Title: Current State of Mathematics and Science
1Current State of Mathematics and Science
Education in the United States
Pat OConnell Ross Office of Elementary and
Secondary Education United States Department of
Education
2Skill Level Changes
Skilled 20
Unskilled 15
Unskilled 60
Professional 20
Skilled 65
Professional 20
1950
1997
National Summit on 21st Century Skills for 21st
Century Jobs
3Losing Our Edge?
- New Participants in World Economy
- Over Last Five Years
- China, India and Russia
- Total population three billion people
- 10 percent highly educated300 million
- USA 300 million 20 percent highly educated
60 million
4Losing Our Edge?
- Last year, more than 600,000 engineers graduated
from institutions of higher education in China,
compared to 350,000 in India and 70,000 in the
United States. - American 12th graders performed below the
international average for 21 countries on general
knowledge in mathematics and science. - The cost of employing one chemist or engineer in
the United States is equal to employing about
five chemist in China and 11 engineers in India.
5Percentage of population with a postsecondary
credential
Losing Our Edge?
55-64
45-54
35-44
25-34
Education at a Glance OECD Indicators 2003
6U.S. Student Achievement in Mathematics and
Science
- TIMSS 2003 Mathematics and Science Grade 8
- Mathematics score of 504 exceeded international
average of 466 - Science score of 527 exceeded international
average of 473 - Significant improvement in mathematics and
science between 1995 and 2003 - BUT we were outperformed by 7 of the 13 other
countries in mathematics and 5 of the 13 0ther
countries in science.
7(No Transcript)
8PISA 2003 Mathematics Literacy
9U.S. Student Achievement in Mathematics and
Science
- NAEP 2002 Math Assessment
- 12th Graders Scoring Below Basic
- 35 percent of all students
- 56 percent of Hispanic students
- 69 percent of African-American students
- 60 percent of low-income students
- The population of young adults will grow by 3
million and 56 percent of them will be minority
students. They are underrepresented in higher
level mathematics and science classes. (U.S.
Census Bureau)
10The fastest growing jobs often require a solid
mathematics or science background.
- Many of todays occupations require solid math
skills. (Murnane and Levy) - Of the 20 fastest-growing occupations projected
through 2010, 15 of them require substantial
mathematics or science preparation. - (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics)
11Opportunities to Attend College and Enter High
Wage Professions
- The earnings of young adults with at least a
bachelors degree increased over the past 20
years relative to their counterparts who have
less education. (National Center for
Education Statistics) - Students with higher-level mathematics skills
earn more (up to double). (National Center for
Education Statistics) - Scientists and engineers earn higher salaries
and are employed at very high rates. (National
Science Board) - Students of all income levels who take rigorous
mathematics and science courses in high school
are more likely to go to college. (U.S.
Department of Education)
12College remediation ratesEntering freshmen, 2000
Source NCES, Remedial Education at
Degree-Granting Postsecondary Institutions in
Fall 2000,
13Student and Public Perception of Mathematics and
Science
- Public opinion calls for better science and
mathematics education in schools. - 93 say students need stronger science
education. - 85 want this to be a top priority for their
governor. - College students wish they had a stronger
pre-college mathematics and science education. - (Bayer Corporation)
14The Need for Mathematics and Science Teachers
- Projections show a need for over 2 million new
teachers in this decade, of which 240,000 will be
middle and high school mathematics and science
specialists. (National Center for Education
Statistics, - National Commission on Mathematics, and
- Science Teaching for the 21st Century)
- Â State-level reports indicate high levels of need
for mathematics and science teachers. - (National Association of State Boards of
Education)
15Current State of Teacher Quality
- Teacher quality linked to student mathematics
performance. (Sanders and Rivers) - A sizeable number of mathematics and science
teachers do not have a major or minor in their
field, especially those who teach in high-poverty
and high-minority schools. (National Center for
Education Statistics)
16Mathematics and Science Partnership Program
Funding History
FY 03 100 million FY 04 150 million FY
05 180 million
- Program Overview
- State formula grants. States make competitive
awards. - Partnerships between math, science, and
engineering faculty of IHE and high need
schools. - Others may be included.
- Evidence of impact on teacher content knowledge
and student achievement.
17Mathematics and Science Partnership Program
MSP Targets
Math 50.8 Science 26.3 Math and Science 22.9
Number of Teachers Served in MSPs
No. of Teachers Percent Less than or equal to
25 30.0 26 50 23.6 51-100 20.4 101-150
9.2 151-200 3.6 201-250 4.4 Greater than
250 8.8
18Title I Math Initiative
Collaborative effort to improve mathematics
achievement of students in high poverty, low
performing schools. Three basic assumptions on
the underlying problems or challenges to
improving mathematics instruction in high
poverty, low performing schools Students cant
learn what theyve never been taught. Teachers
cant teach what they do not understand. Students
cant perform well on high stakes exams if they
are not exposed to conceptually high curricula
material.
19Title I Math Initiative Activities
- Bring together the math community and the Title I
community to discuss challenges and barriers in
mathematics education in Title I programs. - Provide tools to Title programs that are
struggling to improve their mathematics
achievement. - Determine the key elements of a strategic plan
designed to improve the mathematics achievement
of students in high poverty, low performing
schools. - Work with States to provide assistance.
20Contact Information
For more information please contact Pat
OConnell Ross 400 Maryland Avenue, SW FB-6,
3W101 Washington, DC 20202 Patricia.Ross_at_ed.gov
http//www.ed.gov/programs/mathsci/resources.html