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Monday, May 13, 2013

WNYC Presents "STEM is the New Space Race"

WNYC Presents "STEM is the New Space Race"

A panel discussion on the state of STEM education in New York City

Co-Hosted by WNYC Reporters Beth Fertig and Manoush Zomorodi

Tuesday, May 21 at 5pm in The Greene Space at WNYC

NEW YORK, May 13, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- The White House, business leaders, and the scientific and technology communities have declared a state of emergency in STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education, with President Obama calling on colleges to produce 10,000 more engineers a year and 100,000 new teachers with majors in STEM.

But the critical groundwork happens earlier, especially in middle schools and high schools, and New York City is finding success with small-scale, targeted efforts.

On Tuesday, May 21 at 5pm at The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space, WNYC's education site Schoolbook.org will present "STEM IS THE NEW SPACE RACE," a dynamic conversation among teachers - from elementary up to college - and industry leaders about the innovations, challenges and opportunities in the growing field of STEM education, with particular focus on what is happening in New York City.

As New York City becomes the Silicon Valley of the East, resources are being poured into STEM education to support training - and retaining - qualified teachers, improve the lab and computer facilities, and set higher benchmarks for statewide standards and tests. The city is also forging partnerships with companies, large and small, who say they are desperate for qualified workers to fill jobs in STEM-related fields.

Co-moderated by Manoush Zomorodi, host of WNYC's New Tech City and Beth Fertig, Contributing Editor for Education, "STEM IS THE NEW SPACE RACE" will cover a broad range of questions, including:


-- Why do we need to expand STEM education?
-- How can the education field attract more people trained in science and
technology to teaching?
-- What is being done to recruit more minority students and girls to the
STEM fields?
-- What would the ideal school look like in terms of STEM, and what would
it cost to bring that model citywide?
-- What needs to happen in the public and private sectors to bring STEM
training to the next level?
-- How can the impressive results NYC has had with concentrated programs be
implemented city-wide to the benefit of all students?
The panelists are:

Alicia Abella, executive director of the Innovative Services Research Dept at AT&T and vice president of the Young Science Achievers Program and chair of the AT&T Labs Fellowship Committee.

Michele Cahill, vice president, National Programs of Urban Education at the Carnegie Corporation of New York.



Ryan Cain, science teacher at P.S. 3 The Bedford Village School in Brooklyn. He also works with students after school on robotics with NYU-Poly and gardening.

Ben Esner, director of K-12 STEM Education at NYU/Polytechnic University.

Vikram Kapila, professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at NYU/Polytechnic University.

Saranii Muller, technology teacher at Fort Greene Preparatory Academy in Brooklyn, where she also coaches the Lego Robotics teams with NYU-Poly.

Josh Thomases, Deputy Chief Academic Officer for Instruction at New York City's Department of Education.

Tickets: Free, but reservations are required
Duration: 1 hour, 30 minutes
Venue: The Greene Space44 Charlton Street, New York, NY (corner of Varick Street)

New York Public Radio is New York's premier public radio franchise, comprising WNYC, WQXR, The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space, and New Jersey Public Radio, as well as www.wnyc.org, www.wqxr.org, www.thegreenespace.org and www.njpublicradio.org. As America's most listened-to AM/FM news and talk public radio stations, reaching 1.1 million listeners every week, WNYC extends New York City's cultural riches to the entire country on-air and online, and presents the best national offerings from networks National Public Radio, Public Radio International, American Public Media, and the British Broadcasting Company. WQXR is New York City's sole 24-hour classical music station, presenting new and landmark classical recordings as well as live concerts from the Metropolitan Opera, the New York Philharmonic, among other New York City venues, immersing listeners in the city's rich musical life. In addition to its audio content, WNYC and WQXR produce content for live, radio and web audiences from The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space, the station's street-level multipurpose, multiplatform broadcast studio and performance space. New Jersey Public Radio extends WNYC reach and service more deeply into New Jersey. For more information about New York Public Radio, visit www.nypublicradio.org.

SOURCE WNYC

WNYC

CONTACT: Jennifer Houlihan Roussel / Senior Director, Publicity, New York Public Radio, T: 646.829.4497 | F: 646.829.4327, E: jhoulihan@nypublicradio.org

Web Site: http://www.wnyc.org


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