#StandardsGoals for 2024: What’s new for BISAC - Tech Forum 2024
Role of Education, Workforce Development in US Competitiveness
1. Super Systems: The Role of
Education, Workforce and
Economic Development
Collaboration in U.S.
Competitiveness
Texas Workforce Commission, Dallas, TX,
November 28, 2012
JIM BRAZELL
jimbrazell@ventureramp.com
2. General Bernard
Schriever
Feb. 19, 1957
Inaugural Air Force Office of
Scientific Research
Astronautics Symposium in
San Diego.
Commander of Western
Development Division
Headquarters
Charles Wilson
10. Massachusetts Governor William Douglas appointed a Commission on
Industrial and Technical Education that later became known as the
Douglas Commission. The Commission reported:
1. There was a widespread interest in the subject of industrial education.
2. The lack of skilled workmen was not chiefly a want of manual dexterity
but a want of what what may be called industrial intelligence.
3. There was a growing feeling of inadequacy of the existing public school
system to fully meet the needs of modern industrial and social conditions.
The schools were too exclusively literary in their spirit, scope, and
methods.
4. To the question of who should bear the expense of technical education,
the common answer was the state.
11. On June 7, 1905, Massachusetts Governor William Douglas appointed a
Commission on Industrial and Technical Education that later became known as the
Douglas Commission. The Commission reported:
1. There was a widespread interest in the subject of industrial education.
2. The lack of skilled workmen was not chiefly a want of manual dexterity but a
want of what what may be called industrial intelligence.
3. There was a growing feeling of inadequacy of the existing public school system
to fully meet the needs of modern industrial and social conditions. The schools
were too exclusively literary in their spirit, scope, and methods.
4. To the question of who should bear the expense of technical education, the
common answer was the state.
(Barlow, 2001 Years of Education 1776-1976, Feb. 1976)
Vocational Education, 1826-1917
12. Common Core State Standards & Career and Technical Education: Bridging the Divide between
College and Career Readiness was prepared for Achieve by Hans Meeder and Thom Suddreth of
the Meeder Consulting Group, with the Association for Career and Technical Education and the
National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium.
“...all too
often, the
focus on
“college
readiness”
and “career
readiness”
remains in
two distinct
silos...”
41. A Pacemaker the
Size of a Tic Tac -
Medtronic is using
microelectronics to
make a pacemaker so
small it can be
injected. Technology
Review
http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/32436/?
nlid=4177
45. What are the
implications for work?
http://www.calcars.org/photos.html
The increasing footprint of automation in cars, trains, planes, and heavy
equipment has necessitated a shift from mechanic to “technician.”
46. Software
Motors
Computers
Electronics
Cyber physical systems utilize
information technology
(computers, software, and
networks, “cyber”) to direct
the communication and
control of physical processes
and systems (or vice versa).
The structure of technology is evolving from
informational to cyber physical.
47. “Superior is about precision... high quality and high tolerance...
Tolerances are within thousandths of an inch.” --Randy DeBolt,
Co-founder, Superior Extrusion
48. “Superior’s processes are all automated. Technicians work at the
intersection of mechanical, computer, and electrical processes.” --
Randy DeBolt, Co-founder, Superior Extrusion
51. “Digital control systems require
people who have theory and
skill... Most new employees
have associates or university
degrees.” --Troy Sarles,
Administrator for Employee
Relations, HR, Cliffs Natural
Resources
52. “We never physically
touch product... We
support safety, people,
process and
machines...” --Troy
Sarles, Administrator
for Employee
Relations, HR, Cliffs
Natural Resources
54. Butler Community College
April 7 to 11, 2008
D-J Engineering
Engineering Design
$50K - $180K
Machinists & Sheet Metal
$22K - $42K
--Razaul A. Chowdhury, President
56. “In most industries you
have electricians,
mechanics and IT, in
wind, you are expected
to do everything.”
-- Bryan Gregory, Jr.
11.1.2006, TSTC West TX, Sweetwater
60. The technicians who work at the intersection
of cyber and physical systems and processes
are referred to as “multi-craft technicians,”
“multi-skill technicians,” “integrated systems
technicians,” “mechatronics technicians,”
“engineering technicians,” “instrumentation
and control systems technicians,” “process
control technicians,” and “Science and
Technology R&D technicians” among other
names.
63. 4.16.2007, TSTC Waco
“….we had to
upgrade our basic
mechanic skills to
include
programmable
logic controllers
and electrical
systems.”--Dr. Ron
Lentsch, Allergan
64. “In 2006, demand was off the charts.
Every graduate had a job 6 months
before graduation. Chemical
Technology Graduates typically start
at $35K and it is not uncommon for
them to make $60K-to-$70K per year.”
