>> THIS PROGRAM WAS MADE

POSSIBLE IN PART BY FUNDING

FROM THE DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY

FOUNDATION.

A PROUD SUPPORTER OF QUALITY

EDUCATION ACROSS LOUISIANA.

IN THE FIELDS OF SCIENCE,

TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING AND

MATH.

AND THE FOUNDATION FOR

EXCELLENCE IN LOUISIANA PUBLIC

BROADCASTING.

 

>>> HELLO AND WELCOME TO

"LOUISIANA PUBLIC SQUARE."

I'M BETH COURTNEY, PRESIDENT

OF LOUISIANA PUBLIC

BROADCASTING.

>> AND I'M SHAUNA SANFORD,

NEWS ANCHOR FOR LPB.

TONIGHT WE'RE PLEASED TO BE

COMING TO YOU FROM THE

BEAUTIFUL NEW PERFORMING

ARTS CENTER AT THE MATH,

SCIENCE, AND ARTS ACADEMY

IN PLAQUEMINE.

THE FACILITY IS PART OF A

$15 MILLION FACELIFT THAT

ILLUSTRATES THIS COMMUNITY'S

COMMITMENT TO EDUCATING ITS

STUDENTS IN THE FIELDS OF

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY,

ENGINEERING, AND MATH.

KNOWN BY THE ACRONYM OF STEM,

THESE SUBJECTS TRULY FORM

THE FOUNDATION OF

BLOSSOMING CAREER

OPPORTUNITIES IN LOUISIANA.

>> BUT MANY OF THESE JOB

OPENINGS ARE CURRENTLY BEING

LEFT UNFILLED DUE TO A LACK

OF QUALIFIED CANDIDATES.

HOW WELL IS THE STATE

PREPARING OUR CITIZENS FOR

STEM CAREERS?

HOW WELL ARE OUR EDUCATORS

TRAINED TO TEACH THE STEM

SUBJECTS?

AND HOW CAN STUDENTS

ESPECIALLY FEMALES, BECOME

MORE ENGAGED IN STEM FIELDS?

OVER THE NEXT HOUR, WE'LL

EXPLORE THESE ISSUES AND MORE.

BUT FIRST, LET'S TAKE A LOOK

AT LOUISIANA'S STEM STATUS.

>> CURRENTLY WE ARE WORKING ON

AN ANTI-BULLYING VIDEO FOR THE

SCHOOL BOARD.

>> I'M DESIGNING A WEB SITE FOR

UNIVERSITY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

AND MIDDLE SCHOOL --

>> CLICK ON THE DOT, IT TELLS

YOU WHO WAS BURIED THERE, THEIR

HISTORY, WHAT THEY'RE KNOWN

FOR.

>> THESE STUDENTS ATTENDING

SHREVEPORT'S SOUTHWOOD HIGH

SCHOOL HAVE BEEN GETTING A

HANDS-ON EXPERIENCE IN THE

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY,

ENGINEERING AND MATH FIELDS FOR

THE LAST YEAR.

COURSES USE WHAT'S CALLED THE

EAST APPROACH, A SELF-DIRECTED

EXPLORATION OF STEM CAREERS.

>> I DON'T REALLY TEACH IN THE

CLASS.

I FACILITATE THEIR LEARNING.

I FACILITATE THEM TEACHING

THEMSELVES.

>> LLOYD RUSHING SAID STUDENTS

DEVELOP PROJECTS THAT SERVE

THEIR COMMUNITY WHILE RECEIVING

REAL LIFE EXPERIENCE IN AREAS

OF VIDEO EDITING, ARCHITECTURE,

ANIMATION DESIGN, AND

GEOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION

SYSTEMS.

>> THIS CLASS ALLOWS THEM TO

COME AND OPEN UP A TOOLBOX TO

SAY HERE IS A TOOLBOX FULL OF

GREAT TOOLS THAT ALL RELATES TO

STEM.

TAKE EACH TOOL OUT, FIND WHICH

ONE THAT YOU REALLY LIKE, AND

LET'S CONCENTRATE ON LEARNING

THAT PARTICULAR TOOL.

>> THE PROGRAM IS ONE OF

SEVERAL INITIATIVES THAT CADDO

PARISH INSTITUTED IN THE 90s

AFTER THE LOSS OF MANUFACTURING

JOBS.

FOR THE LAST 10 YEARS, STEM

JOBS HAVE BEEN GROWING

NATIONALLY AT THREE TIMES THE

RATE OF NONSTEM OCCUPATIONS.

THE STATE WILL NEED TO FILL

69,000 STEM-RELATED JOBS BY

2018.

ALTHOUGH THE WORK HERE IS

PLENIF

PLENTIFUL, IN LOUISIANA, THREE

STEM JOBS OPENING FOR EVERY

UNEMPLOYED WORKER.

>> A SITUATION IN LOUISIANA

WHERE I CONSIDER A BLESSING IN

DISGUISE, IN THAT WE HAVE MORE

JOB OPPORTUNITIES IN THE STEM

FIELD THAN WE HAVE CITIZENS WHO

ARE PREPARED FOR THOSE JOBS.

AND OUR CHALLENGE RIGHT NOW IS

TO ENSURE THAT WE MEET THE

SHORT AND LONG TERM DEMAND OF

BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY.

>> BRYAN MOORE DIRECTOR OF WORK

FORCE DEVELOPMENT FOR

LOUISIANA'S WORK FORCE

COMMISSION.

MOORE SAYS BRIDGING THE STEM

SKILLS GAP INVOLVES WORKING

WITH INDUSTRY TO PROVIDE

CUSTOMIZED TRAINING IN THE

SHORT TERM BUT WORKING WITH

EDUCATORS IN THE LONG TERM.

>> 90% OF THE STEM RELATED

OCCUPATIONS IN OUR STATE

REQUIRE ASSOCIATE DEGREE OR

BETTER.

VERY IMPORTANT TO WORK CLOSELY

WITH THE UNIVERSITIES TO

RESPOND TO THE NEEDS OF

BUSINESS.

CREATE A CURRICULUM CONSISTENT

WITH THE DEMAND IN BUSINESS AND

INDUSTRY.

>> 9% OF BACHELOR'S DEGREES

AWARDED IN LOUISIANA ARE IN THE

STEM FIELD.

CLOSE TO THE NATIONAL AVERAGE.

NOT ALL STEM CAREERS REQUIRE A

FOUR-YEAR DEGREE.

IN FACT, A RECENT BROOKINGS

INSTITUTION REPORT FOUND THAT

HALF OF ALL STEM JOBS REQUIRE

NO BACHELOR'S DEGREE.

THE STUDY RANKED BATON ROUGE

FIRST NATIONALLY FOR THESE

TYPES OF OPPORTUNITIES.

WITH MANY OF THEM TIED TO THE

PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRY AND

CONSTRUCTION TRADES.

>> WE GO BACK AND LOOK AND

WHERE WE PUT OUR DOLLARS OVER

THE LAST SEVERAL YEARS, IT IS

VERY HEAVILY IN PROGRAMS

SUPPORTING MATH, SCIENCES, ALSO

ALLIED HEALTH TECHNOLOGIES,

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGIES,

PARTICULARLY THOSE AFFILIATED

WITH THE OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY

AS WELL AS THE CHEMICAL AND

PROCESSING INDUSTRIES.

>> DR. JOE MAY IS PRESIDENT OF

LOUISIANA'S TECHNICAL AND

COMMUNITY COLLEGE SYSTEM.

HE SAYS THE SYSTEM HAS ADDED

OVER 200 NEW PROGRAMS THAT

FOCUS ON STEM SKILLS.

LEGISLATION PASSED THIS YEAR

WILL PROVIDE OVER $280 MILLION

IN STATE AND INDUSTRY FUNDING

FOR 29 COMMUNITY COLLEGE

EXPANSION PROJECTS.

NEARLY HALF WILL BE LOCATED IN

RURAL PARTS OF THE STATE.

>> AS YOU LOOK AT THE PROGRAM

LIST, YOU ARE GOING TO SEE IN

THE TITLE A STEM FACILITY,

BOSSIER PARISH COMMUNITY

COLLEGE.

ALLIED HEALTH FACILITY, OTHER

SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS AND

GENERAL EDUCATION CLASSROOMS

THAT ARE REALLY BUILT TO

SUPPORT THE TYPES OF CAREERS

THAT WE SEE TODAY IN LOUISIANA.

>> KEN BRADFORD WITH

LOUISIANA'S DEPARTMENT OF

EDUCATION SAYS THE AGENCY IS

CONSIDERING CONSOLIDATING THE

THREE

THREE DIPLOMA CHOICES.

>> WHEN A STUDENT GRADUATES

FROM HIGH SCHOOL, THEY'RE GOING

TO HAVE AN INDUSTRY CREDENTIAL

IN THE STEM AREAS.

SO THAT THEY CAN BE EMPLOYABLE

UPON GRADUATION.

>> LOUISIANA RECENTLY ADOPTED

RIGOROUS COMMON CORE STANDARDS

FOR MATHEMATICS BUT HASN'T

COMMITTED TO ADOPTING THE NEXT

GENERATION SCIENCE STANDARDS.

RESEARCH SHOWS THAT LOUISIANA

EDUCATORS STILL LAG BEHIND THE

NATION IN KNOWLEDGE AND

TRAINING IN THE STEM FIELDS.

>> WE BELIEVE THAT TEACHERS ARE

THE KEY TO SYSTEMIC AND

SUSTAINABLE CHANGE.

>> G.B. CAZES VICE PRESIDENT --

BUILT TO DIVERSIFY THE AREAS

ECONOMIC BASE THROUGH THE WORLD

OF COMPUTERS, PROFESSIONAL

DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES TO

BETTER PREPARE EDUCATORS TO

TRAIN TOMORROW'S WORK FORCE.

KNOWN AS THE NATIONAL

INTEGRATED CYBER EDUCATION

RESEARCH CENTER, OR NICERC, ITS

PROGRAMS ARE OFFERED TO

TEACHERS STATEWIDE.

>> WE WORK WITH TEACHERS

PROVIDING MENTORING

RELATIONSHIPS, PROVIDE THEM

MATERIALS AND RESOURCES AND

CREATE A NETWORK OF TEACHERS ON

THE NEW FRONTIERS, IF YOU WILL

AND ON NEW WAYS TO LEARN.

>> GUIDED BY THE STAFF AT

LOUISIANA TECH UNIVERSITY,

TEACHERS IN NICERC'S CYBER

DISCOVERY PROGRAM LEARN HOW TO

ENGAGE STUDENTS IN STEM

SUBJECTS BY USING ROBOTICS.

>> ENGINEERING PART, THEY HAVE

TO BUILD, DESIGN IT.

MATHEMATICS, YOU HAVE TO

UNDERSTAND DISTANCE.

