 Science, Math, Engineering and Technology (SMET) departures projected within 10 years • The number of clearable students pursuing defense-related critical skills degrees is small and declining • Projected U.S. demand for S&E’s will be up 10% by 2010 (Bureau of Labor Statistics 2001) • DoD will have tough competition for best S&Es • Linguist needs in Science & Technology (S&T) also beneficial
DoD S&Es as % of Total Fed S&Es Source: Pre-release - OPM data for NSF pub, Table B-14. Federal scientists and engineers, by agency and major occupational group: 1999-2002
DoD Civilian S&E’s All DoD Civilians in S&E Occupational Series Source: DMDC Data for April, 2004
S&E Workforce Current Efforts Across DoD Pre-college (K-12) • Materials World Modules (Ray Pawlicki – Army) • STARBASE – (Ernie Gonzales – OSD-RA) • eCybermission – ( Kelly Stratchko – Army) Undergraduate • Awards to Stimulate & Support Undergraduate Research Education (ASSURE) (with NSF; Koto White – AFOSR) • Research Assistantships in microelectronics (with Semiconductor Industries Association) (Dan Radack – DARPA) • Science, Mathematics and Research for Transformation (SMART) (K. Thompson – DoD/Koto White - AFOSR)
Current S&E Workforce Efforts Across DoD Graduate • National Defense Science & Engineering Graduate Fellowships (NDSEG) • Naval Research – Science and Technology for Americas Readiness (N-STAR – with NSF, Bob Kavetsky – Navy) • SMART (Keith Thompson/Koto White – AFOSR)
SMART Program Components Science, Mathematics and Research for Transformation Congress Appropriated -- $2.5M FY 05 • Undergraduate/Graduate – US Citizens • Critical Skills areas • Institution independent • 2 years support – to achieve degree • Tuition, fees, books, lab expenses, room & board • Satisfactory academic performance • Work payback required
DoD Outreach Initiatives • ‘Taking the Pentagon to the People’ Outreach Initiative • Technical Assistance Workshops • Leadership Symposiums • Student Expositions & Luncheons • Exhibitions • Other DoD Sponsored events at Science & Engineer related conferences (WoC, Black Engineer, MAES, LULAC) • Partnerships & Task Forces • Student Luncheons & Orientations • Symposiums • H.S. & College Student Information & Recruitment Booths • DoD Laboratories & Centers of Excellence in Research
DoD Outreach Initiatives • Student & Faculty Employment Programs • Student & Faculty Internships & Fellowships • Paid & Volunteer • External Appointing Authorities/Programs (i.e. Outstanding Scholar, PMF) • Student Temporary Experience Program (STEP) • Student Career Experience Program (SCEP) • Summer Employment Programs • Workforce Recruitment Program for Students with Disabilities (WRP) • Disabled Veteran Employment Program • On-Site Campus Visits
Diversity in Context US employment population in 2003 • Total Workforce 137,736 (K) • 10.1% of total are SME Workforce (approx) • 46.8% of total are Women • 17.1% of total are Minority Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat9.pdf http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat10.pdf
What Were Sep 2004 Civilian S&T End Strengths? 77,066 S&T CIVILIANS ASSIGNED TO DoD Other DoD 4% Distribution* by DoD Component • Army 25,745 33.4% • Navy 34,868 45.2% • Air Force 13,420 17.4% • Other DoD 3,033 3.9% Air Force 17% Navy 45% * May not add to 100.0% due to rounding Army 34% S&T WORKFORCE REPRESENTS 12% OF ALL DoD CIVILIANS
S&T Civilians Total DoD Civilians Sep 2004 Distributionof DoD Civilian S&T Workforce PERCENT FEMALE Females Make Up Two-Fifths of S&T Workforce
S&T Civilians Total DoD Civilians Sep 2004 Distributionof DoD Civilian S&T Workforce PERCENT NON-WHITE One-Fifth of S&T Workforce is Non-White
Critical Issues Remain • Keeping students on the Path • Capture them in the DoD and National Security Workforce • Attracting the “Underrepresented Majority” (women, minorities) to S&E careers
Awards to Stimulate & Support Undergraduate Research Education (ASSURE) • Joint DoD/NSF undergraduate research program based on National Science Foundation Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) site program • Support ~20 summer research sites in DoD relevant science and engineering (~10 students/site; avg. award 3 years; 8-10 weeks) • Army, Air Force, & Navy representatives select sites for DoD funding • Participants must be US citizens or permanent residents • Encourages participation of women, underrepresented minorities, & students from institutions where research opportunities are limited • Air Force is lead service for administering this program • FY04 ASSURE budget: $4.5M
eCYBERMISSIONShows Students that Math, Science and Technology can be interesting and exciting • Supports Army’s intent “to give back to the Nation” • Attracts an audience of children beyond math/science “stars” • Web-based adventure: team competition activities, games, puzzles with solid learning points • Overview • Web Based Competition – Team Effort • 6-9th Grade, 3-4 Student Teams + 1 Advisor • $500K in Prizes, ($2K-$5K/Team Member) Regional and National
STARBASE • Primarily At-Risk kids • 20 Classroom Hour experience at DoD bases • 45+ sites in 28 states • EngagingScienceand Mathematics • Grades 5-8
Secondary School Curriculum MS&E: National Security and the Workforce Northwestern University Materials World Modules (MWM) • Pedagogy integrates Inquiry and Design Inquiry cycle Design cycle • Identify question. • Propose explanation. • Create and perform • experiment • Based on results, • refine • explanation • Identify problem. • Propose design. • Build and test • prototype • Based on results, • redesign • product. • Students complete a series of hands-on,inquiry-basedactivities in each module • Each module culminates indesign challenges • Students simulate the work ofscientists(through activities that foster inquiry)andengineers(through activities that emphasize design) Goal: Working explanation Goal: Functional product Science Engineering 23
Troops to TeachersBackground • Began in 1994 as transition assistance program • Financial aid for 2 years (FY 94 & 95) • Provided placement assistance from FY 96 - 01 • Defense Authorization Bill of 2000 moved responsibility to Dept of Education • “No Child Left Behind Act of 2001” provides financial assistance, extends program thru FY 06
Troops to TeachersProgram Purpose • Recruit quality teachers for schools serving low-income families • Help relieve teacher shortages, primarily in Math, Science, & Special Ed • Assist military personnel in moving to second careers in K-12, public school teaching "America’s school children need you’’ Laura Bush, First Lady of the United States
401+ (4) 201 - 400 (5) 101 - 200 (9) 51 - 100 (9) 26 - 50 (9) 0 - 25 (15) Where “Troops” Teach
90% 58% 42% 10% Minority Hires Compared to All Teachers *NEA Report - Status of the American Public School Teacher 2000-2001
79% 81% 19% 21% Gender Hires Compared to All Teachers *NEA Report - Status of the American Public School Teacher 2000-2001
“Troops” TeachingMath & Science • Incomplete data (~7500 “Troops” Teaching) • ~25% (1750) of the “Troops” are teaching Math & Science (all levels) • ~50% M&S “Troop” Teachers are Minority • Most of them are Male