Today the alarm is sounding about a new threat: the rising technological prowess of China and India. In response, Congress and President Bush recently enacted legislation intended to produce more scientists and engineers. While educators disagree over whether more American scientists are, in fact, needed, they do agree that for the United States to remain economically competitive and to confront complex problems like global warming and energy shortages, the quality of teaching in science, mathematics, and engineering must be improved at all levels.
In the coming months, The Chronicle will publish a series of articles on what colleges are doing, or not doing, to improve instruction and training in those fields. As national attention on science teaching grows, it remains to be seen if America's response will resemble the vigorous one that followed followed the release of Sputnik 50 years ago this October, or a muted echo.
A program at UT-Austin to produce better math and science teachers — and students — is set to go national.
Engaging high-school science students in chemistry is important to Robert A. Gonzales (center), who learned his craft in a U. of Texas at Austin teaching program. (Photograph by Robert Baumgardner)