Office of Science and Technology Policy Blog
Watch and Engage: Girls in STEM
Posted by on April 23, 2012 at 6:22 PM EDTWomen and girls continue to be significantly underrepresented in the STEM fields – a trend that starts early and comes at a serious cost to both the career prospects of our young women and the success of our economy. By ensuring women and girls receive the exposure, encouragement, and support they need to enter and succeed in STEM fields, this country can benefit from the full range and diversity of its talent.
The White House Council on Women and Girls is excited to announce a White House event that features a panel of trailblazing women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields who will share their experiences and encourage young women to follow in their footsteps – or blaze a trail of their own. Watch the event live at www.wh.gov/live tomorrow, Tuesday, April 24, 2012 at 10:30am ET. During the event, panelists will answer questions from a live audience and also take questions submitted online. Ask your questions here or on Twitter using the hashtag #GirlsInSTEM.
This event will also include the very first public screening of “Girls in STEM,” a video on girls in STEM, featuring footage from girls who participated in the 2012 White House Science Fair.
From Friday: NASA Reaching for New Heights
Posted by on April 23, 2012 at 8:08 AM EDT[Editor's Note: This has been cross-posted from the White House Blog.]
In his gloomy Washington Post commentary today on yesterday’s ceremony transferring ownership of the Space Shuttle Discovery from NASA to the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, Charles Krauthammer urged readers to think of that transfer as the funeral for U.S. leadership in space. Nothing could be further from the truth. The United States remains far and away the world leader in space technology and exploration. As long as appropriate support continues to be forthcoming from Congress, this will remain the case indefinitely.
Krauthammer suggests that if China succeeds in putting astronauts on the Moon by 2025, as that country plans, they will have “overtaken” the United States. How absurd! Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the Moon in 1969. How does China managing this feat fifty-six years later, if this happens, amount to “overtaking” us? Obviously, the United States could repeat its lunar feats of the 1960s and 1970s if that were the next most important thing to do in space exploration for the money. But it isn’t! We may well return to the lunar surface again as one of many destinations in the future, but for now, our immediate, more scientifically rewarding goals include sending astronauts to an asteroid in the 2020s, and Mars in the mid-2030s. They bring scientific and technological challenges worthy of a great nation and a true world leader.
Krauthammer doesn’t even mention the International Space Station. The United States led the planning, design, and construction of this $53 billion marvel – an orbiting science and technology-development laboratory that has been continuously manned since 2000. Under the previous administration’s plan, it was underfunded after 2016, implying intent to abandon it long before its scientific and engineering potential had been realized. Under the new bipartisan space-exploration plans worked out between the Obama Administration and the Congress, we will continue to operate the Space Station until at least 2020 and perhaps beyond.
In robotic space exploration, too, nobody else comes close. At this very moment, a stream of data is flowing to us from missions orbiting the Sun, Mercury, the Moon, the asteroid Vesta, Mars, and Saturn. We now have missions on the way to Jupiter, Pluto and Mars. The Hubble, Spitzer, Chandra, and Fermi space telescopes continue to make groundbreaking discoveries on an almost daily basis. We’re on track in the construction of the James Webb Space Telescope, the most sophisticated science telescope ever constructed to help us reveal the mysteries of the cosmos in ways never before possible. Last year, the MESSENGER spacecraft became the first-ever to enter orbit around Mercury. And shortly thereafter, the Ebb and Flow satellites began orbiting and mapping the gravity field of the Moon.
We are ahead in looking downward from space as well as in looking outward. Sixteen Earth-science missions currently in orbit study the Earth as an integrated system. In 2011, Aquarius SAC-D produced the first global view of ocean surface salinity and the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite began making observations of Earth’s weather and climate. No other country can match our capabilities in Earth observation from space.
Declining to remind readers that it was President Bush, not President Obama who ended the shuttle program (President Obama actually added 2 flights), Krauthammer carps about the Bush Administration’s successor to the Space Shuttle having been canceled in this Administration, but the Bush “Constellation” program as designed was behind schedule and over budget – “unexecutable” in the words of the independent blue-ribbon commission set up by the Obama Administration to review our options. In cancelling Constellation per se, we have kept the parts of it that made sense. A new heavy-lift rocket and multi-purpose crew vehicle developed out of the Constellation program will be instrumental in carrying U.S. astronauts to an asteroid, to other deep-space destinations, and ultimately to Mars.
