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STEMCO The STEM Coalition

STEMCO is a broad-based coalition working to enhance San Antonio's global competitiveness by collaborating with STEM educators, workforce systems, government, and industry. Learn about the pressures on the workforce ecosystem and the key factors that need to be addressed. Discover the next steps and engage in a Q&A session.

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STEMCO The STEM Coalition

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  1. STEMCO The STEM Coalition US First robotics Edgewood ISD

  2. Background: Pressures & the Workforce Ecosystem Key Factors What We Should Do Next Steps and Q&A

  3. What is STEM? Engineering Science Math Technology

  4. What is STEMCO? A broad based (currently) independent coalition In long-term engagement to address STEM education and career pipelines Mission Enhance San Antonio’s global competitiveness through the collaborative efforts of STEM educators, workforce systems, government and industry.

  5. Assertions @ 100,000 feet Regions that win in the global economy will succeed at long-term transformation of their education and workforce development systems. This will require a collaboration of education, academia, governments, workforce systems, communityleaders and industry.

  6. Middle Schools After School Programs Two-Year Colleges High Schools Magnet Schools Summer Programs Four-Year Colleges Graduate Programs Academies Cities Policy Workforce Boards Counties Articulation Agreements Economic Developers States Assessment Services The Workforce Ecosystem INDUSTRY

  7. Pressures on the Workforce Ecosystem

  8. There are more Indian college graduates than U.S. high school graduates. There are more English speakers in China than in the U.S.

  9. Other nations outpace U.S. in engineering graduates Source: National Science Board, “Science and Engineering Indicators – 2004”; Table 2-33. Russia, India and S Korea data from University of Texas NCR Report 2004

  10. A National Conversation “This is a story about the big public conversation the nation is not having about education … whether an entire generation of kids will fail to make the grade in the global economy because they can't think their way through abstract problems, work in teams, (and) distinguish good information from bad …” Time Magazine, December 2006 Quoting the New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce

  11. Texas Workforce Commission “Meeting Industries Critical Needs” Grant Wins Alamo Community Colleges and Northwest Vista College win $470K to expand robotics summer camp region- and state-wide. 1!

  12. The Key Observation “San Antonio is growing in targeted clusters above the state and national averages, but we are doing so despite the preparedness of our workforce.” Alamo WorkSource Industry Cluster Report 2005

  13. Pressures on the Workforce Ecosystem Houston Community College organizing to graduate 500 bio-technicians Houston stands up Robotics Education Support Center Arlington organizing to recover manufacturing base with state grants “This is a story about the big public conversation the nation is not having about education … whether an entire generation of kids will fail to make the grade in the global economy because they can't think their way through abstract problems, work in teams, (and) distinguish good information from bad …” Time Magazine, December 2006 Quoting the New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce Alamo WorkSource survey raises red flags about sustainability of San Antonio’s growth. More Indian college graduates than U.S. high school graduates More English speakers in China than in the U.S.

  14. Assertions @ 10,000 feet There are innovative STEM programs everywhere you turn over a rock. Alignment is always a challenge. These programs are only loosely connected to industry support, workforce pipelines, regional strategies and global best practices.

  15. What Pockets of STEM activity? • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • XYZ • Alamo Area Aerospace Academy • Information Technology & Security Academy • Manufacturing Technology Academy • SpaceTEAMS • Edgewood Robotics Program • Information Technology Academy (Roosevelt) • Communication Arts High School • Health Careers High School • FIRST robotics competition • BEST robotics competition • TexPrep

  16. The New Education / Workforce Ecosystem? High School, Magnet, Academy (or is it College?) Middle School College / Workplace C O U N S E L I N G C O U N S E L I N G Integrated coursework and exploration Pathway Continuous planning and assessment … Holistic Assess- ment Pathway Continuous planning and assessment … Pathway Continuous planning and assessment …

  17. Master of the Obvious We will have a competitive advantage if we work together. We will be at a disadvantage if we don’t.

  18. So what should we do?

  19. Key Facts • Global pressures are changing the K12-Workforce landscape. • Pressures filter down to regions. • The “wins” are (mostly) regional.

  20. Key Principles • Region-wide strategies This is a regional issue with regional motivators, but with global pressures and global best practices. • Long-term sustainment • A bias for action • Stakeholder education, top to bottom

  21. Key Stakeholders • K12 teachers, counselors and administrators • College faculty and administrators • Workforce and Economic Development Professionals • Industry • Government

  22. Key Questions • How do we create a regional strategy that essential stakeholders deeply buy into? • How do we translate that strategy into action? • How do we sustain action over the long term?

  23. The Answer Has Always Been … • Create a framework for collaboration. • Give it leadership. • Celebrate front line innovators. • Educate stakeholders. • Engage stakeholders in defining strategies and actions. • Build in a bias for action. • Resource and motivate that action. • Review and refine; show results.

  24. Mission and Values ACTION LEADERSHIP Conference Agenda IDEAS STEMCO Symposium NEXT YEAR All Stakeholders

  25. Option 1 -- STEMCO San Antonio 2007 Dr. Willard Daggett Celebrate and give visibility to front line innovators Stakeholder Education Workforce System Alignment to Identified Local Clusters Breakouts & Problem Identification Urgency & Culture Change “Once every year, thousands of America’s school administrators, teachers, parents, business leaders, and policymakers join together at one event for ideas and inspiration that place our children first. It’s the nation’s premier conference on K-12 education reform.”

  26. Status and Next Steps • Create STEMCO. • Find a home (in progress). • Buy or build? • Build a steering committee (in progress). • Secure stakeholder & leading citizen support. • Secure funding – estimated $100K for Year 1. • Commit and go.

  27. Signs of Success • Teachers deeply understand the global imperative. • STEM programs explore careers and feed pipelines in a formal way. • Industry influences curriculum and programs at every level. • Industry provides long-term financial and resource support. They will buy if something valuable is for sale. • These things are pervasive and systemic.

  28. Do this and we will create a generation of kids who are “golden” in every way. An inspired mind An improved economic future An ability to self-fund more education A help in drawing high wage industry in jobs A foundation for innovation & leadership An agent of economic development

  29. STEMCO The STEM Coalition PRESENTATION CREDITS Dr. William Daggett International Center for Leadership in Education Jim Brazell President, VentureRamp, Inc., www.ventureramp.com US First robotics Edgewood ISD

  30. Q&A Is STEMCO yet another organization? That depends. It could be an organization and/or a conference housed elsewhere. It can be anywhere there is big and innovative thinking.

  31. Q&A How do we keep this from just being another meeting? We require leadership to set the tone and demand action. The conference must be designed around finding and taking action. Dollars and support must be available to resource the actions needed. There must be rewards for action and a culture of terminating inactive efforts. • We must recognize that short term solutions are an illusion. We must find a way to initiate and sustain activity to solve our education and workforce problems.

  32. Q&A How do you carry out this effort without staff? You don’t. At most, we can run one conference without staff. Then we need resources to carry the conference forward. Even better, we engage at least an Executive Director in Year 1.

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