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PRESS RELEASE: NJ STEM Education Summit

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

TRI-STATE BUSINESSES, EDUCATION AND NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS CONVENE TO ADDRESS SCIENCE AND MATH EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES

Event Aimed at Building a Network of Future Employees for the Tri-State Region

April 17, 2012 – Newark, NJ – On Wednesday, April 18st, local corporations, and education and nonprofit organizations will come together, at the Newark Museum, to address the current state of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education in New Jersey and the greater tri-state region. The 2nd Annual STEM Summit is a convening of the tri-state STEM coalition, a group committed to ensuring that all youth, including underrepresented minority and female youth, have access to high quality STEM education.

The group is being assembled by Citizen Schools, a national education organization with programs in Newark and New York City, in partnership with Novartis Pharmaceuticals, in response to a growing concern about STEM education. Many educators worry about the growing STEM achievement gap between U.S. students and students from other developed countries, particularly as jobs in STEM areas are increasing in demand. On the 2009 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), U.S. 15-year-olds scored 23rd in science out of 65 countries, lagging far behind powerhouses China, Singapore, Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea.

At the same time that our students are lagging behind internationally, we are seeing that women and people of color continue to be underrepresented in well-paying, secure STEM jobs here in the U.S. According to a 2011 U.S. Department of Congress report, women fill close to half of all jobs in the U.S. economy, but hold less than 25 percent of STEM jobs. African Americans, Latinos, and other underrepresented minorities, who together constitute 24 percent of the U.S. population, represent just 10 percent of science and engineering professionals with a college degree.

At the national level, there are signs of a significant new focus on STEM education. From President Obama’s “Educate to Innovate” campaign to the 100Kin10 movement to recruit excellent STEM educators, national leaders are focusing their efforts on solutions to increase STEM literacy among all U.S. students and expand STEM education and career opportunities for underrepresented groups, including female and minority students.

These programs bring STEM to the forefront of the nation’s education conversation and Wednesday’s event will call on tri-state area companies and organizations to explore how they can play a role in addressing the issue locally. Attendees will discover how organizations are already forming partnerships to make STEM learning accessible for young students and how they can help excel and build upon those efforts.

The event will feature opening keynote speaker Kevin Aspell, Cisco’s Business Development Manager for Education, and closing keynote speaker Navarrow Wright, Chief Technology Officer at Interactive One. The summit will also feature guest speakers and presenters from Citizen Schools, New York Science Academy, Google, Cognizant, IBM, Pfizer, Saint Philips Academy, and Verizon.

“Our future depends on providing our youth with access to first-class STEM education,” said Lucy Castillo, Executive Director of Citizen Schools New Jersey. “Citizen Schools is thrilled to be working with partners like Novartis Pharmaceuticals to bring together a distinguished group of leaders from across the tri-state to build the knowledge, inspiration, and action necessary to make that happen.”

Citizen Schools, which operates in seven states including New Jersey and New York, has recruited approximately 25,000 professionals nationwide, including many scientists and other STEM professionals, to teach middle school students over the past seventeen years. The organization helps improve student achievement, with a focus on STEM, through expanded learning days and skill-building hands-on learning projects called apprenticeships. These 10-week apprenticeships are taught by volunteer experts who teach middle schools students about new careers and fields, including a wide variety of STEM careers, through real-world experiences.

About Citizen Schools

Citizen Schools is a national nonprofit organization that partners with middle schools to expand the learning day for low income children across the country. Citizen Schools uniquely mobilizes thousands of adult volunteers to help improve student achievement by teaching skill-building apprenticeships. The organization’s programs blend these real-world learning projects with rigorous academic and leadership development activities, preparing students in the middle grades for success in high school, college, the workforce, and civic life.

Learn more about Citizen Schools’ programs and results at www.citizenschools.org.  For New Jersey specifics, visit http://www.citizenschools.org/newjersey/. For New York specifics, visit http://www.citizenschools.org/newyork/.

 

 

 

CEO: Inspiring Lessons Learned from Skoll World Forum

Eric Schwarz is the CEO and Co-Founder of Citizen Schools.

