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Ambassador:
Policy Will Continue In Koreas
Engineering
Deanm...
Medford/Somerville,
Mass. [02.03.01] -- Massachusetts' education leaders
yesterday adopted a pioneering initiative developed by Tufts to
bring engineering to classrooms across the state.
The
program -- the first of its kind in the country -- comes at a
crucial time for the United States. "This is historic," Ioannis
Miaoulis, Tufts' Dean of Engineering, told the Boston Herald.
"Massachusetts will be the first state in the country to do this.
We will also be a world leader."
He
told the Boston Globe, "Everybody is watching us." The state's
education board passed the new standards by a 7-0 vote, putting
into place the pioneering program, reported Boston's major news
networks including Channel 56, Channel 4 and New England Cable
News. The new engineering curriculum was designed by Tufts' Miaoulis
to make science education more practical and relevant.
"Out
of tradition, we put so much emphasis on learning the basics of
science, like how volcanoes erupt, but put no emphasis on the
human world, like how cars work," he told the Associated Press.
"Yet
people send much more time in cars than they do volcanoes." According
to the Herald, "Miaoulis and his colleagues have worked for more
than a decade to get schools and policy-makers to embrace the
notion that grade-appropriate engineering lessons can be taught
to students." Miaoulis -- who chaired the technology/engineering
panel for the Massachusetts Department of Education -- said that
the new engineering curriculum is uniquely positioned to incorporate
other major subjects including: math, English and even history.
"There are very few things you can do in school that you can start
and finish something you can feel touch and be proud of that pulls
together all of your skills. And sometimes, what they come up
with can even be useful," he told the AP. With recent reports
showing US students lagging behind many countries in math and
science skills, the engineering initiative comes at a particularly
important time, Miaoulis said. The Boston Globe reported that
the developers of the program hope "that including engineering
in the new statewide curriculum will produce higher math and science
scores and more engineers at a time when they are sorely needed."
"The shortage of engineers in the United States has become so
severe that American companies have had to begin recruiting employees
from oversees," according to the Associated Press. Miaoulis hopes
to develop similar programs around the country to help raise the
quality of science education nationwide. He hopes the new curriculum
will also inspire more students to choose engineering as a profession.
"We have a tremendous need," he told the AP. "We have a lot of
people with high ability who simply do not choose the field because
they don't know what it is. It is our job to help them."
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