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W. Bauer, MSU. Outline. NSAC Charge Undergraduates REU, CEU Ph.D. Production Overall numbers, trends, sub-fields, employment Diversity DNP Education Committee Projects Web-Based Courses Recommendations (Oakland town meetings). NSAC - Charge.

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  1. W. Bauer, MSU Outline • NSAC Charge • Undergraduates • REU, CEU • Ph.D. Production • Overall numbers, trends, sub-fields,employment • Diversity • DNP Education Committee • Projects • Web-Based Courses • Recommendations (Oakland town meetings)

  2. NSAC - Charge • Education of young scientists is central to the mission of both agencies and is integral to any vision of the future of the field. We ask NSAC to articulate the importance of education in nuclear science to academia, to medicine, to defense, to industry, and to government. We ask further that NSAC analyze the effectiveness and appropriateness of current graduate programs in nuclear science in preparing future generations of scientists, to articulate the role that the nuclear science research community presently plays in addressing broad educational needs of national concern, including diversity issues, along with strategies for strengthening these roles in a way that makes optimal use of the resources of the community.

  3. Undergraduates Source: AIP • Physics bachelor’s have decreased for the last 15 years • Total college population has increased by 20% during that time

  4. US Physics Bachelor Production

  5. REU

  6. CEU (Conference Experience for Undergraduates) • Since 1998 • 60- 80 UG students attend DNP Fall Mtg. • Poster session with their research results • Support from NSF and DOE • Warren Rogers (Westmont College)

  7. Ph.D.s

  8. Nuclear Physics Ph.D. Production

  9. Ph.D. Production by Sub-Field Years: 1994-2000 Total Ph.D.s: ~700

  10. First Year Graduate Students • Enrollment of first year graduate students in Physics has declined ~25% since early 91-92 • Enrollment of first year US graduate students has declined ~40% • Total Ph.D. graduation rate started declining in 96, reflecting the first year enrollments • By 2005 expect at least 25% less Physics Ph.D. graduates then in 96 • Trend likely to continue! Source: 1998 AIP graduate students report

  11. Where can students do experiments? • 5 Major DOE labs: • Argonne National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Jefferson Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory • Only 10 University labs left: • Florida State University, University of Kentucky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Michigan State University, University of Notre Dame, Ohio State University, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Texas A&M University, University of Washington, Yale • Problem!

  12. Who pays? • The average time for a physics graduate student to obtain a Ph.D. is 6.1 years. • Federal grants provide ~ 45 % of the total financial support for physics doctoral students during that period. • Most of the remaining 55 % comes from other university resources.

  13. Scientific Productivity • ~70% of all physics publications originate in academic institutions • For 1995-2000, A PROLA search of 4205 publications in PRC indicates that this is also true for nuclear science • J. Natowitz

  14. Where do our graduates go? • Recent examples of Ph.D.s at MSU-NSCL: • Mike Lisa (‘95): Prof., OSU • Joelle Murray (‘97): Prof.,Linfield College • Damian Handzy & Phil Zecher (‘96): Wall Street • Gerd Kortemeyer (‘97): Director, LITE • Stefan Hannuschke (‘96): Airline Industry • Sally Gaff (‘96): Ford Motor Company • John Kruse (‘99): Mayo Clinic • Chris Ramsell (‘99): KLA Technologies • Njema Frazier (‘96): Congressional Science Staff Broad education => Diverse career paths

  15. Female Representation, all Physics % female % female

  16. Diversity in nuclear science work force

  17. Example: Saturday Morning Physics • Florida State University • Every Saturday morning in the fall • For last 15 years • 200 high school students each time

  18. Example: Science Theatre • Michigan State University graduate student initiative • First physics, now all sciences • Concerned with science literacy in general public and in particular K-12 • Perform physics demonstration shows for all audiences

  19. DNP Education Committee • Members:Wolfgang Bauer, Chair bauer@nscl.msu.eduPeggy McMahan, Past Chair p_mcmahan@lbl.govChris Gould, DNP Exec. Com. chris_gould@ncsu.eduMary Alberg alberg@seattleu.eduWarren Rogers rogers@westmont.eduAndrea Palounek aptp@lanl.govHoward Matis hsmatis@lbl.gov • 2 research U, 2 small college, 3 national lab representatives

  20. Nuclear Science Wall Chart http://www.lbl.gov/abc/wallchart/index.html Nuclear Science Division at LBNL, Contemporary Physics Education Project

  21. DataBase mailto: NucOutreach@pa.msu.edu

  22. National Nuclear Science Outreach/Education Database REU Michigan State University Undergrad. This program was established in 1988 and has been continuously funded by NSF's REU program since then. Each year, 20 undergraduate students have the opportunity to work on research at MSU ... Contact: Name: W. Bauer Email: bauerw@msu.edu Phone: 517 333 6326 • Web-input for database • Automatic creation of web site • Resource booklet in printed version http://www.nscl.msu.edu/~reu/

  23. Web-based Courses • Problem: Many institutions have sub-critical nuclear physics groups • No advanced nuclear physics courses can be offered • Solution: Multi-institution web-based adv. undergrad. and graduate courses • Shared resources!

  24. Relativistic Heavy-Ion Course • Craig Ogilvie, MIT (now Iowa State) • Participating Institutions: MIT, UCR, UIC, Ohio State, Kent State, MSU, Auckland • Video-conference Course, Fall 1998 • CUseeMe technology • PowerPoint presentations

  25. Oakland Town Meetings • B. Balantekin, University of Wisconsin • W. Bauer, Michigan State University • N. Benczer-Koller, Rutgers University • J. A. Cizewski, Rutgers University • B. Clark, Ohio State University • D. Haase, North Carolina State University • K. Kemper, Florida State University • C. Mader, Hope College • R. McKeown, California Institute of Technology • M. McMahan, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory • J. Natowitz, Texas A&M • W. Rogers, Westmont College

  26. Recommendations 1. University-based research groups and laboratories are the lifeblood of our field. The federal investment into the university infrastructure should be strengthened to take full advantage of the opportunities to immerse young scientists into frontier scientific environments and to train future generations of nuclear scientists for basic research and national needs. 2. Science education and literacy are critical to the future of the nation. Education and outreach activities to K-12 and society-at-large should be a required component of all new major institutional research proposals. Federal funding agencies should identify additional resources to help fund these essential additional activities.

  27. Recommendations 3. The social diversity in the nation should be reflected in its scientific work force. Efforts to recruit, train and retain underrepresented elements of the work force into the study of science must be increased at all levels of education, research and funding. 4. Establishment of a DOE/NSF funded “Educational Fellowship” Modeled after the APS “Congressional Fellowship” program, designed to encourage and support interested scientists to develop new educational initiatives at all levels.

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