IF I WANT IT TO GO THIS

DISTANCE, HOW DO I NEED TO CODE

THAT TO MAKE IT GO THAT

DISTANCE?

AND THEN TECHNOLOGY, USING

COMPUTERS ALL OF THE TIME.

>> INDUSTRIES LIKE DOW CHEMICAL

COMPANY, EXXON MOBILE ARE

PROVIDING CLASSROOM RESOURCES

AND SPONSORING TEACHERS FOR

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT.

LAURA LEA CEPHALU TEACHES

SCIENCE AT MIDDLE SCHOOL IN

BATON ROUGE.

SHE ATTENDED THE SALLY RIDE

SCIENCE ACADEMY.

STEM FAMILY NIGHT TO PROMOTE

CAREERS IN SCIENCE AND MATH.

>> IT WAS A BIG SUCCESS.

A LOT OF WORK, BUT THE KIDS

LOVED IT AND IT SPARKED A BUNCH

OF INTEREST THAT A TEXTBOOK

CANNOT DO.

IT WAS GREAT.

>> I THINK --

>> ALEXIS JOHNSON IS AN EIGHTH

GRADER AT GLASGOW MIDDLE SCHOOL

WHO PLANS ON BECOMING A NURSE.

CEPHALU SAID HER INTEREST AND

CONFIDENCE HAS INCREASED SINCE

STEM NIGHT.

>> I STILL THINK IT IS HARD BUT

I CAN SEE MYSELF DOING IT

BECAUSE I'M MORE INTO SCIENCE.

>> REGIONAL ROBOTICS

COMPETITION AND PROGRAMS ARE

OTHER WAYS THAT THE STATE IS

TRYING TO IGNITE STUDENTS

PASSION IN STEM AND ITS OUT OF

THIS WORLD CAREER

OPPORTUNITIES.

>> IT IS DEFINITELY A RUSH ON

THE MOMENT OF LANDING TO SEE

EVERYTHING THAT WE HAVE WORKED

SO HARD ON FOR THE LAST, YOU

KNOW, FROM SEVEN TO 10 YEARS

ALL EXECUTE SO FLAWLESSLY RIGHT

DOWN TO THE SURFACE OF MARS.

>> KEITH COMEAUX, A LOUISIANA

NATIVE, LSU GRADUATE, AND THE

FLIGHT DIRECTOR OF NASA'S

"CURIOSITY" ROVER THAT LANDED

ON MARS.

NOT EVEN THE SKY IS THE LIMIT

IN THE WORLD OF SCIENCE.

>> STUDENTS SHOULD GET

ENERGIZED BY SCIENCE.

SCIENCE IS OUR FUTURE.

SCIENCE DRIVES A LOT OF THE

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS THAT WE

SEE AND ALSO DRIVES OUR

CURIOSITY.

I THINK HUMAN NATURE IS TO

EXPLORE AND I THINK SCIENCE IS

SOMEONE WAY WE CAN DO THAT.

>> TALK ABOUT ENTHUSIASM FOR

SCIENCE.

THAT LANDING WAS REALLY

EXCITING.

WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE

CADDO PARISH SCHOOL DISTRICT

AND OTHERS FOR HELPING TO

COORDINATE SEVERAL OF THOSE

INTERVIEWS.

BEFORE WE GO TO THE AUDIENCE

HERE, I WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE

OUR PANEL THIS EVENING.

KEN BRANFORD IS ASSISTANT

SUPERINTENDENT WITH THE

LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF

EDUCATION'S OFFICE OF CONTENT.

STACEY CHIASSON IS A FORMER

HIGH SCHOOL BUSINESS TEACHER

WHO NOW LEADS THE PUBLIC

AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT FOR THE

DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY IN

LOUISIANA.

DR. ISAIAH WARNER IS A BOYD

PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY AT

LSU.

DUE IN LARGE PART TO HIS

RECRUITING EFFORTS, LSU

RANKS FIRST NATIONALLY FOR

PRODUCING AFRICAN-AMERICAN

PH.D.'S IN CHEMISTRY.

CATHI COX-BONIOL IS

COORDINATOR OF THE ACHIEVE

PROGRAM IN LINCOLN PARISH

SCHOOLS.

A SCIENCE TEACHER FOR 17

YEARS, MRS. BONIOL HAS

DIRECTED STEM INITIATIVES AT

THE UNIVERSITY AND HIGH

SCHOOL LEVELS.

AND CURT EYSINK IS THE

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF

LOUISIANA WORK FORCE

COMMISSION.

A POSITION HE'S HELD SINCE

2008.

HIS AGENCY WORKS AS A

MATCH-MAKER FOR LOUISIANA'S

EMPLOYEES AND EMPLOYERS.

I THINK YOU HAVE AN OPENING

QUESTION.

>> THANK YOU VERY MUCH.

THANK YOU TO OUR PANELISTS FOR

BEING HERE TONIGHT AND OUR

AUDIENCE.

I KNOW EVERYBODY IS EXCITED AND

READY TO GO.

THIS IS FOR EACH OF YOU.

WE SAW IN THE PACKAGE THERE

THAT THE DEMAND IS GREAT, JOBS

OF PLENTIFUL WHEN IT COMES TO

CAREERS IN THE STEM AREAS RIGHT

HERE IN LOUISIANA.

BUT IS THE STATE REALLY DOING

AN ADEQUATE JOB OF PREPARING

STUDEN

STUDENTS, MANY OF THE STUDENTS

HERE TONIGHT AND OTHERS AND

THOSE IN THE WORK FORCE TO

REALLY MEET THAT DEMAND?

WE WILL START WITH YOU, CURT.

>> GREAT QUESTION TO START

WITH.

I THINK THAT GETS TO THE HEART

OF THE ISSUE RIGHT OFF THE BAT.

THE KEY THING, THESE JOBS ARE

EVOLVING.

OUR SYSTEM THAT IS DEVELOPING

PEOPLE FOR THESE JOBS HAS TO

EVOLVE, TOO.

A NUMBER OF THINGS WE ARE

DOING.

A REALLY RAMPED UP VERSION OF

OCCUPATIONAL -- LOOKS

SHORT-TERM THROUGH 2014,

LONG-TERM THROUGH 2020, AND A

SPECIAL STUDY ON THE

CONSTRUCTION JOBS MENTIONED IN

THAT SEGMENT.

WE HAVE A BOOMING INDUSTRIAL

CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY THAT IS

GOING TO BE TAKING OFF VERY

SOON AND IT IS GOING TO LAST

FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS.

ONCE WE KNOW WHAT THE DEMAND

IS, WORKING CLOSELY WITH THE

EDUCATION TRAINING INSTITUTION,

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, AND

PARTICULARLY THE COMMUNITY OF

TECHNICAL COLLEGE SYSTEM, BUT

MOST IMPORTANTLY WITH BUSINESS

AND INDUSTRY TO UNDERSTAND

EXACTLY WHAT THE OCCUPATIONS

ARE, THE SKILLSETS REQUIRED FOR

THE OCCUPATIONS AND BUILDING

THAT INTO THE FRAMEWORK

AVAILABLE TO PEOPLE REALLY

STARTING JULY.

FIRST WEEK IN JULY.

FIRST CLASS FROM THIS SPECIAL

INITIATIVE WILL RAMP UP.

INDUSTRIAL CONSTRUCTION JOBS

AND THAT IS A MODEL THAT WE PUT

TOGETHER IN THE LAST 2 1/2

MONTHS, EVERYBODY WORKING

TOGETHER TO RESPOND VERY

QUICKLY TO THIS FIELD.

>> I AM VERY ENCOURAGED WHAT

I'M SEEING IN LOUISIANA.

A NETWORK OF SCIENCE LEADERS

THROUGHOUT THE STATE WORKING

DILIGENTLY TO CREATE A NETWORK

OF RESOURCES, INFORMAL AND

FORMAL THAT CAN SUPPORT THE

EDUCATIONAL PROCESS AND BRING A

REAL AUTHENTICITY TO THE

CLASSROOM, BEYOND JUST LEARNING

THE CONTENT AND DEALING WITH

STANDARDS MANDATED BY THE

DEPARTMENT, WE ARE BRINGING IN

THE -- BRINGING IT TO THE

FOREFRONT, GETTING KIDS

EXCITED.

THAT IS WHAT IT IS GOING TO

TAKE.

WE NEED TO TURN THEM ON TO IT

EARLY.

THEY BECOME EMPOWERED AND

BELIEVE IN WHAT THEY CAN DO AND

SEE THE WINDOWS OPEN TO THEIR

FUTURE.

IT IS ALL ABOUT A MINDSET AND

GETTING THE RESOURCES IN THERE

TO EMPOWER THE TEACHERS TO DO

THAT.

>> DR. WARNER.

>> I HATE TO BE THE NAY SAYER

HERE, BUT THE FACT THAT YOU

HAVE THREE STEM JOB TO EVERY

UNEMPLOYED PERSON SUGGESTS THAT

WE'RE NOT DOING WHAT WE SHOULD

BE DOING.

I THINK WE CAN DO A MUCH BETTER

JOB PREPARING OUR STUDENTS FOR

THE STEM FIELD.

I THINK THAT, FOR EXAMPLE,

QUITE OFTEN, EVEN COUNSELLORS

WILL TRANSFORM THEIR OWN FEARS

TO STUDENTS.

WE NEED TO TELL STUDENTS MORE

OFTEN YOU NEED TO TAKE THAT

TOUGH STUFF BECAUSE THAT IS

WHERE THE JOBS.

I THINK WE'RE NOT DOING AS

NEARLY A GOOD AS JOB AS WE

SHOULD BE DOING IN THAT AREA.

>> DOW IS FORTUNATE, WE HAVE

SIX SITES ACROSS THE STATE.

AND SO, WE DO GET TO PARTNER

WITH A LOT OF DIFFERENT FOLKS

AROUND THE STATE.

AND WHAT WE ARE SEEING IS THERE

ARE POCKETS OF EXCELLENCE.

THERE ARE GREAT THINGS GOING ON

AT LSU AND TECH.

AND THERE ARE GREAT THINGS

GOING ON RIGHT HERE AT THE MATH

AND SCIENCE ACADEMY IN

IBERVILLE PARISH.

WHAT WE ARE SEEING WHEN WE

CAN'T FILL A JOB IN THE STEM

FIELD, THERE ARE NOT A YOUNG

PEOPLE COMING OUT OF THESE

DEGREE PROGRAMS.

THE KEY IS TO GET MORE YOUNG

PEOPLE EXCITED AND UNDERSTAND

THE OPPORTUNITIES THAT WILL

EXIST FOR THEM RIGHT HERE AT

HO

HOME.

THE DATA SHOWS HOW WELL THE

JOBS PAY AND IT DOESN'T HAVE TO

BE FOR A YOUNG PERSON JUST FOR

THE FOUR-YEAR DEGREE.

