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SHPE Jr. Chapter STEM S cience, T echnology, E ngineering and M ath Fort Worth, TX November 2012

SHPE Jr. Chapter STEM S cience, T echnology, E ngineering and M ath Fort Worth, TX November 2012. Outline. Bottom Line Up Front NAVSEA Objectives Penn State STEM Navy / Naval Sea Systems Command. 2. Bottom Line Up-Front (BLUF).

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SHPE Jr. Chapter STEM S cience, T echnology, E ngineering and M ath Fort Worth, TX November 2012

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  1. SHPE Jr. Chapter STEMScience, Technology, Engineering and MathFort Worth, TXNovember 2012

  2. Outline • Bottom Line Up Front • NAVSEA Objectives • Penn State • STEM • Navy / Naval Sea Systems Command 2

  3. Bottom Line Up-Front (BLUF) • The Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) wants to help you grow and climb so you can lift as you climb • You will learn about STEM and STEM Careers • You will learn about the Navy, NAVSEA and NAVSEA STEM careers that you should think about 3

  4. NAVSEA Objectives • Enhance STEM career awareness in Hispanic communities • Raise Hispanic community awareness of NAVSEA civilian STEM careers • NAVSEA, SHPE national partnerships to help us all lift as we climb 4

  5. Penn State University Founded in 1855 25 Campuses 96,000 Total Enrollment 6,000 Full Time Faculty Degrees in every STEM Discipline Outstanding SHPE Chapter Applied Research Laboratory (ARL) STEM 5

  6. Penn State ARL Mission n Serve as a university center of research excellence and advanced capabilities for critical Naval sciences and technology and related Department of Defense (DoD) applications n Champion the transition of advanced technology to operational systems in support of Naval and DoD acquisition programs and the defense industry n Contribute to the education, research, and service mission of The Pennsylvania State University SEAWOLF CLASS DD-X CONCEPT 6 AAAV

  7. Penn State SHPE Chapter • High School Leadership Conference 2012 • Extreme Engineering Challenge: SeaPerch 7

  8. Your SHPE Chapter • Insert Your Chapter Information • Insert Chapter Highlights • Insert Chapter Programs • Insert Chapter Pictures

  9. Science Technology Engineering Math STEM 9

  10. STEM stands for a cluster of careers and courses in the fields of: Science Technology Engineering Math What is STEM Any field or career that: • Creates, Discovers or Applies New Knowledge to Make Life Better for All! 10

  11. STEM Working Definitions • Science aims to understand the “why” and “how” of nature • Technology is the process by which humans modify nature to meet their needs and wants • Engineering seeks to shape the natural world to meet human needs • Math is the science of numbers and... 11

  12. STEM careers : Search for new information, methods, and ways to do and understand things better Work to effectively and efficiently solve the world’s problems Require you to innovate, create, & discover Require you to ask why and how about things that need to be built, invented and designed In Other Words… 12

  13. The World Needs You We want you to explore STEM careers… because the World needs YOU and you may not have been getting the message! 13

  14. Interested in creating & being “outside the box” (Artistic) Interested in organizing, processing, & record-keeping (Conventional) Interested in helping society and individuals (Social) Interested in leading, persuading and selling (Enterprising) STEM Fields Value People Who Are: 14

  15. Everyday outcomes of STEM: Cell phones, smart phones or MP3 players - computer engineering, high tech manufacturing Video games - computer engineering: hardware, and software Cars – mechanical, mining, petroleum aerospace, and industrial engineering, math, manufacturing Digital photography - computer software and hardware engineering, physics, math, materials Plastic - petroleum engineering, material science How You Benefit from STEM Today 15

  16. Earn good pay Earn respect Learn new things everyday Create new technologies Be valuable to society What’s In it for You? 16

  17. Education Pays! $40,702 17 *Education Pays, 2012, College Board

  18. STEM Education Pays More! • Engineersdepending on field: $54K to $114K • Software Engineers: $90.5K • Chemists: $70K • Medical Scientists: $77K • Geoscientist: $82.5K • Environmental Scientist: $60K • Biochemist/Biophysicist: $83K Average Salary with Bachelor Degree $40.7K These numbers were taken from the U.S. Occupational Outlook Handbook 18