Annie Lennox: Artist, Activist

As is often the case at the Skoll World Forum for social entrepreneurs in Oxford, England, which wraps up today, an artist with grit stole the show.  This year it was Annie Lennox.  In her heyday she was Annie Lennox and the Eurythmics.  Then came decades of AIDS and anti-war activism, a family, and ongoing success (four Grammy’s) as a pop star.  Last night at Oxford’s New Theater (one of the few buildings I was in all week less than 600 years old) Lennox performed for 1000 social entrepreneurs and other social change-agents who gather here for a remarkable annual conference that marries indignation at the injustices of the world, wonder at changes underway, and confidence that, on balance, injustice is in retreat.  Man, can she sing.  And, man, what a spirit.

YouthBuild: Empowering Community Growth

I watched Lennox perform while sitting with Dorothy Stoneman,  the veteran social justice leader who built the YouthBuild movement over the last 35 years, transforming hundreds of thousands of lives across now 268 communities. Dorothy’s program works because she has an unshakeable belief in the capacity of young, poor men of color — her core constituency — to lift up their communities and themselves.  This belief has sustained her and YouthBuild as she has built a still-tenuous funding base and continues growing and fighting for opportunity with every fibre of her being.  A few rows in front of us was Cecelia Flores-Oebanda who is working to end human slavery in her native Philippines and across the world.  Taddy Blecher, who sat a few rows away, is creating free universities across Africa — free because class sizes are as large as 500 and because the students also work at a variety of university-run businesses, raising the money needed to eliminate tuition.

All around us were dozens of pioneers, finding new ways to bring education, health, jobs, water, and freedom to the world’s neediest citizens.

Every year I come home from Skoll humbled by the amazing work of others, excited at the insights we are able to share, and inspired to step-up our work to reimagine and reinvent the U.S. education system.  Following, in no particular order, are a few lessons I learned this year, or was reminded of, and are top of mind for me as I prepare to fly home:

  • Much of the best social change work in the world is about building social networks and bridges — bridges between  farmers, fishermen and markets, as with FairTrade USA, Root Capital, and the Marine Stewardship Council; between medicine and remote villages, as with Riders for Health and their motorcycling medical delivery drivers across Africa; between different cultures and nationalities, as with Search for Common Ground and Ecopeace; and between children and successful professionals, as with Citizen Schools and INJAZ Al-Arab, which connects business volunteers to schools across the middle east.
  • Taddy Blecher

    Many social entrepreneurs help the “client” become a producer, building ownership, efficacy, and skill at what Citizen Schools calls the top of the triangle.  Taddy Blecher and Dorothy Stoneman blur the line between student and worker as does Bill Strickland at his Pittsburgh-based Manchester Craftsman’s Guild and Martin Burt at Fundacion Paraguaya.

  • Social entrepreneurs are skilled at developing financial models that can scale — pushing hard to reduce costs so they can deliver quality services at a price that communities of need can afford. For example, Debbie Aung Ding and her husband Jim Taylor, who met as civil rights foot soldiers in Mississippi, worked for years in her native Myanmar to get the price of a plastic water pump down to $13, allowing them to sell the pump and other income-producing products to 100,000 families.
  • The best social entrepreneurs treat the children and families they serve with respect and trust.  I learned of a new school in Chile where the outcasts from other schools learn Yoga and Meditation, eat delicious food, and learn to love their teachers — eventually — and only after the teachers display saintly doses of patience.  The school, Fundacion Origen, has gotten the youth development and ed reform balance right, engaging and building up the youth while also delivering higher test scores and a drop-out-rate of zero, said founder Mary Ann Muller.
  • Hero Rat from APOPO

    Social entrepreneurs are creative and look for solutions in surprising places. Bart Weetjens of Apopo, for instance, has trained rats how to sniff out and defuse land mines, reclaiming hundreds of thousands of acres to use again as farmland. 