WE HIRE 6,000 PEOPLE IN THIS

STATE, AND WE HIRE A LOT OF

ENGINEERS, BUT TO BE HONEST

WITH YOU, THE BACKBONE OF OUR

FACILITY, TWO-YEAR DEGREE STEM

PROFESSIONALS.

>> AS WE SPEAK, SUPERINTENDENT

WHITE IS OUT ON A TWO-WEEK TOUR

AND WHAT WE ARE DOING IS WE ARE

TALKING ABOUT THE CURRENT --

THE THREE DIPLOMAS THAT A

STUDENT IN LOUISIANA CAN GET

RIGHT NOW.

THERE IS CURRENTLY A CAREER

DIPLOMA, THERE IS A BASIC

DIPLOMA, AND A CORE FOR COLLEGE

TRACK DIPLOMA.

IN THE ORIGINAL SEGMENT WE SAW,

ALLUDED TO LOUISIANA, THERE IS

THIS DEMAND RIGHT NOW, RANKED

FIRST IN THE NATION IN

METROPOLITAN AREAS IN BATON

ROUGE, AND NEW ORLEANS RANKED

NUMBER THREE FOR STEM JOBS THAT

DO NOT REQUIRE A BACHELOR'S

DEGREE.

AND SO WITH THESE THREE DIPLOMA

PATHWAYS RIGHT NOW, WITH 32,000

STUDENTS, 32,000 PLUS STUDENTS

THAT GRADUATE EACH YEAR IN

LOUISIANA, THERE WAS 170 THAT

EARNED A CAREER DIPLOMA THIS

YEAR.

WITH A CAREER DIPLOMA, WE'RE

GOING AROUND THE STATE.

AND WE WOULD LIKE TO STRENGTHEN

THAT OPTION SO THAT A STUDENT

WHO IS ON A CAREER DIPLOMA PATH

WHERE THEY TAKE TWO YEARS OF

RIGOROUS ACADEMIC COURSE WORK

AND THEN THE LAST TWO YEARS

THEY WILL START TO WORK TOWARDS

AN INDUSTRY-BASED CREDENTIAL TO

HELP MEET THIS NEED.

IT WILL BE AN INDUSTRY-BASED

CREDENTIAL ALIGNED TO HIGH

DEMAND JOBS.

WE HAVE BEEN WORKING WITH CURT

AND THE WORK FORCE INVESTMENT

COUNCIL AND COMMISSION AND WE

ARE GOING AROUND THE STATE AND

SEEKING INPUT ON THAT NOW.

AND SO, THERE IS ALSO GOING TO

BE ACCOUNTABILITY ASSOCIATED

WITH THAT, JUST LIKE WE REWARD

STUDENTS IN THE SYSTEM RIGHT

NOW, IN SCHOOLS FOR STUDENTS

THAT TAKE RIGOROUS COURSE WORK,

REWARDS IN THE SYSTEM FOR

STUDENTS WHO COME OUT OF HIGH

SCHOOL WHO GRADUATE WITH AN

INDUSTRY-BASED CREDENTIAL.

>> KATHY BRAND, DIRECTOR OF THE

STARBASE LOUISIANA PROGRAM.

MY QUESTION IS THE DEPARTMENT

OF DEFENSE PROGRAM IN LOUISIANA

PROVIDES 25 CONCENTRATED HOURS

OF STEM CONTENT AND APPLICATION

TO OVER 4,000 STUDENTS A YEAR.

THE CURRENT ADMINISTRATION

PLANS AN ACROSS-THE-BOARD

ELIMINATION OF FEDERALLY FUNDED

STEM PROGRAMS, EVEN THOSE WITH

A PROVEN TRACK RECORD OF

SUCCESS IN AN EFFORT TO

REORGANIZE AND STREAMLINE

RESOURCES.

IF STARBASE FUNDING IS NOT --

THIS RESOURCE WILL BE CLOSED.

-- AVAILABLE IN EDUCATION,

BUSINESS, OR INDUSTRY THAT

COULD SUSTAIN A SUCCESSFUL

PROGRAM LIKE STARBASE IF

FEDERAL FUNDING IS LOST?

>> THAT IS A TOUGH ONE.

WHO WOULD LIKE TO -- WHO WOULD

LIKE TO TRY THAT?

>> I WILL TAKE THAT.

YOU KNOW, I DON'T KNOW HOW

DIVERSIFIED THE FUNDING IS.

I DON'T KNOW IF YOU ARE

COMPLETELY FUNDED BY FEDERAL

FUNDS.

IS THAT CORRECT THAT YOU ARE

COMPLETELY FUNDED BY FEDERAL

FUNDS.

I THINK IT IS EXTREMELY

IMPORTANT AND DOW'S PHILOSOPHY

TO HAVE A PUBLIC/PRIVATE

FUNDING MECHANISM TO SUSTAIN

THESE THINGS.

WE HAVE A VESTED INTEREST IN

THOSE PEOPLE THAT YOU ARE

TRAINING.

SO, WE WANT TO INVEST IN THAT

FINANCIALLY AND WITH HUMAN

RESOURCES AND VOLUNTEERS.

OUR STATE HAS TO, YOU KNOW,

ENGAGE IN THAT.

I WILL GIVE YOU AN EXAMPLE OF

THAT PUBLIC/PRIVATE FUNDING

MECHANISM IS THE NEW TECHNICAL

COLLEGE RIGHT HERE IN IBERVILLE

PARISH.

STATE DEDICATED A LITTLE OVER

$3 MILLION TO GET THE PROJECT

DONE.

IT WAS GOING TO BE A $4

MILLION.

DOW CONTRIBUTED THE ADDITIONAL

$1 MILLION TO MAKE THAT HAPPEN.

I THINK AS A PARTNERSHIP, WE

CAN SUSTAIN THAT'S THINGS THAT

HAVE GREAT TRACK RECORDS.

>> ANYBODY ELSE WANT TO CHIME

IN?

>> I WOULD LIKE TO SAY ONE OF

THE THINGS THAT THE DEPARTMENT

IS DOING IN THE AREA OF FUNDING

IS THAT IT USED TO BE THAT

SCHOOL SYSTEMS WOULD HAVE TO

APPLY FOR THEIR FUNDING AND

THEY WOULD HAVE 25 DIFFERENT

POTS OF FUNDS THEY WOULD HAVE

TO APPLY IN THEORY, ALMOST 25

DIFFERENT TIMES.

WHAT WE HAVE DONE IS WORKED TO

CONSOLIDATE ALL OF THAT FUNDING

INTO ONE UNIFIED APPLICATION.

AND WE WORKED TO PROVIDE

FLEXIBILITY WITH THE DISTRICTS

AND SO IN THIS CASE, YOU KNOW,

WORKING WITH THE SCHOOL

SYSTEMS, YOU KNOW, YOU COULD

PARTNER WITH THEM AND SEE IF

THERE IS AN IDENTIFIABLE

FUNDING SOURCE, BECAUSE IT

SOUNDS LIKE WHAT IS OCCURRING

IS VERY POSITIVE AND I'M SURE

THAT THE SCHOOL DISTRICTS WOULD

BE AMBITIOUS IN WANTING TO

PARTICIPATE IN SOMETHING LIKE

THIS.

>> IN OUR COMMUNITY AND

TECHNICAL COLLEGES, SUPPLYING

PEOPLE FOR THE GREATEST GAP IN

OUR WORK FORCE, DEVELOPING

TREMENDOUS PUBLIC PRIVATE

PARTNERSHIPS AND IN SOME DEGREE

WITH HIGH SCHOOLS AND

UNIVERSITIES TO BRIDGE THIS

GAP.

IF YOU LOOK AT DELGADO FOR

INSTANCE, A TREMENDOUS AMOUNT

OF PRIVATE DOLLARS COMING INTO

THAT UNIVERSITY, EITHER AS

MATCHES, IN OTHER WAYS.

CAMPUSES ACROSS THE STATE DOING

THAT SAME THING.

THE KEY IS WORKING WITH THE

PEOPLE WHO ARE ULTIMATELY GOING

TO HIRE THOSE STUDENTS AND

SHOWING VALUE AND -- FROM AN

EMPLOYER PERSPECTIVE, IF A

PROGRAM IS PROVIDING VALUE,

PRODUCING PEOPLE THAT CAN MEET

THE DEMANDS BY SKILL, THERE IS

GOING TO BE A VESTED INTEREST

IN EVERYBODY PARTICIPATING IN

THAT PARTNERSHIP.

WE ARE SEEING A GROWING NUMBER

OF SUCCESS STORIES JUST LIKE

THAT ACROSS THE STATE.

I THINK HIGH SCHOOLS

PARTICIPATING IN THAT, TOO.

>> THANK YOU.

THANK YOU SO MUCH.

OVER TO YOU, SHAUNA.

>> THANK YOU.

YOU MENTIONED EARLIER THAT

THERE ARE POCKETS OF SUCCESS

OUT THERE.

AND LOUISIANA TECH IS CERTAINLY

HAVING A LOT OF SUCCESS AND WE

HAD SOMEONE HERE FROM THE

SCHOOL.

GIVE US YOUR NAME AND TELL US

WHAT YOU ARE DOING HERE.

>> I'M THE STUDENT SUCCESS

SPECIALIST FOR THE COLLEGE OF

ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE AT

LOUISIANA TECH.

AT LOUISIANA TECH WE INVOLVE

OUR FRESHMEN IN HAND ON

PROJECTS.

THEY BUILD THEIR OWN LAB THAT

IS PORTABLE AND THEY'RE

RESPONSIBLE TO BRING TO EACH

CLASS.

WE SEE THIS AS A MAJOR ROLE IN

OUR RETENTION AND RECRUITING.

I WOULD LIKE TO ASK STACY OR

CATHI TO VOICE THEIR OPINION

ABOUT OUR APPROACH.

>> LOUISIANA TECH A VITAL

PARTNER TO PARISH SCHOOLS -- IT

HAS BEEN AMAZING TO WATCH THE

GAME CHANGER THAT HAS BEEN THE

RESULT OF THEIR INVOLVEMENT AND

I'M -- I WILL SPECIFICALLY CITE

THE NASA THREAD GRANT THAT WE

GOT IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

LOUISIANA TECH.

BROUGHT THAT FRESHMAN CLASS --

WHERE OUR STUDENTS WERE

SUDDENLY TAKING COLLEGE

LEVEL -- THEIR MINDSET CHANGED

ABOUT WHAT THEY WERE ABLE TO DO

AND OPENED UP AN ENTIRE WORLD

TO THEM.

THIS PAST YEAR, THE ECHO CAR

TEAM THAT WENT TO NATIONALS

ALONG WITH LOUISIANA TECH AND

ENDED UP DOING INCREDIBLE

THINGS THAT NO ONE ANTICIPATED.