–Robert Hernandez, TSTC
69. The role of workforce, education, and
economic development collaboration in
U.S. competitiveness is to enable
innovation.
Similar to space in 1957, cyberspace is
now the the platform and engine of
education, workforce, and economic
innovation, while simultaneously
representing an emerging domain of
warfare, terrorism, and crime.
The integration of computers, networks,
software, and machines (cyber physical
systems) has given birth to a new
generation of work, education, and
economic development.
71. Morrill Act, July 2, 1862
Practical
Arts
Liberal
Arts
S&T
Motivates
New
Ed
“...promote the liberal and practical education of the
industrial classes.” (Barlow, 2001 Years of Education
1776-1976, Feb. 1976)
72. Hail the skillful
cunning hand!
Hail to the
cultural mind!
Contending for
the world’s
command,
Here let them
be combined.
(Barlow, 2001 Years of
Education 1776-1976, Feb.
1976)
St. Louis Manual Training
School, 1880
Steam-driven threshing machine near Hallock, Minnesota. Photo from
1882, scanned from H. Arnold Barton, A Folk Divided: Homeland
Swedes and Swedish Americans, 1840—1940, Uppsala: Acta
Universitatis Upsaliensis, 1994. Held by Nordiska Museet, Stockholm.
Public domain by reason of age in Wikipedia.
73. Understanding the
structure of technology
Defining STEM in the
context of workforce and
economic development
Education pathways to
innovation
81. 5.5% STEM JOBS
5.5% of U.S. Workforce,
7.6MM STEM Jobs in
2010
David Langdon, George McKittrick, David Beede, Beethika Khan, and Mark Doms, “STEM: Good Jobs Now and for
the Future.” US Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics Administration last accessed online October 28,
2012 http://www.esa.doc.gov/sites/default/files/reports/documents/stemfinalyjuly14_1.pdf
82. David Beede, Tiffany Julian, David Langdon, George McKittrick, Beethika Khan, and Mark Doms, Office of the Chief
Economist, “Women in STEM: A Gender Gap to Innovation.” US Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics
Administration last accessed online October 28, 2012 http://www.esa.doc.gov/sites/default/files/reports/documents/
womeninstemagaptoinnovation8311.pdf
83.
84. David Beede, Tiffany Julian, David Langdon, George McKittrick, Beethika Khan, and Mark Doms, Office of the Chief
Economist, “Women in STEM: A Gender Gap to Innovation.” US Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics
Administration last accessed online October 28, 2012 http://www.esa.doc.gov/sites/default/files/reports/documents/
womeninstemagaptoinnovation8311.pdf
85. ½ of STEM Jobs are
Network and
Information Tech
David Langdon, George McKittrick, David Beede, Beethika Khan, and Mark Doms, “STEM: Good Jobs Now and for
the Future.” US Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics Administration last accessed online October 28,
2012 http://www.esa.doc.gov/sites/default/files/reports/documents/stemfinalyjuly14_1.pdf
5.5% STEM JOBS
86. There are between 3.8 (DOL) and 5.8
(OECD) million people in the US
employed in NIT.
Computer and mathematical occupations
are projected to add 785,700 new jobs from
2008 to 2018.
As a group, these jobs are forecast to grow
more than twice as fast as the average for
all occupations in the economy.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/pcast-nitrd-report-2010.pdf
87. I
n 2008,the Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative listed “expanded
cyber education” as one of its key recommendations. In 2009, the Partnership
for Public Service produced a report stating that the current pipeline of cyber-
security workers into the government was inadequate.1
In the same year,Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates stated that the military was “desperately short of people who
have the capabilities [to operate in cyberspace].”2
And in 2011, the Inspector Gen-
eral of the Federal Bureau of Investigation reported that 35 percent of the special
agents investigating national security cyber-intrusion cases lacked necessary training
Preparing the Pipeline:
The U.S. Cyber Workforce
for the Future
by David J. Kay,Terry J. Pudas, and Brett Young
DEFENSE HORIZONS
National Defense University
LSECURITYPOLICY
About the Authors
David J. Kay is a Research Analyst
in the Center for Technology and
National Security Policy (CTNSP), In-
stitute for National Strategic Studies,
at the National Defense University.
Terry J. Pudas is a Senior Research
Fellow in CTNSP. Brett Young was a
Research Assistant in CTNSP.
Key Points
There is widespread agreement in
the public and private sectors that
U.S. educational institutions are un-
able to meet the growing demand
for cyber workforce professionals.
It is difficult to measure the true
size and requirements for the cyber
workforce due to the lack of com-
August 2012
There is widespread agreement in
the public and private sectors that
U.S. educational institutions are un-
able to meet the growing demand
for cyber workforce professionals.
