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Engineering Education for Innovation Act (E2)


Click to download a PDF
of the draft E2 Bill text.

IEEE-USA Wants to Teach Engineering
in Your Kid’s Public School

Well, not us personally. But we do want to help your states and local communities add engineering design concepts and problem solving skills to its public school science and math education programs.

Towards this end, IEEE-USA has joined with a broad coalition of engineering, science, educational, and business groups to support the Engineering Education for Innovation ACT, or the E2 Bill.

The E2 Bill (S. 3043 & HR. 4709) will provide federal grants to enable states to add engineering to their public school curricula. The bill creates two grants programs: one to develop the curricula and a second to put the curricula into practice. The first planning grant cannot exceed $1 million over two years. The second implementation grant would be for not less than $10 million over four years. The bill also provides for $5 million for evaluative research to help determine which programs do and do not work. Overall the E2 Bill would cost less than $142.5 million over six years.

States would have to compete for the implementation grants based on criteria set forth in the bill. These criteria would include:

  1. The quality of their plan, developed with the planning grant
  2. Percentage of students from underprivileged backgrounds who would be served by the plan, and
  3. An agreement that the state provide matching funds to cover a portion of the costs

Participation in the program would be entirely voluntary. States that do not want to meet the conditions of the bill can simply choose not to submit applications.

The bill also gives states wide latitude in using the grants, allowing states to experiment and adapt their plans to their unique needs. For example, states can use the implementation grants to set academic standards, create distance learning modules for students or teachers, build on-line learning tools, buy equipment, assess their program, train or recruit teachers and even fund after school programs focused on engineering.

As most American IEEE members know, the United States generally does not expose our students to engineering in public school at all. This is a serious weakness in our educational system, given the important role engineering plays in our economy.

Worse, many communities in the United States produce few engineers. Because there are no engineers to expose students to engineering outside of school, children in these communities have little chance to learn about the field in time to acquire the skills needed to enter it. The E2 Bill would help break this cycle by exposing more students to engineering at an early age, soon enough so that they can prepare to pursue higher education and a career in the field.

The E2 Bill was introduced by the following legislators:

  • Sen. Kristen Gillibrand (D-NY)
  • Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-NJ)
  • Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME)
  • Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA)
  • Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-WA)
  • Rep. Paul Tonko (D-NY-21)
  • Rep. Phil Hare (D-IL-17)
  • Rep. Daniel Lipinski (D-IL-3)

Key Benefits of the E2 Bill:

  • Increased technological literacy across the American public
  • Greater student interest and success in math and sciences
  • Broader awareness of and interest in engineering
  • Increased competency in engineering design and problem solving
  • Wider exposure to engineering among underprivileged students

The bill is broadly popular in Congress, but because of the crowded legislative calendar, many beneficial bills will fail to pass simply because Congress will not get to formally consider them. Engineers who support the E2 Bill will have to be vocal in that support in order for Congress to act on this modest, but potentially very important, educational reform bill.

Resources

Leadership for this initiative, and much of the original thinking behind it, is provided by the Boston Museum of Science’s National Center for Technological Literacy (www.mos.org/nctl/)

Updated:  18 May 2010
Contact:  IEEE-USA GR Webmaster

 

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