  19. Agricultural and food scientists Biological scientists Conservation scientists and foresters Medical scientists Atmospheric scientists Chemists and materials scientists Environmental scientists and specialists Geoscientists and hydrologists Physicists and astronomers Some Science & Technology Careers SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY • Computer network, systems, and database administrators • Engineering Technicians • Computer software engineers and computer programmers • Computer support specialists • Computer systems analysts More Science Career Info See: OOH Professional Occupations 19

  20. Aerospace Agricultural Biomedical Chemical Civil Electrical Electronics Environmental Some Engineering & Math Careers ENGINEERING • Health and Safety • Industrial • Marine • Materials • Mechanical • Mining and Geological • Nuclear • Petroleum MATHEMATICS • Operations Research Analysts • Statisticians • Actuaries • Mathematicians For more info:OOH Engineers 20

  21. Your STEM Class Opportunities SCIENCE • Engineering • Engineering Technology Concepts • Engineering Design • Engineering Technician • Engineering Careers • Physics • Biology • Chemistry • Technology • Production Systems • Photography • Architecture • Computer Assisted Design • Electrical Technology • Math • General Math • Algebra I/II • Trigonometry • Geometry • Calculus 21

  22. Where Can You Use Your Strengths in STEM? Your Opportunity 22 22

  23. NAVSEA Welcome Video

  24. Navy Foundational Skills Graduates Ready for Tasking student-focused career development Information providing technical and career opportunity details for US citizens interested in Navy civilian STEM careers 24

  25. Chain of Command President and Commander-in-Chief All Civilians Secretary of Defense Secretary of the Army Secretary of the Navy Secretary of the Air Force 25

  26. The Navy’s Job The Navy is one of three military branches of the Department of Defense that, when directed by the President, provides the people (uniformed and non-uniformed, also known as civilian), ships, aircraft, weapons, communications equipment, land vehicles, small watercraft, and other stuff) to: 26

  27. The Navy’s Job (1) protect the United States and its allies against its adversaries; and those who would harm us 27

  28. The Navy’s Job (2) provide humanitarian aid wherever needed around the world 28

  29. How the Navy Does its Job • Recruits and trains men and women to serve in the uniformed Navy and Marine Corps (pilots, ship captains, Navy seals, nuclear engineering duty officers, sonar men, etc) • Recruits and trains men and women to serve as civilians (engineers, scientists, accountants, doctors, nurses, lawyers, etc.) to support the Navy and Marine Corps operating forces • With their partners in industry the Navy develops and purchases all of the stuff (ships, aircraft, weapons, communications hardware, land vehicles, small watercraft, etc) needed to equip its operating forces 29

  30. How the Navy Does its Job • Maintains a technical workforce, many of which are civilians, to oversee the development, design and purchase of its military equipment • Conducts research and technology development at universities, such as Penn State University, industry and government laboratories to always be prepared to protect the United States and its allies 30

  31. How YOU Get to Work for the Navy • Civilian Path • Graduate from high school • Get accepted into college because college is critical for getting a civilian job with the Navy (scoring high on ACTs and SATs helps) • The Navy offers help for getting into college, getting through college, and getting a job with the Navy • The Department of Defense Science and Engineering Apprenticeship Program (SEAP) offers high school students an opportunity for a summer job to gain experience working in a science or engineering environment if you live near a Navy facility (Insert Navy Facility) • Military Path • Graduate from high school • Contact your Navy recruiter to explore joining the uniformed Navy and do an outstanding job • Once in the uniformed Navy take advantage of all Navy Education & Training activities like the Seaman to Admiral program which supports you while you get your college degree 31

  32. Career Levels Entry: Carries out assignments using basic principles, concepts, and methodology Journey: Experienced worker who has achieved the full performance level of the defined job Expert: Typically manages or advises management and colleagues on difficult problems, conducts special studies, proposes alternatives, and represents the command in committees and seminars; serves as the technical expert in a specific area NAVSEA Civilian Career Planning We care about you and want you to succeed We Focus on Helping You Plan Your Career Path