AND THOSE KIDS ARE GOING RIGHT

INTO ENGINEERING.

THEY SEE THEMSELVES

DIFFERENTLY.

THAT TO ME IS WHAT THE

DIFFERENCE IS WITH THE PROGRAM

LIKE LOUISIANA TECH BECAUSE IT

HELPS CHANGE THE MINDSET.

I THINK WE'RE GOING TO HAVE TO

CHANGE THE MINDSET ACROSS THE

BOARD IN LOUISIANA IF WE ARE

GOING TO ACHIEVE WHAT IT IS

THAT WE NEED TO.

NOT ONLY IN THE CLASSROOM BUT

IN THE PARTNERSHIPS AS WELL AS

THE GENERAL PUBLIC

UNDERSTANDING THE CHANGES THAT

NEED TO TAKE PLACE.

I SEE WHAT LOUISIANA TECH DOES

AS A MODEL FOR OTHER PARTNERS

TO FOLLOW.

AND I CAN'T SPEAK HIGHLY ENOUGH

ABOUT IT.

>> I GOT TO MEET ALLY LAST

SUMMER.

GOOD TO SEE YOU.

I WAS SO IMPRESSED WITH WHAT

YOU ALL ARE DOING.

WHAT IMPRESSED ME THE MOST WAS

THE HAND-HOLDING THAT TECH DID

WITH THESE YOUNG PEOPLE, THE

STUDENTS.

TO NOT ONLY ENGAGE THEM BUT

KEEP THEM ENGAGED.

YOU REALLY HAVE PUT YOUR MONEY

WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS.

THEY HAVE HIRED PEOPLE LIKE YOU

TO DO THAT.

I WAS VERY IMPRESSED, EVEN AS

AN OLD SCHOOLTEACHER, WHEN WE

WOULD GO TO PROFESSIONAL

DEVELOPMENT, STAFF DEVELOPMENT,

THE TEACHERS WOULD GO, RIGHT?

YOU ARE TAKING THE TEACHER AND

THE STUDENTS, AND THEY'RE DOING

THE PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

TOGETHER.

THAT IS A GAME CHANGER.

VERY IMPRESSIVE.

I HAVE SEEN THINGS ON LSU'S WEB

SITE WHERE THEY ARE TRYING TO

DO THAT.

THIS IS GOING TO BRING IT HOME.

AND THAT STUDENT IS GOING TO

HOLD THAT TEACHER ACCOUNTABLE

IF THEY DON'T BRING THAT BACK

TO THE CLASSROOM AND THAT IS

PRETTY COOL.

>> NOT ONLY ARE THERE SOME

THINGS GOING ON AT LSU, THERE

ARE LOTS OF GREAT THINGS GOING

ON AT LSU.

WE MENTIONED EARLIER ABOUT THE

PROGRESS IN CHEMISTRY, NUMBER

ONE GRADUATE OF

AFRICAN-AMERICAN PH.D.'S IN

CHEMISTRY.

BUT ALSO ONE OF THE TOP

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS IN THE

COUNTRY IN TERMS OF STEM.

A STEM SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM

FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE

FOUNDATION AND A GROUP OF THOSE

STUDENTS OUT HERE RIGHT NOW WHO

CAN SPEAK TO THE PROGRAM.

THESE STUDENTS ARE COMING INTO

OUR PROGRAM AND THEY'RE GOING

ON AND GETTING PH.D.'S AT MIT,

MICHIGAN, GEORGIA TECH, THE TOP

SCHOOLS IN THE COUNTRY.

DIVERSE POPULATION OF STUDENTS.

THE POPULATION OF THAT GROUP IS

ROUGHLY REPRESENTATIVE OF THE

STATE.

ABOUT 35% AFRICAN-AMERICAN, 8%

HISPANIC, 48, 50%, OR MAJORITY

STUDENTS AND WE HAVE A GROUP

THAT IS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE

STATE THAT IS DOING AN

OUTSTANDING JOB.

>> THANK YOU VERY MUCH.

BETH.

>> ONE OF THE THINGS WE TALK

ABOUT IN LOUISIANA WE HAVE

ACCESS TO TOPS MONEY TO ALLOW

MANY STUDENTS TO GO TO SCHOOL.

WE HAVE STUDENTS HERE -- A

QUESTIONER HERE.

TELL US YOUR NAME AND QUESTION.

>> HI, I'M THE COLLEGE ACCESS

CHALLENGE GRANT DIRECTOR,

LOUISIANA OFFICE OF STUDENT

FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE.

ONE OF MY TASKS IS TO ASSURE WE

ARE AFFORDING STUDENTS EQUITY

OF -- COLLEGE AND CAREER

INFORMATION.

AS YOU MAY KNOW, COORDINATES

THE LOUISIANA CONNECT PORTAL,

WHICH IS THE STATE'S PREMIER

PORTAL FOR COLLEGE AND CAREER

INFORMATION FOR STUDENTS IN

GRADES 8-12.

PARTNERSHIP WITH THE DEPARTMENT

OF EDUCATION, THE -- THE

LOUISIANA WORK FORCE COMMISSION

WITH THE LAUNCH OF THE STAR

JOBS TOOL.

MY QUESTION TO THE OTHER

MEMBERS OF THE PANEL IS HOW CAN

WE PARTNER WITH YOUR

ORGANIZATION IN ORDER TO

PROVIDE MORE OPPORTUNITIES FOR

STUDENTS IN LOUISIANA --

>> CATHI.

>> I WILL BE GLAD TO START

THAT.

I THINK YOU WILL FIND FERTILE

GROUND FOR THE CONNECTION YOU

ARE LOOKING FOR.

MORE AND MORE OF OUR STUDENTS

ARE LOOKING FOR THAT AUTHENTIC

CONNECTION AS WELL.

THE NEW TECH SCHOOL IN LINCOLN

PARISH, EVERY STUDENT WILL HAVE

TO JOB SHADOW A MINIMUM OF TWO

TIMES THEIR JUNIOR YEAR.

INTERN THEIR SENIOR YEAR.

THEY NEED TO DO THEIR HOME WORK

OF WHAT THEY ARE INTERESTED IN

PRIOR TO THAT.

CAREER COACHES.

CAREER CENTER.

WE ARE LOOKING TO EQUIP THESE

YOUNG PEOPLE TO MAKE THE BEST

INFORMED DECISION THAT THEY

CAN.

YOUR TYPE OF OUTLET AND

INFORMATION BASE IS GOING TO BE

CRITICAL, AND IT IS GOING TO

HELP BECAUSE SO MANY OF OUR

YOUNG PEOPLE WILL BE MAKING

THESE DECISIONS BASED ON LITTLE

ADULT SUPERVISION FROM HOME, IF

YOU WILL.

THEY MAY BE THE FIRST ONE IN

THEIR FAMILY THAT IS ACTUALLY

GOING TO GO BEYOND THAT HIGH

SCHOOL DIPLOMA.

AND SO WE'RE GOING TO NEED

EVERY RESOURCE POSSIBLE TO

CONNECT THEM WITH THE

OPPORTUNITIES OUT THERE.

THESE KIDS ARE SEEING

THEMSELVES AS ABLE TO.

THEY JUST NEED TO KNOW HOW TO.

AND SO THAT IS HOW YOU ARE

GOING TO CONNECT WITH THESE

HIGH SCHOOLS THROUGH THE CAREER

CENTERS, CAREER COACHES AND

GUIDANCE COUNCILLORS --

COUNSELLORS AND INNOVATIVE --

>> GO ONLINE AND SEE THE

COURSES THEY WILL BE TAKING --

>> A GREAT BENEFIT, LOUISIANA

CONNECT, ANY KIND OF SIMILAR

TOOL.

THIS IS THE TOOL THAT PUTS

EMPLOYERS IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT

OF SOLVING THEIR OWN WORK FORCE

NEEDS.

EMPLOYER LIKE DOW, SOMEBODY

ELSE, CAN GO THROUGH THAT TOOL

AND START COMMUNICATING WITH

STUDENTS AS EARLY AS THE EIGHTH

GRADE WITH PERMISSION, BUT CAN

START COMMUNICATING WITH THE

STUDENTS, TELL THEM WE NEED A

STUDENT WITH A PARTICULAR SET

OF SKILLS TO DO A PARTICULAR

JOB AND WE WILL PAY THIS MUCH

FOR IT.

IF YOU TAKE THIS PARTICULAR

PATHWAY, YOU ARE EXACTLY THE

KIND OF KID WE ARE GOING TO

WANT TO HIRE.

THAT IS VERY POWERFUL.

>> I WEAR TWO HATS.

PROFESSOR, MY FAVORITE TITLE,

VICE CHANCELLOR OF STRATEGIC

INITIATIVES.

IN THAT OFFICE WE HAVE DONE A

LOT OF THINGS WORKING WITH THE

LOCAL COMMUNITY.

IN PARTICULAR, WITH 100 BLACK

MEN, WE STARTED TO WORK WITH

THAT GROUP AND WORKING WITH

PARENTS, PARENTS IS WHERE IT

ALL STARTS.

GETTING PARENTS TO RECOGNIZE

THAT ALL OF THOSE EFFORTS ARE

AVAILABLE FOR THEIR KIDS.

ONCE YOU GET THE PARENTS SOLD

ON THIS, THEN THE KIDS WILL

COME ALONG BECAUSE THE PARENTS

ARE GOING TO FORCE THEM TO COME

ALONG.

WE HAVE A SECOND PROGRAM THAT

WE ARE WORKING IN THE SUMMER

THROUGH GEAR UP, WORKING WITH

THE STUDENTS, WORKING WITH

THEIR ACT SCORES, WORKING TO

SHOW THEM HOW TO CONNECT WITH

LOUISIANA CONNECT AND DOING ALL

OF THE THINGS THAT ARE

NECESSARY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF

EFFORTS IN THE STEM FIELD.

>> BETH, I WOULD LIKE TO

FURTHER ADD ONE OF THE OTHER

FEATURES OF THE L.A. CONNECT

PORTAL.

BENEFICIAL TO PARENTS,

STUDENTS, BUSINESS COMMUNITY,

EVERY STUDENT STARTING IN THE

EIGHTH GRADE TAKES THE EXPLORE

TEST.

AND THAT GUIDES THEM ON WHICH

DIRECTION THEY MIGHT WANT TO

HEAD DOWN IN A CAREER PATH.

THEY DO AN INDIVIDUAL

GRADUATION PLAN IN THIS SYSTEM.

THEY START TO MAP OUT THEIR

PATHWAY FOR THE NEXT FOUR YEARS

THAT THEY ARE GOING TO BE IN

HIGH SCHOOL.

THEY SIT DOWN, AND THEY WORK

WITH THE COUNSELOR, THE PARENT,

THE PRINCIPAL, AND SUBMIT THIS

INDIVIDUAL GRADUATION PLAN UP

INTO THE SYSTEM.

