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The STEM Crisis Is a Myth
http://spectrum.ieee.org/at-work/education/the-stem-crisis-is-a-myth?wpisrc=nl_wonk#.UiXxiTmk92g.twitterYou must have seen the warning a thousand times: Too few young people study scientific or technical subjects, businesses cant find enough workers in those fields, and the countrys competitive edge is threatened.
It pretty much doesnt matter what country youre talking aboutthe United States is facing this crisis, as is Japan, the United Kingdom, Australia, China, Brazil, South Africa, Singapore, India the list goes on. In many of these countries, the predicted shortfall of STEM (short for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) workers is supposed to number in the hundreds of thousands or even the millions. A 2012 report by President Obamas Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, for instance, stated that over the next decade, 1 million additional STEM graduates will be needed. In the U.K., the Royal Academy of Engineering reported last year that the nation will have to graduate 100 000 STEM majors every year until 2020 just to stay even with demand. Germany, meanwhile, is said to have a shortage of about 210 000 workers in whats known there as the MINT disciplinesmathematics, computer science, natural sciences, and technology.
The situation is so dismal that governments everywhere are now pouring billions of dollars each year into myriad efforts designed to boost the ranks of STEM workers. President Obama has called for government and industry to train 10 000 new U.S. engineers every year as well as 100 000 additional STEM teachers by 2020. And until those new recruits enter the workforce, tech companies like Facebook, IBM, and Microsoft are lobbying to boost the number of H-1B visastemporary immigration permits for skilled workersfrom 65 000 per year to as many as 180 000. The European Union is similarly introducing the new Blue Card visa to bring in skilled workers from outside the EU. The government of India has said it needs to add 800 new universities, in part to avoid a shortfall of 1.6 million university-educated engineers by the end of the decade.
And yet, alongside such dire projections, youll also find reports suggesting just the oppositethat there are more STEM workers than suitable jobs. One study found, for example, that wages for U.S. workers in computer and math fields have largely stagnated since 2000. Even as the Great Recession slowly recedes, STEM workers at every stage of the career pipeline, from freshly minted grads to mid- and late-career Ph.D.s, still struggle to find employment as many companies, including Boeing, IBM, and Symantec, continue to lay off thousands of STEM workers.
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The STEM Crisis Is a Myth (Original Post)
Starry Messenger
Sep 2013
OP
hedgehog
(36,286 posts)1. !
Starry Messenger
(32,342 posts)2. It's a really good article, isn't it?
I'm putting a bookmark to it on my desktop as my go-to article to whip out when people say that corporations are having a hard time finding people.
Really well researched.
antigop
(12,778 posts)3. of course it's a myth! Thanks for posting this! nt