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Carnegie Corporation of New York
Public Affairs 212-207-6273
Carnegie Corporation Of New York And Institute For Advanced Study
Establish Joint Commission On Math And Science Education
Commission
of 22 Includes Prominent Educators, Business Leaders, Current and
Former Governors, and Academics
New
York, NY and Princeton, NJ, November 8, 2007 -- Vartan Gregorian,
President of Carnegie Corporation of New York and Phillip Griffiths,
former director and professor of mathematics of the Institute
for Advanced Study (IAS), announced the creation of a new high-level
joint commission to address the continuing concern that America’s
education systems , both K-12 and higher education, are not providing
the level of instruction in science, mathematics and technology
needed to participate and succeed in a knowledge-based global economy.
The
Carnegie-IAS Commission on Mathematics and Science Education, a
partnership between the New York-based grantmaking foundation and
the Princeton-based center for theoretical research and intellectual
inquiry, will assess the current state of science and math teaching,
identify and analyze successes and failures, and provide recommendations
for improving K-12 science, math and technology education.
The
Commission comprises a mix of knowledgeable, distinguished individuals
and brings together a broad range of experiences and expertise from
government, academia, industry, cultural organizations and educators
(see complete list of Commissioners below). The Commission will
convene its first meeting today at the American Museum of Natural
History.
“America
risks jeopardizing its prosperity, security and indeed its very
way of life if we do not improve the math and science literacy of
our students. Mathematics is a critical gateway subject for college
success and business and technical careers at all levels, and it
is the foundation of higher order thinking. The sciences provide
both a method of approach to problem solving and basic knowledge
needed in our complex society. It should be unacceptable to each
of us that we spend more per pupil than nearly any other nation,
yet the performance of American students in math and science continues
to compare poorly relative to their peers overseas,” said
Vartan Gregorian. “As our global economy becomes ever more
reliant on a workforce with technological know-how, we must be steadfast
in our commitment to improve the capacity of our schools to provide
the kind and quality of science, math and technology education that
our students need, and our nation demands.”
The
Commission expects that the final report’s findings, targeted
for early 2009, will be relevant to federal, state and local officials,
university and faculty administrators, and leaders of the business
and philanthropic communities. In offering its recommendations,
the Commission will emphasize practical, incremental changes—often
improving upon what is already working – rather than suggesting
wholesale, system-wide reform. The Commission will consult with
policymakers, practitioners and scholars in a variety of fields,
and commission research syntheses to inform its final report.
“Science
and math education is too important to our individual and collective
futures to be left to founder. The time for bold action is now,”
said IAS’s Phillip Griffiths, Chair of the Commission. “The
Commission must find practical solutions to increasing the size
and improving the subject matter knowledge of our nation’s
teaching force and promote workable models offering satisfying,
inspiring instruction to motivate student interest in math and science.”
Carnegie
Corporation of New York and IAS have established the joint Commission
at a time when there is a sense of deep national apprehension that
one of the most important components of our continued economic success
and prosperity—America’s technological and scientific
pre-eminence—is fast eroding as other regions increase their
investments in the development of highly skilled workforces geared
toward innovation and the creation of new enterprises.
The
Carnegie-IAS Commission on Mathematics and Science Education will
learn from and build upon the findings of previous blue ribbon panels
on math and science instruction. A series of reports and action
plans issued over the past 20 years by prominent national organizations
representing business, education, philanthropy and technology interests
have alerted the country to our failure to provide the investments
in education necessary to maintain our international leadership
in science and technology or to produce sufficient numbers of technology
workers. While there are many examples of successful science and
technology programs in schools and colleges, indicators of genuine
advances, and a body of research that provides insight into how
to improve educational institutions, the Commission acknowledges
the conventional wisdom that little progress has been made in providing
enriched science and technology education.
The
Commission’s work takes place within a context of transformative
change in global labor markets as existing industries reconfigure
or disappear altogether while others are being created, spurred
by advances in science and technology. This changing landscape demands
both higher levels of achievement in mathematics by all students
during high school and better understanding of the kind and quality
of mathematics and science education the nation should be providing
in college to larger numbers of students.
Carnegie-IAS
Commission on Mathematics and Science Education
Phillip
A. Griffiths (Chair) – Institute for Advanced Study professor
of mathematics and past director
Bruce
M. Alberts – University of California, San Francisco professor
of biochemistry and biophysics, former National Academy of Sciences
president
Michele
Cahill – Ex officio – Carnegie Corporation
of New York, vice president for national program coordination and
director of urban education
Donald L. Carcieri – Governor of Rhode Island, former high
tech manufacturing executive and high school mathematics teacher
Ralph J. Cicerone – National Academy of Sciences president,
atmospheric scientist
Rudolph F. Crew – Miami-Dade County Public Schools superintendent
Norman C. Francis – Xavier University of Louisiana president
Richard B. Freeman – Harvard University professor of economics
Ellen V. Futter – American Museum of Natural History president
Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. – The Carlyle Group, chairman, former
IBM CEO
Vartan
Gregorian – Ex officio – Carnegie Corporation
of New York president
Neil Grabois – former Colgate University president and former
Carnegie Corporation of New York vice president, mathematician
Susan Hockfield – MIT president, neuroscientist
James B. Hunt, Jr. - Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice partner,
former Governor of North Carolina
Susanna Loeb – Stanford University associate professor of
education, Institute for Research on Education Policy and Practice
director, economist
Thomas W. Payzant – Harvard Graduate School of Education senior
fellow, Boston superintendent (ret.), former U.S. Asst. Sec. for
Elementary and Secondary Education
Thomas F. Taft – Hardware Suppliers of America, chairman,
former state senator in North Carolina
Philip Uri Triesman – University of Texas-Austin professor
of mathematics, Dana Center director
Katherine E. Ward – Aragon High School (CA) biology teacher
Gene Wilhoit – Council of Chief State School Officers executive
director, former state chief in Kentucky and Arkansas
Suzanne M. Wilson – Michigan State University professor of
education, department of teacher education chair
Gary
A. Ybarra – Duke University, department of electrical and
computer engineering, professor of practice and director of undergraduate
studies
About
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Carnegie Corporation of New York was created by Andrew Carnegie
in 1911 to promote “the advancement and diffusion of knowledge
and understanding.” For more than 95 years the Corporation
has carried out Carnegie’s vision of philanthropy by building
on his two major concerns: international peace and advancing education
and knowledge. As a private grantmaking foundation, the Corporation
will invest more than $100 million this year in nonprofits to fulfill
Mr. Carnegie's mission, “to do real and permanent good in
this world.” The Corporation’s capital fund, originally
donated at a value of about $135 million, had a market value of
approximately $3 billion on September 30, 2007.
About
The Institute for Advanced Study
The Institute for Advanced Study is one of the world’s leading
centers for theoretical research and intellectual inquiry. The Institute
exists to encourage and support fundamental scholarship –
the original, often speculative, thinking that produces advances
in knowledge. It provides for the mentoring of younger scholars
by Faculty, and it offers all who work there the freedom to undertake
research that will make significant contributions in any of the
broad range of fields in the sciences and humanities studied at
the Institute.
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