AND IT IS TRACKED.

YOU KNOW, THE KID AS EARLY AS

THE EIGHTH GRADE DECIDES I

WOULD LIKE TO BE AN AIRLINE

PILOT.

WELL, THIS SYSTEM WILL HELP

THEM MAP OUT THE COURSE

SEQUENCES THAT THEY NEED.

IT IS ALSO TELLING THEM IF YOU

WANT TO USE YOUR TOP

SCHOLARSHIP AND GO TO LOUISIANA

TECH, TELL YOU ALONG THE WAY,

HEY, LOOK, YOU ARE MISSING A

COURSE, A RED FLAG WILL GO UP.

>> THANK YOU.

>> RESEARCH INDICATES THAT THE

TWO GREATEST RESOURCES

REMAINING UNTAPPED WHEN IT

COMES TO STEM CAREERS ARE

MINORITIES AND WOMEN.

I HAVE HEARD YOU TALK SO MUCH

ABOUT THE NEED TO GET STUDENTS

EXCITED ABOUT STEM CAREERS,

EXCITED ABOUT SCIENCE AND

ENGINEERING AND MATH.

AND WITH ME NOW IS DIANE, WHO

IS WITH THE SOCIETY OF WOMEN

ENGINEERS, AND YOU ARE VERY

PASSIONATE ABOUT THIS.

>> YES, I AM.

I AM A NATIVE LOUISIANAN AND A

CHEMICAL ENGINEER.

I BELIEVE -- I'M HERE TODAY

BECAUSE I BELIEVE THAT

ENGINEERING IS AN AMAZING

CAREER FOR ALL GIRLS.

I AM A MEMBER OF THE SOCIETY OF

WOMEN ENGINEERS.

AS PART OF THE SOCIETY OF WOMEN

ENGINEERS, OUTREACH LOCALLY

HERE, I COACH AN ALL-GIRLS

FIRST LEGO LEAD ROBOTICS TEAM

WITH THE GIRL SCOUTS.

ONE THING I NOTICED, EVEN WITH

ALL OF THE OUTREACH THAT WE ARE

DOING, STILL ONLY 30% OF

PARTICIPANTS IN THE PROGRAMS

ARE GIRLS, AND OVERALL, ONLY

ABOUT 10% OF ENGINEERS ARE

WOMEN.

A LOT OF RESEARCH HAS BEEN DONE

AND A LOT OF THEORIES MADE

ABOUT WHY, WHY IS THIS?

AND RESEARCH HAS SHOWN THAT

GIRLS AS YOUNG AS SIX, PRONE TO

SUBCONSCIOUS BIAS THAT CAN HURT

THEIR MATHIBILITY.

WHAT IS BEING DOWN IN LOUISIANA

TO ADDRESS THIS ISSUE AND

EDUCATE TEACHERS, THE GIRLS

THEMSELVES, PARENTS IN THE

PUBLIC ABOUT THIS BIAS?

>> WE DON'T HAVE -- WE DON'T

HAVE THE LUXURY TO IGNORE ANY

GROUP OF PEOPLE FROM OUR

EDUCATION AND TRAINING SYSTEM

IF WE ARE GOING TO MEET THE

DEMAND NOT JUST FOR STEM FIELDS

BUT ALL OF THE OTHER JOBS OUT

THERE THAT ARE ALSO VERY

IMPORTANT FOR THE HEALTH AND

VITALITY OF OUR COMMUNITY.

THERE IS NOT ONE GROUP.

IN LOUISIANA, WE HAVE MAYBE

600,000 ADULTS WHO DON'T EVEN

HAVE A GED.

THEY ARE NOT CONTRIBUTING MUCH

TO THEIR OWN LIVELIHOOD, LET

ALONE THE WELL BEING OF THEIR

COMMUNITIES.

THEY DON'T HAVE THE CAPACITY TO

DO THAT VERY OFTEN.

WE HAVE TO GET THEM BACK INTO

THE WORK FORCE.

MANY OF THOSE PEOPLE ARE WOMEN.

HIGH SCHOOL KIDS WHO DON'T KNOW

WHAT THEY WANT TO DO.

WE HAVE TO MAKE SURE THROUGH

TOOLS LIKE LOUISIANA CONNECT

AND LOUISIANA STAR JOBS AND

CAREER COACHING AND ALL OF

THESE MECHANISMS AVAILABLE TO

US THAT THEY UNDERSTAND THE

FULL BREADTH.

OPPORTUNITIES.

ONE THING THAT WOULD BE

BENEFICIAL, SPEAK ABOUT

DIVERSITY, INDUSTRY UNDERSTANDS

THE VALUE OF DIVERSITY

COMPLETELY.

COMPANIES COME TO LOUISIANA,

ONE OF THEIR CHIEF GOALS IS

DIVERSITY IN THE WORK FORCE

THAT WE ARE ABLE TO PROVIDE AS

A STATE.

THEY WANT TO HIT CERTAIN

STRETCH TARGETS.

I THINK IF WE DID A BETTER JOB

OF EXPLAINING TO YOUNG GIRLS

THAT THE FACT THAT YOU ARE A

GIRL, MEANS THAT YOU ARE GOING

TO BE LOOKED AT HARD FOR THESE

JOBS.

HERE IS AN OPPORTUNITY.

NOW, THE FACT IS THAT WE HAVE A

LOT OF JOBS, WE HAVE MORE JOBS

THAN WE HAVE UNEMPLOYED PEOPLE.

THAT IS NOT A BAD THING.

I WOULD DISAGREE ON THAT.

THAT IS THE TESTAMENT TO THE

OPPORTUNITIES THAT WE HAVE.

THAT DOESN'T MEAN WE'RE

STRUGGLING.

IT MEANS WE HAVE OPPORTUNITIES.

AND GIRLS NEED TO UNDERSTAND

THAT THOSE OPPORTUNITIES ARE

EVEN GREATER FOR THEM.

>> THERE IS SOME SORT OF

DISCONNECT OUT THERE.

WE SAW THE YOUNG GIRL AT

GLASGOW SAY THAT SHE INITIALLY

THOUGHT THAT SCIENCE WAS HARD.

FORTUNATELY FOR HER, SHE HAD A

TEACHER WHO IS VERY

ENTHUSIASTIC AND EXCITED ABOUT

SCIENCE.

THEY HAD STEM NIGHT.

AND NOW SHE IS VERY INTERESTED

IN BECOMING A NURSE.

SO, YES, DO YOU WANT TO SPEAK

TO THAT?

>> VERY FAMILIAR WITH -- WITH

THE GREAT, GREAT ORGANIZATION.

WE HAD WOMEN ENGINEERS FROM DOW

AT A LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL TALKING

TO GIRLS.

THAT WAY THE COUNSELLOR IS A

BARRIER PERHAPS OR MOM IS A

BARRIER PERHAPS, WE WILL CREATE

ENVIRONMENTS WHERE WE CAN STILL

TALK ABOUT THE POSITIVE.

I THINK IT IS REAL IMPORTANT

FOR OUR INDUSTRY PARTNERS IN

THE AREA TO HAVE THE DIVERSITY

NETWORKS.

WE HAVE THOSE.

WE HAVE THE AFRICAN AMERICAN

NETWORK.

THE WOMEN INNOVATION NETWORK.

TO GET THOSE DIVERSITY NETWORKS

OUT IN THE COMMUNITY, TALKING

ABOUT WHAT THEY DO EVERY DAY.

TALKING ABOUT HOW THEY GOT

THERE.

AND HOW DOES A WOMAN, WHO WORKS

SHIFT WORK AT DOW, STILL TAKE

CARE OF HER TWO SMALL CHILDREN?

BECAUSE THAT'S REAL.

AND, SO, IT IS GOING TO TAKE

PEOPLE IN THE WORKPLACE ALREADY

TO TALK ABOUT THOSE THINGS.

>> I JUST WANTED TO SAY, ONE OF

THE FOCUS OF THE PROGRAM THAT I

MENTIONED TO YOU EARLIER IS ON

DIVERSITY.

I SIT ON THE BOARD OF A YOUNG

WOMAN WHO IS A PROFESSOR AT

UCLA.

ONE THING SHE HAS SHOWN BY

RESEARCH IS THAT DIVERSITY IS

THE KEY TO LEARNING.

WHY IS THAT TRUE?

WELL, IT'S TRUE BECAUSE IF YOU

ARE AROUND PEOPLE WHO THINK

DIFFERENTLY THAN YOU DO, YOU

ARE GOING TO MAKE ARGUMENTS IN

TERMS OF WHATEVER FIELD YOU'RE

IN, THEN YOU HAVE TO BE ON YOUR

TOES TO BE ABLE TO MAKE AN

ARGUMENT TO SOMEONE WHO IS VERY

DIFFERENT THAN YOU.

BECAUSE OTHERWISE, YOU CAN'T

HOLD YOUR ARGUMENT.

SO SHE HAS SHOWN BY RESEARCH --

WHAT WE HAVE DONE IN OUR

PROGRAM IS FOCUS ON DIVERSITY.

IF YOU LOOK AT THE POPULATION

OF STUDENTS RIGHT OUT HERE.

THERE ARE MANY WOMEN AS THERE

ARE MEN.

THERE IS A GREAT DIVERSITY IN

TERMS OF RACE.

GREAT DIVERSITY IN TERMS OF

RELIGIONS, AND WHAT WE HAVE

DONE IS CREATED A ENVIRONMENT

WHERE THE USE -- USE THIS

DIVERSITY TO PROMOTE THE WHOLE

FIELD OF STEM AND CHALLENGE

EACH OTHER.

AND THESE STUDENTS ARE

PERFORMING INCREDIBLY WELL.

WE HAVE HAD 250 STUDENTS COME

OUT OF THIS PROGRAM.

ROUGHLY ABOUT 37 -- I'M SORRY,

43% OF THEM HAVE COME OUT WITH

A 3.7 GRADE POINT AVERAGE OR

BETTER IN THE STEM FIELD.

WE HAVE A GRADUATION RATE,

WHICH IS 92%, TWICE THAT OF ANY

OTHER PROGRAM IN THE COUNTRY

AND THREE TIMES MORE THAN SOME

OF THE MOST SELECTED PROGRAMS.

SO, WE HAVE BEEN VERY EFFECTIVE

INCLUDING WOMEN.

WE HAVE BEEN VERY EFFECTIVE IN

INCLUDING MINORITIES.

GRADUATION RATE FOR MINORITIES

OUT OF OUR PROGRAM, FOR WOMEN

OUT OF OUR PROGRAM, FOR

MAJORITY OUT OF OUR PROGRAM,

92%.

EXACTLY THE SAME.

WE HAVE ELIMINATED THE

DISPARITY, WHICH YOU SEE IN

MANY OTHER PROGRAMS ACROSS THE

COUNTRY.