  • Increasingly, social entrepreneurs are working in close partnership with government.  In California, Roadtrip Nation, is working with the state department of Education to embed its career-exploration curriculum in high schools across the state.  And individual change-makers are migrating between nonprofits and government, whether at the grand scale of Partners In Health co-founder, Jim Kim, going to run the World Bank, or the very local scale of Becky Vogel  leaving Citizen Schools to run expanded learning time partnerships for The Edwards Middle School.
  • While many of the flashiest projects involve direct service in remote villages or third-world cities, some of the most meaningful efforts at Skoll involve seemingly dry topics like land title reform and accounting.  Global Footprint Network, for instance, is trying to establish a better accounting system than Gross Domestic Product, because GDP calculates production and consumption and does not take into full account the devaluing of the world’s capital resources such as its land and water.
  • I learned as well, that the world’s largest companies see the world changing fast and want to be part of the change.  With millions leaving poverty each year, even as great disparities remain,  they see new markets opening, and they see new combinations of talent, technology, and program combining together to make change where change did not happen before. The companies want in on the action and want to help, which is why Cisco, and HP, and Google, and Twitter, and more were at the conference, eager to use their talent and their tools to make the world a better place.
  • Citizen Schools Teaching Fellows

    I learned there are pockets of people all over the world who know about and draw inspiration from Citizen Schools.  Two years ago I met with Louise van Rhyn, CEO and Founder of Symphonia for South Africa. Now Louise says she goes all around her country talking about the 80 percent of a child’s waking hours that are out of school and the need for citizens to step up as full partners with the state in ensuring healthy futures for their children and their country.  “We elected a new government,” Louise told me last night, “but now we need models like Citizen Schools to get our people engaged in making our society work.”  Others in Japan, Colombia, and England said they are frequent visitors to our web site.  Willy Oppenheim, a Rhodes Scholar and founder of Omprakash, which connects volunteers, to schools around the world, said he has drawn inspiration from Citizen Schools since his days teaching in rural Maine; he offered to push the Teaching Fellow job opportunity on his web site, which gets 13,000 unique visitors every month.

  • My last lesson was about grit.  We talk about how our kids will need to develop and show grit as they take on big challenges and work their way through hardships to inspiring futures.  We on the staff need grit too.  And we need to find ways to perpetually replenish our supply — whether it is through listening to Annie Lennox, talking with an inspirational peer, or just spending a little more time with a child or parent or volunteer at Citizen Schools and reminding ourselves that we are helping to build a bridge to a better, fairer, more beloved future.

Corporate Employees Stepping Up to Teach

This spring, over 1,500 volunteer Citizen Teachers are teaching nearly 500 apprenticeships across the country. About 60 percent of those apprenticeships are being taught by volunteers from partner organizations and almost 300 Citizen Teachers come from ten companies: Google, Cisco, Fidelity, Cognizant, Bank of America, EMC, AOL, Facebook, Microsoft, and Hewlett Packard.

These corporate volunteers are teaching our students about electrical engineering, investing, creating and marketing products, the science in baking, documentary filmmaking, LED technology, and so much more.

In New York, 230 sixth grade students from East Harlem and the Bronx visit the Google NY headquarters each week. Google is offering a wide range of exciting apprenticeships this semester including “Gourmet Google,” which looks at the cultural, biological, and economic aspects of food.

In North Carolina, Cisco employees are leading the “Brand You/Networking 101” apprenticeship, which teaches students about key marketing and business concepts. Cisco is also offering a math focused apprenticeship, “Building Blocks with Math,” which focuses on the fundamentals of math and design through the creation of 2D and 3D scalable models.

These are just a few examples of the tremendous learning opportunities our students are exposed to thanks to the support of our partners and Citizen Teachers. Learn more about how your company can get involved.

Cisco Volunteer Featured

Brandon Middleton, an engineer from Cisco, taught an amazing filmmaking apprenticeship last year in California. Read all about it in this article from the Redwood City Patch!

The President’s Volunteer Service Award

Volunteering over 90,000 hours in middle schools teaching robotics, rocket science, web design, finance, and more, these modern heroes we call Citizen Teachers have gone above and beyond their call of duty. Created in 2003, the President’s Council on Service and Civic Participation was established to recognize the valuable contributions volunteers are making in our communities. The Council created the President’s Volunteer Service Award program as a way to thank and honor Americans who, by their demonstrated commitment and example, inspire others to engage in volunteer service.

California Citizen Teacher Gerard Berthet from Cisco will teach his fourth Robotics apprenticeship this fall.

Congratulations to our beloved Citizen Teachers who have been recognized for their commitment to service and influencing the lives of students across the country. Many thanks to the national support and partnership we’ve received from Bank of America, Fidelity, Cognizant, and Google, in addition to over 100 organizations that provided volunteers to teach apprenticeships.

Thank you for your help in transforming education, one student at a time.