The Chronicle of Higher Education
Issues in Depth

America's Science Test
photo illustration
INTRODUCTION TO
THE SERIES

December 21, 2007

LEARNING FROM TEXAS

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)

BACKGROUND:

Articles

Universities Fail to Reward Science and Math Professors for Working With Schoolteachers (August 16, 2007)

Teaching Math and Science May Get Boost From Congress (August 10, 2007)

National Science Board Proposes 'Action Plan' on Science Education (August 9, 2007)

Federal Programs to Improve Science Education Are Not Well Reviewed, Panel Finds (May 18, 2007)

Engineering Programs in the United States Aren't Falling Behind but Need Improvements, Study Finds (March 20, 2007)

A Top Physicist Turns to Teaching (February 9, 2007)

Americans Split on Requiring Students to Study More Science (December 15, 2006)

Foreign Academics Question the Quality of Their Countries' Engineering Programs (September 8, 2006)

Taking Anxiety Out of the Equation (January 13, 2006)

National Academies Panel Calls for 30,000 Scholarships and Big Jump in Research Spending (October 13, 2005)

Community and 4-Year Colleges Should Cooperate Better in Education of Engineering Students, Report Says (September 8, 2005)

National Academy of Engineering Suggests Revamping Engineering Education (June 27, 2005)

Juggling the Numbers (May 27, 2005)

Is There a Science Crisis? Maybe Not (July 9, 2004)

Study Blames Obstacles, Not Lack of Interest, for Shortage of Black and Hispanic Scientists (April 4, 2006)

Student Interest in Computer Science Plummets (May 27, 2005)

Opening the Door to a Doctorate (August 13, 2004)

Battling the Image of 'a Nerd's Profession' (July 9, 2004)