STEM Education And Jobs: Decreasing Amounts Of Shades of black Observed In Math, Science
With black unemployment reaching historic levels, banks laying off tens of thousands and law school graduates waiting tables, why aren’t more African-Americans looking toward science, technology, engineering and math – the still-hiring careers known as STEM?
Yet the situation is most acute for African-Americans.
“The more people you have in STEM,” she says, “the more innovations you’ll get.”
That’s a stereotype Jemison knows well.
He thinks some African-Americans psych themselves out of STEM.
“I get paid to go to school, so I don’t want to complain,” Smith says.
Yet it’s hard to advance far in science without at least a master’s, if not a doctorate.
Francisco mentions another source of pressure affecting black STEM students: isolation.
That changed when he went to the University of Texas and then MIT, where there were few black faces.
In the world of atoms and numbers, does the color of the person who studies them really matter?
“It’s a much more robust reason for diversity that just the head count.”
Related posts:
- U.S. News and world report: America’s best high schools for math and science
- NAACP: Education Is Key To Boosting Black Men
- A Program to Get 1,000 Real, Working Scientists In School Classrooms
- Black Eyed Peas’ will.i.am now stumping for science
- Obama Losing Liberal And Black Support Over Jobs Record
Category: Education



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