STEM mentoring initiative moves forward

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STEM mentoring initiative moves forward http://US2020.org

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ducation in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields fills the materials research pipeline and provides experts who continue to drive materials innovation. But will there be enough materials researchers, and indeed STEM professionals in general, to fill future needs? This question has been a rising concern for governments worldwide with many projecting a significant lack of qualified professionals to fill future STEM jobs. This so-called “STEM Crisis” was addressed in a 2012 report by the US President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, that forecasts a need to produce approximately one million more STEM graduates than currently expected over the next decade to fill the gap between qualified

STEM professionals and STEM jobs in the United States. Now imagine communities banding together to help produce the next generation of STEM professionals. Imagine local governments working in partnership with corporations, nonprofits, and schools to bolster interest in STEM fields through dramatic scale-up of STEM mentorship efforts. That is exactly the goal of the US2020 City Competition. Announced in June 2013 at the Clinton Global Initiative and sponsored by Cisco, the City Competition is a part of the broader US2020 STEM mentorship initiative, and seeks to capitalize on the convening power of cities to build and grow a nationwide mentoring community for STEM education.

Students practice laboratory skills in preparation for a summer internship at the University of California–San Francisco Science and Health Education Partnership (SEP), the coalition lead for US2020 City Competition winner, San Francisco, Calif. Photo credit: Ben Koo, Academic Coordinator at SEP.

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MRS BULLETIN



VOLUME 39 • AUGUST 2014



www.mrs.org/bulletin

US2020 is an answer to the White House call for increased access to STEM education and careers specifically for girls, underrepresented minorities, and low-income children. The initiative, unveiled by President Obama at the 2013 White House Science Fair, is an independent organization focused on STEM mentoring. By the year 2020, the organization seeks to match one million STEM mentors with students ranging from kindergarten through college to create what US2020 calls “moments of discovery”—experiences that spark an interest in STEM-based careers. US2020 is a partnership between education nonprofits and STEM-focused corporations. Incubated within education nonprofit Citizen Schools, US2020 is set to become an independent nonprofit in 2014. The partnership is growing and building momentum, evidenced by both the large number of applicants to the City Competition and by the fact that Raytheon and Chevron have recently joined corporate founding partners Cisco, Cognizant, SanDisk, and Tata Consultancy Services. Fifty-two cities across the United States submitted applications to the City Competition and 13 were chosen as finalists. Eric Schwarz, Co-founder and CEO of Citizen Schools and Executive Chair o