成人小说亚洲一区二区三区,亚洲国产精品一区二区三区,国产精品成人精品久久久,久久综合一区二区三区,精品无码av一区二区,国产一级a毛一级a看免费视频,欧洲uv免费在线区一二区,亚洲国产欧美中日韩成人综合视频,国产熟女一区二区三区五月婷小说,亚洲一区波多野结衣在线


 
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 
Desperately seeking math and science majors
作者: Geoff Colvin    時(shí)間: 2010年08月03日    來源: 財(cái)富中文網(wǎng)
 位置:專欄         
字體 [   ]        
打印         
發(fā)表評(píng)論        





????Applied Materials had to fly in 100 interviewers just to screen all the job applicants for its new Solar Technology Center in Xi'an, China, last year. The company wanted to fill 260 high-tech jobs. It got 26,000 resumes. A fraction of those applicants were invited to interview. The final selectees, board member Andy Karsner tells me, "were top-of-their-class, English-speaking engineers. They're the best of the best."

????Now some of the most advanced research in this high-value, fast-growing field is being done in China -- instead of in the U.S. with American engineers. Why should we care? Because it's graduation season, when we see how starkly the direction of the American educational system differs from the way that faster-growing economies are headed.

????Those Chinese solar researchers are the cream of an engineering crop that included an estimated 10,000 Ph.D. graduates last year. This spring the U.S. will graduate about 8,000 Ph.D. engineers, an estimated two-thirds of whom are not U.S. citizens. About 150,000 students who majored in engineering, computer science, information technology, and math will collect bachelor's degrees. The Chinese government claims that in recent years the number in China has been well north of 500,000 and rising fast; even if overstated, as some believe, the real number is much larger than America's, and the quality of those graduates is improving.

????Americans should be alarmed, not because we have to beat the Chinese on every statistic, but because those facts threaten the heart of our great economic story. Until the past decade most Americans lived a little better every year. From the nation's beginnings, the engine of that improvement has been technology that makes millions of workers more productive. That's why you learned about Whitney's cotton gin and the McCormick reaper in elementary school. A stagnant living standard has terrible consequences, one of which is that the country eventually stops attracting and keeping the world's best and brightest, triggering a downward spiral that grows ever harder to break.

????The spiral may be well under way. Instead of staying in the U.S., our non-U.S. Ph.D. graduates increasingly judge home to be a more attractive option. Anand Pillai, a top talent executive at India's giant HCL Technologies, says that his best young recruits used to insist on being sent to the U.S. for a time, but now many of them resist going: "They see such great opportunities at home."

????Its next turn could be the worst. As math and science talent accumulates abroad, companies do more of their hiring there, reducing demand in the U.S. That's partly why undergraduate engineering majors are a shrinking proportion of the total, down from 6.8% to about 4.5% over the past 20 years. Employers then claim they can't find engineers in the U.S. -- so they have to hire abroad.

????The fastest-growing college majors in America as of 2007, says the U.S. Education Department, were parks, recreation, leisure, and fitness studies, as well as security and protective services. That's not a great omen for technology breakthroughs. If the next great technological advances in energy, the environment, medicine, and information are made elsewhere, American workers will have a much tougher time earning good pay in those key industries.

????When the National Academies (experts in the sciences, engineering, medicine, and research) raised this alarm in a landmark 2005 report, a chorus of quibblers sidetracked the discussion by arguing that China's engineering graduates weren't up to the same standard as America's, so the statistical comparisons weren't valid. Five years later it's clear that the National Academies were prophetic. For America's great economic story to continue, we need to reverse the downward spiral now, before it picks up speed. That means changing our culture -- hard but doable. As our graduates collect their diplomas this spring, we should send the next classes a message: that as an economy we want more science and math majors, and as a society we prize them.




相關(guān)閱讀
用戶名: 密碼:      匿名


0條評(píng)論          查看更多評(píng)論











国产乱人伦偷精品视频不卡| 久久人人做人人妻人人玩精品Au_| 人妻中文字系列无码专区| 精品国产AV最大网站| 欧美18VIDEOSEX性极品| 日韩乱码人妻无码系列中文字幕| 国产成人无码免费看片软件| 亚洲日韩精品欧美一区二区a| 清纯唯美在线视频欧美| 欧美乱妇狂野欧美在线视频| 国产v片在线播放免费无遮挡| 国产综合久久一区二区三区| 91福利久久AⅤ无码精品色午麻豆精品国产| 亚洲精品无码aⅴ中文字幕蜜桃| 欧美日韩中文国产一区发布| 天天躁日日躁狠狠躁AV中文| 国产精品亚洲色婷婷99久久精品| 99久久精品免费看国产99| 99久久99久久免費精品蜜桃| 欧美日韩精品一区二区三区不卡| 国产午夜成人免费看片无遮挡| 狠狠色丁香婷婷综合五月| 国产成人久久精品二三区麻豆| 国产一级a毛一级a看免费视频一区二区三区| 亚洲欧美日韩在线观看二区| 亚洲AV永久无码精品无码流畅亚洲| 国产69久久精品成人看| d91精品国产综合久久不| 国产精品日本亚洲777| 久久人妻夜夜做天天爽| 丁香花在线影院观看在线播放| 国产丝袜拍偷超清在线| 国产一级精品无码免费视频| 亚洲人成欧美中文字幕| 丁香色婷婷国产精品视频| 日韩欧美一卡2卡3卡4卡无卡免费201| 国产精品一区按摩国产一区| 日韩伦理电影在线播放| 乱人伦中文视频在线| 亚洲精品一品区二品区三品区| 2020国产综合精品|