āAMERICA is in trouble,ā says Vernon Ehlers, a Republican representative from Michigan. The problem, thinks Ehlers, lies in the nationās classrooms: āChina and India recognised 20 years ago that the future belonged to nations that educated their children in math and science.ā
Now a $33 billion remedy is to be administered over the next three years. On 9 August, President George W. Bush signed legislation to recruit thousands of new teachers, update the science and maths skills of those already in classrooms and help science-orientated kids to launch research careers. It also calls for significant increases to the National Science Foundationās $4.7 billion annual research budget, although exactly how much is unclear.
āThe legislation should help recruit thousands of new science and maths teachersā
Advertisement
Elsewhere the act ploughs $300 million into a new funding agency designed to kick-start the transition to new energy systems. The Advanced Research Projects Agency ā Energy, or ARPA-E, is partly modelled on a Pentagon scheme to support innovative ā some say ill-considered ā projects that commercial backers consider too risky. Some policy experts think the Department of Energy could do ARPA-Eās job just as well.