>> YOU MADE A VERY IMPORTANT

STATEMENT WHEN YOU SAID THAT

THE YOUNG LADY SAID UNTIL SHE

HAD A TEACHER THAT WAS EXCITED,

AND I JUST GOT THROUGH HAVING A

MEETING WITH ELEMENTARY

TEACHERS THIS PAST WEEK, AND WE

WERE TALKING ABOUT INFUSING

THEIR DAY WITH SOME STEM.

AND THEY FROZE IMMEDIATELY.

AND THEY SAID I DON'T KNOW

ANYTHING ABOUT THAT.

AND I THINK WE DO A GREAT

INSERVICE TO OUR STUDENTS, AT

THE ELEMENTARY LEVEL, ELA,

DOUBLE BLOCKING MATH AND THERE

IS NO REAL SCIENCE,

ENGINEERING, ANYTHING TAKING

PLACE AT THE ELEMENTARY GRADES

AND THEY BECOME AFRAID OF IT.

THEIR TEACHERS ARE AFRAID OF

IT.

IT IS NOT THEIR FAULT.

I SPENT A GOOD BIT OF TIME

COLLABORATING WITH AN

ENGINEERING COLLEAGUE AND WE

DID WORKSHOPS ON TEACHERS TO

INFUSE THEIR CURRICULUM -- I

THINK WE HAVE TO RETHINK WHAT

IS GOING ON AT THE ELEMENTARY

GRADE SO THAT THESE KIDS ARE

NOT AFRAID OF IT, THEIR

TEACHERS ARE NOT AFRAID OF IT,

AND THEY CAN TRANSITION INTO DO

GREAT STEM STUFF.

WHEN THEY GET A GOOD TEACHER

DOING SCIENCE, NOT JUST

DEFINING WORDS AND ANSWERING

QUESTIONS AND WORKSHEETS, BUT

DOING THE SCIENCE AND

ENGINEERING, THAT IS WHEN WE

SEE THINGS CHANGE.

>> THIS SUMMER WE ARE TRAINING

800 TEACHERS IN ADVANCED

PLACEMENT STEM FOCUS COURSES.

THEY WILL LEARN HOW TO DELIVER

ONE OF THESE RIGOROUS ADVANCE

PLACEMENT COURSES.

WE TALKED ABOUT SOME

INCENTIVES.

RECENT LEGISLATION WAS PASSED

WITH SENATE BILL 202.

WHAT THAT IS DOING FOR STUDENTS

THAT TAKE ADVANCED COURSEWORK

IN HIGH SCHOOL, THEY NOW GET A

WEIGHTED GPA FOR THOSE COURSES

IN THEIR TOP -- IN THE TOP

SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM.

THEY ARE RECOGNIZING THESE

ADVANCED PLACEMENT AND COLLEGE

DUEL ENROLLMENT COURSES.

>> THANK YOU.

BETH.

>> I HAVE BEEN ANXIOUSLY

WANTING YOU TO COME OVER HERE.

ACTUAL CHEMICAL ENGINEER --

>> I'M A RECENT GRADUATE OF

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING AT LSU.

WHILE AT LSU, PART OF THE

STUDENT CHAPTER OF THE SOCIETY

OF WOMEN ENGINEERS AND PART OF

DIVERSITY AMBASSADORS AT THE

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING.

ANOTHER PART WHILE AT LSU, ACT

TUTOR.

AND I REALIZED THAT WHEN I WAS

TRYING TO LIKE SHOW THEM, YOU

KNOW, CERTAIN MATH PROBLEM AND

EXPLAIN TO THEM WHY THEY GOT IT

WRONG, I NOTICED THAT THEY

UNDERSTOOD THE PROBLEM

CONCEPTUALLY, AND THEY COULD

TELL ME I NEED TO GET FROM HERE

TO HERE, BUT THEY LACKED THE

FUNDAMENTAL KNOWLEDGE.

ONE PROBLEM IS THAT THEY

COULDN'T LIKE DIVIDE FRACTIONS

AND ANALYZE THE GRAPHS.

THEY KNEW THEY NEEDED TO GET TO

A CERTAIN POINT BUT DIDN'T KNOW

HOW TO DO THAT.

AS LEADERS IN EDUCATION, WHAT

DOES THAT SAY TO YOU AND HOW DO

YOU THINK THAT SHOULD BE

SOLVED?

>> THIS IS WHAT I WAS REFERRING

TO EARLIER.

THAT WE'RE NOT DOING OUR JOBS

AT THE LOWER AREAS.

WE'RE NOT ENCOURAGING OUR

STUDENTS TO TAKE THOSE

SO-CALLED TOUGH COURSES THAT

ARE NEEDED IN THE MATHEMATICS

AREA TO HAVE THE FOUNDATION TO

DO EXACTLY WHAT YOU ARE TALKING

ABOUT.

AND NO MATTER HOW MUCH WE FOOL

OURSELVES IN LOUISIANA, WE ARE

NOT DOING AN ADEQUATE JOB.

AND THAT IS A FACT.

NOT ONLY CAN I STATE THIS, BUT

STATISTICS BASICALLY SUPPORTS

WHAT I'M SAYING.

IN THE JAPANESE SOCIETY, THE

MOST REVEERED PERSONS ARE THE

TEACHERS.

AND WE NEED TO GET TO THAT

POINT HERE WHERE WE PAY OUR

TEACHERS WHAT THEY'RE WORTH.

WE DO AN EXCELLENT JOB OF

TRAINING SCIENCE TEACHERS IN

LOUISIANA.

WHAT HAPPENS?

THEY GO TO TEXAS AND MAKE 30%

MORE THAN THEY MAKE HERE IN

LOUISIANA.

WE NEED TO PAY OUR TEACHERS,

PARTICULARLY OUR STEM TEACHERS,

THEY ARE A VERY VALUABLE

RESOURCE, WE NEED TO PAY THEM

MORE, AND WE KEEP THE BEST

PEOPLE HERE IN THIS STATE AND

DO A BETTER JOB AT THE

ELEMENTARY AND HIGH SCHOOL

LEVEL OF GETTING BETTER

TEACHERS.

>> WE ARE STILL HAVING

ELEMENTARY SCHOOLTEACHERS WHO

DON'T HAVE TO TAKE ANY ADVANCED

MATH.

ISN'T THAT STILL A PROBLEM --

>> YES, AND I WOULD LIKE TO GO

BACK TO THE SCENARIO THAT YOU

OUTLINED WHERE, YOU KNOW,

STUDENTS ARE COMING TO LSU AND

THEY CAN'T DO SOME OF THE ENTRY

LEVEL FRESHMEN MATH THAT IS

THERE.

THAT GOES BACK TO WHAT I WAS

ALLUDING TO EARLIER.

IN LOUISIANA, THREE DIFFERENT

DIPLOMA MATHWAYS.

VERY CONFUSE -- PATHWAYS.

CONFUSING FOR PARENTS,

STUDENTS, COUNSELLORS, ETC.

WE WANT TO MOVE IN THE

DIRECTION WITH ONE LOUISIANA

DIPLOMA, TWO CAREER TRACKS IN

IT.

ONE A CAREER TRACK AND THE

SECOND ONE A COLLEGE TRACK.

COLLEGE TRACK WILL ALIGN WITH

TOPS AND THE RIGOROUS ENTRANCE

REQUIREMENTS THAT THERE ARE.

STUDENTS CAN GRADUATE WITH A

CORE FOUR DIPLOMA, COLLEGE

TRACK DIPLOMA, BUT YET STILL

NOT MEET REQUIREMENTS FOR A TOP

SCHOLARSHIP.

WE WANT TO HAVE THAT RIGOR IN

THERE.

WE TALKED ABOUT INCENTIVIZING.

WE ARE TRAINING 800 TEACHERS IN

THE ADVANCED PLACEMENT

COURSEWORK.

150 OF THOSE ARE ACTUALLY

MIDDLE SCHOOLTEACHERS BEING

TRAINED IN PRE-ADVANCED

PLACEMENT COURSE WORK.

BUT TRAINING THOSE TEACHERS.

THE STUDENTS, THEY'RE

INCENTIVIZED TO TAKE THIS

COURSE WORK.

WHEN THEY GO TO GET A TOPS

SCHOLARSHIP, THE COURSES WILL

BE WEIGHTED IN THE GPA, AND

ALSO IN THE SCHOOL

ACCOUNTABILITY FORMULA.

STUDENTS PARTICIPATING IN THESE

RIGOROUS COURSES, EXTRA

WEIGHT --

>> COMMENTS ABOUT MATH, THAT IS

NOT TRUE ONLY FOR ENGINEERS, EM

EM -- CHEMISTS AND DOCTORS,

RESEARCH SCIENTISTS.

IT IS TRUE FOR PIPE FITTER,

WELDERS, 86,000 INDUSTRIAL

CONSTRUCTION JOBS WE NEED TO

FILL.

THAT IS TRUE ACROSS THE BOARD.

I DON'T THINK ANYBODY THINKS

THAT ANYBODY IS COMING OUT

FULLY PREPARED.

MASSIVE AMOUNTS OF

RESTRUCTURING.

THEY HAVE TO START AT A

COMMUNITY, OR TECHNICAL COLLEGE

THAT IS A BETTER ENVIRONMENT

FOR THOSE KIDS TO GET THOSE

SKILLS.

DROP-OUT RATE FROM THE

UNIVERSITY THAT IS TOO HIGH,

JUST AS FROM OUR HIGH SCHOOLS.

AND THIS FOCUS ON FOUNDATIONAL

IMPROVEMENT IS -- IT IS WHERE

IT ALL STARTS.

IT STARTS IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL.

WE CAN'T BUILD A PERSON'S SKILL

SETS IF THEY DON'T HAVE THOSE.

WHAT WE ARE SEEING IS A CHANGE

IN HOW WE APPROACH THAT IN

LOUISIANA.

>> THANK YOU SO MUCH.

WE HAVE A LOT OF QUESTIONS.

>> I WORK WITH LSU COLLEGE OF

ENGINEERING OFFICE FOR

DIVERSITY PROGRAM.

SPECIFICALLY WITHIN MY ROLE, I

WORK WITH A PRECOLLEGE

ENGINEERING PROGRAMS.

MY ONLY PERSONAL BACKGROUND,

GRADUATE IN ENVIRONMENTAL

ENGINEERING AND I WENT TO

PRACTICE ENGINEERING FOR 3 1/2

YEARS.

I THEN WENT TO BE A TEACHER.