88. 88
“In this report, we
define STEM jobs to
include professional
and technical support
occupations in the
fields of computer
science and
mathematics,
engineering, and life
and physical
sciences.”
David Langdon, George McKittrick, David
Beede, Beethika Khan, and Mark Doms,
“STEM: Good Jobs Now and for the Future.”
US Department of Commerce, Economics and
Statistics Administration last accessed online
October 28, 2012 http://www.esa.doc.gov/
sites/default/files/reports/documents/
stemfinalyjuly14_1.pdf
89. ANTHONY P. CARNEVALE NICOLE SMITH MICHELLE MELTON, “Science,
Technology, Engineering & Mathematics”, Georgetown University, Center on
Education and the Workforce, October 20, 2012 last accessed October 28,
2012 at http://cew.georgetown.edu/stem/.
90. ANTHONY P. CARNEVALE NICOLE SMITH MICHELLE MELTON, “Science,
Technology, Engineering & Mathematics”, Georgetown University, Center on
Education and the Workforce, October 20, 2012 last accessed October 28,
2012 at http://cew.georgetown.edu/stem/.
Note: STEM does
not include medical
and health jobs or
many of the middle
skill jobs
transformed by
technology in the
past decade across
industry sectors.
91. CTE - Five Ways That Pay, Center for Education and the Workforce, Georgetown University, Sep 2012,
Last accessed online October 28, 2012 at http://www9.georgetown.edu/grad/gppi/hpi/cew/pdfs/
CTE.FiveWays.FullReport.pdf
While STEM
accounts for
7.6MM jobs,
there are 29
million middle
skills jobs
62% of middle
skills job pay
$35K plus
2 out of 5
middle skill
jobs pay $50k
plus
92. US Department of Labor and US Bureau of the Census in National Skills Coalition
93. Technology impacts all jobs and academic
disciplines—all aspects of life.
5.5% STEM JOBS
U.S. Department of Commerce,
Economics and Statistics Administration,
STEM Jobs Now and for the Future,
7.6MM STEM Jobs in 2010, 5.5% of U.S.
Workforce
98. Since going public on August 8, 2008, the
company’s stock has soared from $12.50 a share to
more than $56 a share today. The company has a
market capitalization of $6.5 billion.
http://www.siliconhillsnews.com/2012/03/23/rackspace-and-graham-westons-impact-on-silicon-hills/
2008
101. Richard V. Butler, Ph.D.
Mary E. Stefl, Ph.D.
Trinity University
SFBR is home to the world's
largest computer cluster devoted
to statistical genetic analysis.
Home of military
medicine.
2005
102. Miguel Yacaman, who heads UTSA's physics and astronomy department, shows off images taken by the
world's most powerful electron microscope, nicknamed 'Helenita' after King Ranch heiress Helen Groves,
whose gift was used to buy the device. / SA
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/education/article/UTSA-boasts-world-class-gift-794295.php
106. General Bernard
Schriever,
Father of the U.S. Air Force
space and missile program
Feb. 19, 1957
Inaugural Air Force Office of
Scientific Research Astronautics
Symposium in San Diego.
Commander of Western
Development Division
Headquarters
113. TE(a)MS Model Schools
Classical Contemporary Education
• High degree of faculty interaction across disciplines
and grades (systems)
• Integrating CTE, Arts and Academics (systems)
• Learning laboratories and worldly experience with
industry-standard tools, processes and problems
(systems)
• Emerging P-20 systems (P-20) -- Sequenced,
integrated and transferable courses HS to CTC to
University (systems)
• Transdisciplinary culture (systems) -- Context and
frame for learning is real world, purpose driven and
action oriented.
120. Transdiscipline
Transdiscipline is the organization of
people across academic and
institutional silos to innovate.
Innovation is the creation of new
knowledge, tools, processes, and
systems.
144. Learn more about TX cyber
today at the Texas Cyber
Education, Workforce, and
Economic Development
session from 2:00-3:15.
145. Understanding the
structure of technology
Defining STEM in the
context of workforce and
economic development
Education pathways to
innovation
146. Common Core State Standards & Career and Technical Education: Bridging the Divide between
College and Career Readiness was prepared for Achieve by Hans Meeder and Thom Suddreth of
the Meeder Consulting Group, with the Association for Career and Technical Education and the
National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium.
“The goal of
ensuring that all
students graduate
from high school
ready for college,
careers and life has
taken hold in every
state across the
nation. Yet all too
often, the focus on
“college readiness”
and “career
readiness” remains
in two distinct
silos...”
149. Super Systems: The Role of
Education, Workforce and
Economic Development
Collaboration in U.S.
Competitiveness
Texas Workforce Commission, Dallas, TX,
November 28, 2012
JIM BRAZELL
jimbrazell@ventureramp.com