  33. Potential NAVSEA Career Paths 33

  34. Department of the Navy Secretary of the Navy The Honorable Ray Mabus Under Secretary of the Navy Commandant of the Marine Corps GEN John Amos Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) ADM J. Greenert Operational and Fleet Commands Shore Commands Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Financial Management & Comptroller) Assistant Secretaryof the Navy (Research, Development & Acquisition) COMNAVSEA VADM Kevin McCoy Appropriations Matters Office (FMBE) Civilian PEO ORGANIZATIONS + Carriers +Integrated Warfare Systems + Littoral Combat Ships +Ships + Submarines Military 34

  35. Navy Systems Commands UNITED STATES NAVY Systems Commands SYSCOM NAVSEA SPAWAR MARCOR SYSCOM NAVAIR NAVFAC NAVSUP

  36. NAVSEA • A diverse organization with a single purpose of keeping America’s Navy #1 in the world • A world-class employer of choice that inspires innovation • We set the standard for Naval engineering, shipbuilding and ship maintenance • We support humanitarian efforts world-wide We develop, deliver and maintain ships and systems on time, on cost for the United States Navy. 36

  37. NAVSEA Leadership Commander Naval Sea Systems Command SEA 00 – VADM K. McCoy Vice Commander SEA 09 – RADM J. Orzalli Executive Director SEA 00B – B. Persons (SES) Total Force & Corporate Operations SEA 10 P. Harrell (SES) S. Roden Undersea Warfare SEA 07 RDML D. Duryea S. Schulze (SES) Comptroller SEA 01 M. Maguire (SES) COR J. Melone Contracts SEA 02 J. Punderson (SES) Capt B. Sturken Log, Maint & Ind Ops SEA 04 RADM J. Campbell S. Smoot (SES) Naval Systems Engineering SEA 05 RADM T. Eccles M. Kistler (SES) Surface Warfare SEA 21 RADM J. Mcmanamon B. Anderson (SES) Commander Naval Undersea Warfare Center NUWC RDML T. Wears D. Mccormack (SES) Commander Naval Surface Warfare Center NSWC RDML J. Shannon S. Mitchell (SES) Naval Shipyards SURFMEPP SUBMEP SUPSHIPs SEA 05 SEA 05C SEA 05L Cost Engineering and Industrial Analysis Littoral and Mine Warfare Technical Warrant Holders/ Subject Matter Experts Warranted Ship Design Managers SEA 05D SEA 05V SEA 05U SEA 05P SEA 05Z SEA 05H SEA 05E Ship Design Aircraft Carrier Design Submarine Design Ship Integrity Marine Engineering Human Systems Integration Test and Evaluation 37

  38. Ship Terminology Mast Stern Starboard Bridge Bow Port Side 1 Nautical mile = 1.15 land miles 40 Knots = 46 Miles per hour 43.5 Knots = 50 Miles per hour Keel 38

  39. Ships, Aircraft Carriers & Submarines

  40. Ships are huge Ships are complex to construct Multi-mission People live in this product Ships have an extremely high cost per unit Lengthy design and build times Low quantities are procured Long service lives expected (40 years) Unique industry issues Ships operate chronically in a hostile environment Prototypes are not used for ship itself Follow ships awarded before the lead ship is tested Testing for new units is not destructive WHEN Compared to Other Products:

  41. Expected Service Life is Long 5-15 YEARS 10-15 YEARS 10-20 YEARS 30-50 YEARS “6-8 for LCS” “20-25 for LCS” Subsystem Design & Const. Follow Ship Service Development Lead Ship Production Life 55 - 100 YEARS

  42. NAVSEA’s Naval Shipyards Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Norfolk Naval Shipyard Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard Web Site: http://www.shipyards.navy.mil

  43. NAVSEA Warfare Centers

  44. NAVSEA Warfare Centers

  45. Provide the technical operations, people, technology, engineering services and products needed to equip and support the Fleet and meet the warfighter's needs Serve as the Navy's principal Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E) activity for surface ship and submarine systems and subsystems Provide depot maintenance and In-Service Engineering support to ensure that the systems fielded today perform consistently and reliably in the future NAVSEA Warfare Center Roles

  46. NAVSEA Warfare Centers

  47. Thanks and Start Planning • Stay active in your SHPE Jr. Chapter • Be sure you and your family know the path to being prepared for college and a STEM degree • Be sure to get our contact information so • you can stay in touch and get any questions you might have answered • Let us know what we can do to help you and your family and how we can help you help your community 47

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