WHEN WE TALK ABOUT FUNDAMENTALS

FUNDAMENTALS, THEY ARE SCHOOLS

SERVICING OUR STUDENTS WITH

LOWER ECONOMIC STATUS -- -- ONE

OF MY CONCERNS, NOT ONLY HOW DO

WE INCREASE INTEREST IN STEM

AMONGST THE STUDENTS IN THE

SCHOOLS, BUT ONCE WE RECRUIT

THEM INTO THE UNIVERSITY, HOW

DO WE RETAIN THEM IN THE

UNIVERSITY IN ORDER FOR THEM TO

ULTIMATELY GET THE DEGREES THAT

WOULD LEAD TO THE JOB?

>> I WILL START.

AND I WILL TAKE IT FROM A HIGH

SCHOOL LEVEL.

I'M SITTING HERE THINKING ABOUT

EIGHTH GRADERS, WHEN THEY WERE

COMING IN THE NEW TECH SCHOOL

AND DID NOT HAVE FOUNDATIONAL

SKILLS AND WE REALIZED RIGHT

AWAY THAT WE WERE GOING TO HAVE

TO BACK UP AND REGROUP.

BUT ONCE WE HELD THEIR HAND

THROUGH THAT FIRST YEAR AND

THEY TASTED SUCCESS, THEY

REALIZED THAT THIS HE WERE

GOING TO BE ABLE TO DO

SOMETHING.

I THINK THAT IS PART OF THE

EQUATION.

WE HAVE TO GET THEM IN THERE

AND LET THEM REALIZE WHAT THEY

ARE CAPABLE OF DOING.

IT IS OUR JOB AS TEACHERS AND

EDUCATIONAL PARTNERS TO PUT THE

BUFFET IN FRONT OF THEM AND SAY

HERE ARE YOUR OPTIONS AND THINK

ABOUT IT.

THEY HAVE TO UNDERSTAND THAT

THEY CAN DO IT.

TOO MANY OF THEM HAVE GOTTEN

TOO FAR THINKING THAT THEY'RE

NOT CAPABLE OF DOING ANYTHING.

I'M THINKING OF STUDENT AFTER

STUDENT IN MY MIND RIGHT NOW ON

A COMPLETELY DIFFERENT TRACK,

DIFFERENT PATH.

THEY ARE ADVOCATES FOR

THEMSELVES.

THEY SEE THEMSELVES AS

SUCCESSFUL.

THEY ARE GOING PLACES.

THEY WILL GRADUATE FROM HIGH

SCHOOL AND GOING TO POST

SECONDARY TRAINING.

IF THEY DID NOT HAVE THAT

ORIGINAL EXPERIENCE OF SUCCESS

WHEN THEY GOT INTO THE LEARNING

ENVIRONMENT, I TRULY BELIEVE

THEY WOULDN'T BE THERE.

MIDDLE GRADE, HIGH SCHOOL,

UNIVERSITY, WHATEVER, IF WE

DON'T ALLOW THEM THAT

OPPORTUNITY TO EXPERIENCE THAT

SUCCESS, TO REALIZE WHAT

THEY'RE CAPABLE OF, THEY'RE NOT

GOING TO MAKE IT OUT.

>> WELL, HELLO.

I WANT TO SPEAK ON BEHALF OF

JUST BEING IN THE SHOES OF A

STUDENT IN HIGH SCHOOL AND

SOMEONE WHO IS A GRADUATE IN

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES FROM

SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY.

WE HAVE SPOKEN A LOT ABOUT

LSU -- THE PROGRAMS, BUT

PERSONALLY, I'M A GRADUATE OF

SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY, NUMBER ONE

GRADUATE OF AFRICAN-AMERICANS

IN ENGINEERING AND NUMBER ONE

NURSING PROGRAM IN LOUISIANA

FOUR TIMES IN A ROW.

WE HAVE A PROGRAM THAT

REACHES -- IT IS A PROGRAM

BETWEEN LSU AND SOUTHERN

UNIVERSITY THAT THE ENGINEERING

CAN GET A DEGREE IN

ENGINEERING, CHEMICAL

ENGINEERING, AND IT IS A

PROGRAM BETWEEN OUR ENGINEERING

DEPARTMENT AND LSU.

WE DON'T PERSONALLY HAVE A

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING

DEPARTMENT.

SO STUDENTS TAKE CLASSES AT LSU

AND ALSO AT SOUTHERN AND THEY

CAN GRADUATE WITH A DEGREE IN

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING.

>> WHAT IS YOUR QUESTION.

>> MY QUESTION IS WHAT OTHER

PARTNERSHIPS LIKE THAT, WE CAN

DO BETWEEN UNIVERSITIES TO

DIVERSIFY THE WORK FORCE.

>> THANK YOU.

QUICK QUESTION -- ANSWER.

>> I HAVE THE SAME PRIDE THAT

YOU HAVE.

I AM ALSO A GRADUATE OF

SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY.

IF IT WERE NOT FOR SOUTHERN

UNIVERSITY I WOULD NOT BE

SITTING ON THIS STAGE AND HAVE

THE KIND OF EDUCATION THAT I

HAVE HAD.

WE HAVE A NUMBER OF

PARTNERSHIPS, THE LS -- PROGRAM

ALSO PARTNERS WITH SOUTHERN.

THE PROGRAM -- WE HAVE A

COMPONENT OF THAT,

SUBCONTRACTED FROM SOUTHERN TO

LSU.

WE HAVE STUDENTS PARTICIPATING

IN THAT PROGRAM OUT OF MY

OFFICE.

THERE ARE A NUMBER OF OTHER

ACTIVITIES THAT WE HAVE BEEN

INVOLVED WITH WITH SOUTHERN.

>> NOT JUST PARTNERSHIPS

BETWEEN THE FOUR-YEAR

UNIVERSITIES, WE HAVE BEEN IN

TALKS WITH LSU ABOUT

PARTNERSHIPS WITH THE COMMUNITY

AND TECHNICAL COLLEGES.

BECAUSE IF WE'RE TRAINING

SOMEONE AT THE COMMUNITY AND

TECHNICAL COLLEGE LEVEL WITH A

TWO-YEAR DEGREE, THAT PERSON,

WHO STARTS OFF AS AN OPERATOR,

PROCESS TECHNOLOGY DEGREE, MAY

WANT TO BECOME AN ENGINEER.

HOW DO WE USE THE SAME LEARNING

TOOLS BETWEEN THAT TWO-YEAR

DEGREE AND A FOUR-YEAR

UNIVERSITY.

I THINK -- THAT IS A GAP RIGHT

NOW.

WE NEED TO GET THERE.

>> THANK YOU VERY MUCH.

AND WE TALKED A LOT ABOUT THE

UNIVERSITIES AND THE

COLLABORATIONS, BUT ONE OF THE

THINGS WE WANT TO DO IS TALK TO

THE GENERAL PUBLIC ABOUT

SCIENCE.

BECAUSE THE WHOLE LEVEL OF

UNDERSTANDING SCIENCE -- THINK

YOU HAVE A GUEST OVER THERE --

>> WE HAVE A QUESTION ABOUT

ACCESS.

SO, GIVE ME YOUR NAME AND TELL

US WHO YOU ARE WITH.

>> I AM THE DIRECTOR OF

EDUCATION, SCIENCE CENTER,

SHREVEPORT, LOUISIANA.

MY QUESTION GOES TO RESOURCES.

I AM THE COLLABORATIVE LEAD FOR

LOUISIANA STEM GIRLS

COLLABORATIVE PROJECT IN THE

STATE.

WE KNOW THERE ARE THESE GREAT

POCKETS OF THINGS HAPPENING ALL

OVER OUR STATE BUT NOBODY KNOWS

ABOUT EEP -- EACH OTHER.

WE HAVE AN ONLINE RESOURCE

WHERE WE CONNECT THOSE PEOPLE

TOGETHER AND GIVE THEM WAYS TO

LEVERAGE RESOURCES, WE EVEN

HAVE MINI GRAPHS AND THINGS.

I'M ALSO THE GIRLS RISE NETWORK

TRAINER.

I TRAVEL AROUND ARKANSAS,

TEXAS, OKLAHOMA, ALL OF

LOUISIANA, TRAINING INFORMAL

EDUCATORS LIKE MYSELF IN

MUSEUMS, LIBRARIES, SCIENCE

CENTERS ON HOW TO GET GIRLS

INVOLVED IN STEM.

I HAVE ALL OF THESE RESOURCES

AND DIFFERENT VENUES FROM

FORMAL TO INFORMAL.

MY QUESTION IS, HOW DO I

ACCESS -- HOW DO I SHARE THOSE

RESOURCES?

I HAVE MANY OF THE RESOURCES TO

HELP OUT SOME OF THE THINGS

THAT WE'RE TALKING ABOUT THIS

EVENING.

LIKE GETTING GIRLS INVOLVED IN

STEM FROM ELEMENTARY, IN THE

MIDDLE SCHOOL, BECAUSE WE KNOW

ONCE THEY HIT THE MIDDLE

SCHOOL, THEY HAVE DECIDED WHAT

THEY ARE GOING TO DO AND WHAT

THEY'RE NOT GOOD AT.

HOW DO I DO THAT?

>> WE HAVE OUR TEACHER TOOLBOX,

WHICH IS FULL OF RESOURCES THAT

WE HAVE POSTED TO THE WEB SITE.

AND WE HAVE SOME DEDICATED

PAGES ON OUR WEB SITE THAT

ADDRESS EVERYTHING FROM STEM TO

CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION,

ADVANCED PLACEMENT,

INTERNATIONAL BACCALAUREATE,

AND IF -- WE REVIEW THEM AND

GET THOSE OUT THERE.

THEY SOUND VERY, VERY, LIKE

VERY GOOD RESOURCES.

>> THANK YOU.

>> I WAS GOING TO SAY THAT AS

WELL.

A STATE SYSTEM, LIKE THE

DEPARTMENT OF ED, WORK FORCE

COMMISSION, AND ALSO THE

LOUISIANA COMMUNITY AND

TECHNICAL COLLEGE SYSTEM.

THAT STATE SYSTEM CAN BRING

PEOPLE FROM ALL OVER THE STATE

IN ONE PLACE WHERE YOU CAN

SHARE THAT RESOURCE AND MAYBE

GET YOUR INFORMATION OUT

QUICKER.

>> CONTACT YOU, CONTACT YOUR

OFFICE?

WE WILL GET YOU THAT

INFORMATION.

THANK YOU.

BETH.

>> THANK YOU.

AND I GUESS THIS IS ONE OF THE

ROLES THAT WE AT LPB ARE TRYING

TO DO AS WELL.

BECAUSE WE HAVE HAD A WONDERFUL

CONVERSATION WITH MANY OF YOU

IN THIS ROOM AND WE HAVE SO

MANY QUESTIONS.

WE ARE NOT GOING TO GET TO

EVERYONE'S.

