STEM Preparation, Career Link Overstated (Opinion)

STEM Preparation, Career Link Overstated (Opinion)


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To the Editor:


A recent post in the College Bound blog on edweek.org reported: “High school students are being told to take more rigorous math and science courses if they want to be prepared for college


and get lucrative jobs in STEM careers” (“High School Students Taking More Math and Science Courses,” May 23, 2013).


Will taking more rigorous math and science courses lead to lucrative jobs in science, technology, engineering, and math, or STEM, careers? Maybe not. Published data suggest that American


students are taking more math and science than the economy needs.


According to the blog post, in 2009, nearly 16 percent of high school seniors had taken calculus, but according to a 2010 study completed by Michael Handel of Northeastern University, only 5


percent of new jobs require calculus. Rutgers University professor Hal Salzman concluded in 2007 that there are approximately three qualified graduates annually for each science or


technical opening. Recent studies have also shown the United States is producing more Ph.D.s in science than the market can absorb.


Why are we promoting STEM preparation so vigorously?


Stephen Krashen


Professor Emeritus


Rossier School of Education


University of Southern California


Los Angeles, Calif.

Related Tags: STEM


A version of this article appeared in the June 12, 2013 edition of Education Week as STEM Preparation, Career Link Overstated