When Krauthammer complains about the expanded role for the private sector in carrying U.S. astronauts and cargo to the Space Station, as foreseen in the current bipartisan plan and as is progressing well in practice, he seems unaware that every U.S. launch vehicle and space capsule in history – including the Space Shuttle – has been built by private corporations. That is continuing, but on a more competitive basis. Indeed, in the same week as Discovery’s transfer to the Smithsonian, NASA gave the green light to a commercial company, SpaceX, for a planned April 30 launch from Kennedy Space Center, with a berthing at the ISS a few days later. Later this year, Orbital Sciences will launch their Cygnus module and Antares launch vehicle from Wallops Island, Virginia. In FY 2013, NASA plans for at least three flights delivering research and logistics hardware to the ISS by U.S.-developed cargo delivery systems.
It should also be noted that NASA’s focus on new space technologies is seeding innovation, supporting economic vitality and helping create new jobs and expanded opportunities for a skilled workforce.
We understand that in this election year, there are some who will go out of their way to paint a pessimistic view of the country in order to score political points. But, we believe that America’s technological advancement and continued leadership in space exploration is too important to fall prey to political distortions.
Our Shuttle program was an historic achievement, but an even brighter future is on the horizon. Make no mistake about it - the future in space is happening right now, and it is being built right here in America.
Charles Bolden is the Administrator of NASA and Dr. John P. Holdren is Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and Co-Chair of the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
Learn more about TechnologyEntrepreneurs in Residence: Start Your Engines…
Posted by on April 19, 2012 at 1:58 PM EDTStartup companies are engines of job creation, fueled in no small measure by immigrant entrepreneurs starting new companies across the country. President Obama supports legislation to create a visa designed specifically for immigrant entrepreneurs, as part of his vision for a 21st-century immigration system. But instead of just waiting for Congress to act, there’s a great deal the Federal government can do on its own to streamline immigration pathways for startup founders.
One approach is the Entrepreneurs in Residence (EIR) initiative, launched by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) at a stakeholder summit in Silicon Valley earlier this year. USCIS, the Federal agency responsible for administering visa programs, announced last week that its new EIR “Tactical Team” has hit the ground running. Its 90-day mission: to streamline existing visa pathways for immigrant entrepreneurs interested in coming to the United States to create jobs.
Learn more about ImmigrationOSTP Releases Data on STEM Education
Posted by on April 18, 2012 at 5:41 PM EDTToday, OSTP publishes a trove of data on federal STEM education activities, the 2010 Federal STEM Education Inventory Data Set. The data set is accessible on the OSTP site and also at data.gov. The data set includes information on what STEM education programs the government funded in 2010, what audiences were targeted, what outcomes were monitored, and much more. The data set, which includes information from 13 Federal agencies that support education programs focused on STEM subjects, is the most comprehensive description of Federal STEM education programs.
Learn more about EducationGrowing the Technology Talent Pool in Detroit
Posted by on April 16, 2012 at 3:21 PM EDTAt the White House Insourcing Jobs forum earlier this year, CEO Tim Bryan of GalaxE Solutions shared his story about bringing Information Technology (IT) jobs back to the United States through its "Outsource to Detroit" campaign and its commitment to hire 500 IT professionals in Detroit. GalaxE has already hired 120 employees and is looking to hire hundreds more. "We have established Detroit as a competitive hub," Bryan said, "and from a price standpoint we are on a par with the offshore destinations and from a quality standpoint we are winning."
Currently, there are over 3,000 job openings in metropolitan Detroit. Large companies like Quicken Loans and Compuware, in addition to scores of startups, are laying the foundation for an IT ecosystem in Detroit. To provide high quality, leading edge IT solutions to their customers, these IT companies require highly skilled employees. So in an approach that can serve as a model for other cities, OSTP and other Administration offices have been working together with public- and private-sector partners to strengthen Detroit’s technically trained workforce.
Learn more about TechnologyIntellectual Property Helps Fuel an Economy Built To Last
Posted by on April 16, 2012 at 1:12 PM EDTAt a White House event last week, the Administration released a comprehensive Commerce Department report on the contributions of intellectual property to the U.S. economy. The report finds that IP-intensive industries support at least 40 million jobs and contribute more than $5 trillion to our gross domestic product (GDP). Moreover, IP-driven jobs are good jobs, providing wages that are 42 percent higher on average than wages in other industries, contributing to economic security for America’s middle class.
The Commerce Department report highlights 75 industries that use patent, copyright, or trademark protections most extensively. These widely diverse industries support more than a quarter of all jobs across the United States. Twenty-seven million of these workers are on the payroll or under employment contract within IP-intensive industries, and nearly 13 million more are indirectly supported through the supply chains that service these industries. These companies depend on a strong, healthy, and balanced intellectual property system.
Learn more about Technology
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