WE HAVE ONE FROM A TEACHER --

>> FROM MY EXPERIENCE WITH --

PROGRAM AT LSU -- I WANT TO

COME BACK TO THE DISCUSSION

THAT I THINK THAT THE PROBLEM

WITH THE -- THE TEACHERS, THE

TEACHERS -- THEY DON'T HAVE THE

KNOWLEDGE.

I MEAN -- LOUISIANA, TO TAKE

PHYSICS, YOU NEED ONE COURSE IN

SCIENCE, NOT EVEN IN PHYSICS.

ONE UNIVERSITY COURSE IN

BIOLOGY.

MY QUESTION IS, ANY PLAN TO

RECOGNIZE THE TEACHERS --

REQUIRE THAT THEY REALLY HAVE

TRAINING TO TEACH STEM --

>> WE TALKED A LOT ABOUT THE

RIGOROUS HIGH SCHOOL SCIENCE

COURSES AND WE HAVE ALLUDED TO

SOME ADVANCED PLACEMENT

TRAINING GOING ON.

THE DEPARTMENT HAS ANOTHER

PROGRAM, THE COURSE CHOICE

PROGRAM.

THE COURSE CHOICE PROGRAM HAS

INVITED IN BUSINESS AND

INDUSTRY TO DELIVER COURSES

THROUGH THE COURSE CHOICE

PROGRAM SO THAT STUDENTS CAN

TAKE A HIGH SCHOOL CREDIT.

WE HAVE ALSO WORKED WITH THE

COMMUNITY, LOUISIANA COMMUNITY

TECHNICAL COLLEGE, THEY'RE PART

OF THE CORE CHOICE PROGRAM.

OFFERING COURSES THROUGH CORE

CHOICE AS WELL.

YOU KNOW, THERE IS MULTIPLE

VENUES FOR STUDENTS TO HAVE

ACCESS TO INSTRUCTORS.

WHETHER THAT IS AN ADVANCED

PLACEMENT INSTRUCTOR, OR AN

INSTRUCTOR THAT THEY WANTED TO

TAKE AN ELECTRICIAN COURSE OR

THEY WANTED TO TAKE ANOTHER

STEM-RELATED COURSE, AND IT IS

BEING OFFERED THROUGH THE

COURSE CHOICE PROGRAM.

THERE ARE BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY

PROVIDERS.

AS AN EXAMPLE, THE INNOVATION

CENTER UP IN BOSSIER.

CYBERINNOVATION CENTER OFFER

COURSES THROUGH THE LOUISIANA

COURSE CHOICE PROGRAM.

THEY'RE THE ONES THAT ARE

DELIVERING THE INSTRUCTION.

PARTNERING WITH SCHOOL SYSTEMS

AND PROVIDING ACCESS TO

STUDENTS.

>> SHE'S GETTING TO THE HEART

OF THE PROBLEM, EXACTLY WHAT I

HAVE BEEN SAYING, IS THAT WE

NEED TO PAY OUR TEACHERS MORE.

IF WE PAY OUR TEACHERS MORE, WE

KEEP THE BEST TEACHERS HERE IN

THE STATE IN THE STEM FIELD.

THAT IS THE BOTTOM LINE.

>> WHEN YOU ADD ART TO STEM,

WHAT DO YOU GET?

>> WHEN YOU ADD THE A IN ART TO

STEM, YOU GET STEAM, AND I'M

SURE OUR PANEL KNOWS THERE IS A

NATIONAL EFFORT TO ADD THAT A

FROM STEM TO STEAM.

I'M BRIAN, WITH THE NEURON

CENTER FOR CREATIVE ARTS,

LOUISIANA'S ARTS CONSERVATORY

FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS.

CORPORATIONS LIKE CHEVRON HAVE

INVESTED HEAVILY IN THE WORK,

PREPARING ARTISTS AND

INTELLECTUALS FOR THE JOBS IN

STEM, IN STEAM, AND BEYOND.

I WONDER IF SOME OF OUR

PANELISTS WOULD MIND COMMENTING

ON THE IMPORTANCE, THAT A, IN

STEM, STEAM, HOW YOU SEE IT

BENEFITING FOLKS IN THE WORK

FORCE AND BEYOND?

>> I THINK IT IS A GOOD SIGN.

YOU SEE LOTS OF HEADS SHAKING,

NODDING.

>> I JUST WROTE A COLUMN ON

THAT.

BEING A STEM ADVOCATE, PEOPLE

PROBABLY GET SICK OF ME GOING

ON ABOUT THAT.

I TALKED ABOUT THE STEAM.

RUSTON, A SMALL COMMUNITY, VERY

RICH IN ITS CULTURAL HERITAGE.

WE HAVE A LOT OF ARTISTS.

I BELIEVE IN BRAIN-BASED

LEARNING.

AND I THINK IT CAN'T BE LEFT

OUT.

WHEN WE INFUSE STEM WITH THE A

AND MAKE IT STEAM, KIDS MORE

NATURALLY CONNECT TO IT.

BECAUSE IT SERVICES THEIR WHOLE

BRAIN AS WELL.

YOU HAVE MY 110% SUPPORT THERE.

>> I THINK THE KEY THING THAT

WE HAVE TO RECOGNIZE IS WHAT

MAKES LOUISIANA A GREAT PLACE

TO LIVE.

IT WOULDN'T BE THE GREAT PLACE

WITHOUT THAT A.

TODAY I WAS INTERVIEWED BY A

RADIO STATION ABOUT A LIST THAT

JUST CAME OUT IN A BUSINESS

MAGAZINE THAT RANKED BATON

ROUGE 5th IN THE COUNTRY, NEW

ORLEANS 7th, AS BEING GREAT

PLACES FOR YOUNG SINGLE PEOPLE

WHO ARE BROKE TO GET A START IN

LIFE.

I THINK THEY ARE SAYING FIND A

JOB, FIND LOVE, AND FIND CHEAP

ENTERTAINMENT.

NOW, THE A GOES WELL BEYOND

THAT.

BUT THE A IS A KEY COMPONENT OF

THE QUALITY OF LIFE THAT WE

HAVE IN LOUISIANA.

BEFORE I SAID WE HAVE TO -- WE

HAVE TO PRODUCE PEOPLE FOR MORE

THAN STEM JOBS.

A LOT MORE TO THE FABRIC,

VIBRANT COMMUNITY THAN WHAT WE

HAVE BEEN TALKING ABOUT

TONIGHT.

WE DON'T HAVE THE VIBRANT

COMMUNITIES WITHOUT WHAT WE ARE

TALKING ABOUT TONIGHT AND WE

DON'T HAVE IT WITHOUT THE OTHER

COMPONENT.

IF YOU LOOK AT LOUISIANA STAR

JOBS, SYSTEM THAT RANKS THE

VALUE OF OUR OCCUPATIONS BY HOW

MANY OPPORTUNITIES THERE ARE

AND WHAT THEY PAY.

92% OF STEM JOBS ARE THREE,

FOUR, FIVE STARS IN THAT

THEY'RE HIGH-VALUE OCCUPATIONS.

A BUNCH OF THE OTHER HIGH-VALUE

OCCUPATIONS COME FROM THAT A,

WITHIN THAT A.

WE ARE NOTHING IF WE DON'T

PRODUCE PEOPLE FOR THAT TOO.

>> TO PIGGY BACK ON THAT,

TECHNOLOGY FIELD, MOVIE MAKING,

WHAT IT IS IN OUR STATE, A HUGE

PART OF OUR ECONOMIC

DEVELOPMENT AND WE ARE FOCUSING

ON THAT IN THE NEW TECH SKILL

SO THAT THE KIDS HAVE THE

SKILLS, BUT YOU HAVE TO BE

ARTISTIC TO BE ABLE TO

ACCOMPLISH THE BEST OF THAT AS

WELL.

THAT FITS INTO IT.

>> THANK YOU SO MUCH.

>> WE HAVE SO MANY WONDERFUL

QUESTIONS.

THAT IS ALL OF THE TIME WE HAVE

FOR THIS EVENING, BEFORE

CLOSING COMMENTS, I'D LIKE

TO -- I WOULD LIKE TO HAVE US

ALL LOOK AT SOMEBODY WHO

ACTUALLY DID MAJOR IN A STEM

FIELD AND WHO WOULD LIKE TO SAY

A LITTLE SOMETHING TO US.

>> HELLO, I WANT TO THANK YOU

FOR RAISING AWARENESS ABOUT

SUCH AN IMPORTANT ISSUE.

AS A CHEMICAL ENGINEER, YOUNG

OF MOM STUDENTS, THIS IS A

CAUSE I HOLD CLOSE TO MY HEART.

WORLD WIDE DEMAND OF SCIENTISTS

AND ENGINEERS GROW, STUDIES

SHOW STUDENTS IN AMERICA RANK

LOW IN BASIC SCIENCE AND MATH

PROFICIENCY.

TO PREPARE OUR STUDENTS FOR THE

REWARDING AND HIGH PAYING JOBS

IN 21st CENTURY, WE NEED TO

COME TOGETHER AND COMMIT --

CLASSROOMS FOSTER AN INNOVATIVE

AND RICH LEARNING ENVIRONMENT

THAT ALLOWS OUR STUDENTS TO

THRIVE AND SURPASS NOT ONLY

OTHER STATES BUT OTHER

COUNTRIES.

>> WELL, WHAT A GREAT COMMENT.

I WANT TO THANK OUR AUDIENCE

AND OUR PANELISTS THIS EVENING.

MR. BRADFORD, MISS CHAISSON,

DR. WARNER, MS. BONIOL AND

MR. EYSINK.

>> WHAT GREAT DISCUSSION.

THANK YOU AGAIN TO OUR

PANELISTS.

AND OUR AUDIENCE MEMBERS, YOU

WERE FANTASTIC.

A SPECIAL THANK YOU TO THE

COMMUNITY OF PLAQUEMINE -- WE

ENCOURAGE YOU TO GO TO THE WEB

SITE, lpb.org/PUBLICSQUARE TO

VIEW ADDITIONAL VIDEO CONTENT

AND COMMENT ON TONIGHT'S SHOW.

WE WOULD LOVE TO HEAR FROM YOU.

>> GOOD NIGHT EVERYONE.

THANK YOU AGAIN TO ALL OF YOU.

>> THANK YOU.

[APPLAUSE]

 

Captioning Performed by
LNS Captioning
www.lnscaptioning.com

 

>> FOR A COPY OF THIS PROGRAM,

CALL 1-800-973-7246 OR GO

ONLINE TO lpb.org.

 

>> THIS PROGRAM WAS MADE

POSSIBLE IN PART BY FUNDING

FROM THE DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY

FOUNDATION, PROUD SUPPORTER OF

QUALITY EDUCATION ACROSS

LOUISIANA.

IN THE FIELDS OF SCIENCE,

TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, AND

MATH.

AND THE FOUNDATION FOR

EXCELLENCE IN LOUISIANA PUBLIC

BROADCASTING.