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Louis Jacobson
By Louis Jacobson November 27, 2012
Back to Increase research opportunities for college students

Many agencies are partnering on science, technology, engineering and math education programs

During the 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to "support university programs that partner" with federal agencies "to provide hands-on training experiences at the college level."

A study ordered by Congress and overseen by the White House's Office of Science and Technology Policy provides substantial evidence of such programs.

The report, released in December 2011, catalogs federal investments in "STEM" education -- that is, science, technology, engineering and mathematics education. The report found that federal agencies spent $3.4 billion on STEM efforts in fiscal year 2010.

The report listed 252 distinct programs that qualified as STEM investments, including some from each of the four agencies specifically cited in Obama's promise.

Not all of the STEM investments collected in the report funded programs that "provide hands-on training experiences at the college level." But many did.

Just over one-third of the expenditures were geared towards increasing the number of students who enroll in STEM majors or complete STEM credentialing programs. Another quarter of the expenditures were focused on preparing students to enter the workforce with specific knowledge and skills.

And of the investments serving students (as opposed to teachers or other targeted groups), two-thirds were targeted towards undergraduates or graduate students.

Here are just a few projects cited in the report that seem to fit Obama's definition:

• Agriculture Department: "Agriculture in the Classroom: Secondary and Postsecondary Agriculture Education Challenge Grants"

• Commerce Department: "National Ocean Service Education"

• Energy Department: "American Chemical Society Summer School in Nuclear and Radiochemistry"

• Department of Health & Human Services: "Summer Institute for Training in Biostatistics"

• NASA: "Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunity Project"

We should note that many of these programs existed before Obama took office, and also that the report doesn't provide funding figures past fiscal year 2010, so it's hard to know if funding for these programs is higher now than they were when he took office.

Still, in evaluating whether Obama has stuck to his pledge, we think his administration is funding so many STEM education programs that it merits a Promise Kept.

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