Archive for the ‘STEM Education’ Category

New York Times Highlights Impact of ACT Fly In

Wednesday, May 22nd, 2013

We had a very effective two days of Fly In meetings and briefings with the White House, Congress, and FTC. And according to the New York Times, ACT lobby efforts in the Senate helped push tech amendments to the immigration bill over the finish line.

“The agreement represents a win for the high-tech industry, and comes on the heels of intense lobbying by the industry. The Association for Competitive Technology, a trade group, sent 50 executives and application developers to Washington on Monday and Tuesday to meet with lawmakers, including members of the Judiciary Committee.”



New York Times

Immigration Overhaul Wins Panel’s Backing in the Senate

ACT Members Coming to DC for Annual Fly In Event

Saturday, May 18th, 2013

On Tuesday, fifty tech CEOs and app makers from across the country travel to Washington to meet with officials in the White House, Congress, and the FTC to advocate for Immigration, STEM, and privacy issues.  They will be taking part in the Association for Competitive Technology’s (ACT) Washington Fly-In, an annual event for tech companies to promote policies that allow small business technology companies to innovate and grow.

ACT members are coming to Washington to ensure lawmakers and regulators hear the voices of small business tech companies.  The pace of innovation is remarkable, but that could change suddenly with overreaching legislation or regulation. Our members will meet with their elected representatives to tell the story of their companies’ success and what they need (and don’t need) to continue to grow and create jobs.

Specifically, ACT members will advocate for solutions that:

  • Implement a program to provide students with the computer science education that will help them qualify for rewarding careers in the tech industry. This will foster growth in our U.S. software development workforce where chronic labor shortages persist;
  • Fund STEM education initiatives through increased fees from H-1B visas and green cards. This addresses the short-term urgency to find high skilled workers while laying the groundwork to grow the U.S. high skilled technology workforce;
  • Allow internet companies to implement new solutions for data transparency; Congress should resist the urge to apply broad regulatory restrictions that would deny consumers many of the products and services they rely on every day;
  • Allow small software companies to protect their intellectual property without having to fight patent trolls and speculative lawsuits; and
  • Ensure that the government does not impede efforts to strengthen and expand our internet infrastructure so consumers can benefit from more reliable mobile and fixed data connectivity.

These are issues the federal government is facing. ACT members are looking forward to meeting with their elected officials and others in Washington to educate them about the technology industry so they can make the right decisions about our future. Hopefully, an informed Congress will allow small tech companies to continue to flourish.

Pi Day highlights need for more computer science education

Thursday, March 14th, 2013

ACT has long held March 14th as a special day on the calendar. As the need for math and science education becomes more apparent, many have joined us in recognizing the date as Pi Day. In the tech industry, we are particularly sensitive to our country’s shortcomings educating students in these subjects. Math and science classes provide the building blocks of learning for future engineers and software developers who are crucial for our industry’s growth.

The median salary for a software developer now exceeds $90,000. Our nation’s classrooms should be producing graduates capable of pursuing the degrees needed for these jobs. Sadly, that is not happening. Tens of thousands of high-paying tech jobs remain unfilled because our country is not graduating enough engineers and computer scientists to qualify for these positions.

In order for the United States to retain its competitive edge in the tech industry, we need to rely less on students from abroad and more on homegrown talent. That will only happen if we make significant improvements in math, science, and computer education. Congress earlier recognized the importance of these curricula when it passed a Pi Day resolution. What’s now needed is a far greater commitment to improve education of these core subjects in our nation’s schools.

Immigration Debate Offers Opportunity to Fund STEM Education

Wednesday, January 30th, 2013

As the immigration debate has been renewed, a group of senators have advanced an initiative for the tech industry that would use funds for increased high-tech visas to fund billions of dollars of STEM education grants. ACT’s support for this proposal, the I-Squared Act, was highlighted on the Senate floor by its sponsors upon introduction of the bill. Below is the text of our letter to sponsor Senators Klobuchar, Hatch, Coons and Rubio.

ACT is greatly encouraged by press reports indicating that the I-Squared Act will soon be introduced to address the technology industry’s labor shortage. Your legislation would provide both near and long-term solutions to finding highly-skilled workers that are essential to ensure America’s continued leadership in the tech economy.

As you are well aware, U.S. schools and universities produce far fewer graduates in STEM fields than our industry requires. ACT’s small business members repeatedly raise this issue with their elected representatives whenever they visit Washington. To find candidates for the many unfilled openings in their companies, our members need the ability to hire qualified applicants from abroad.

Increasing the number of H-1B visas will relieve our immediate staffing needs, but it does not provide a tenable long-term solution. We must also focus on improving resources in our schools here in America to fill the needs of our growing software industry. Making a commitment to expand STEM education at the secondary and university level is critical in order to produce enough graduates ready to enter this high-wage marketplace. This must be our long-range goal so we do not remain dependent on foreign labor.

With increased demand for specialists in computer science, our industry is also ideal for worker retraining programs. Many unemployed or underemployed workers possess skills that would translate well into positions in our field.

ACT’s members are very pleased that the I-Squared Act addresses all of these concerns. This balanced approach, addressing our immediate needs while investing in the future of our economy, is the ideal solution.

We applaud your introduction of this legislation and look forward to working with you to tackle these issues critical to our industry’s future.

Sincerely,

Jonathan Zuck
President

STEM Education: Essential for U.S. Technology Leadership

Saturday, October 6th, 2012

In the aftermath of the STEM education bill’s defeat on the House floor, supporters are searching for other means to make sure our young students are exposed to skills which lead to high paying jobs in the technology sector.

While some can disagree over how to raise our country’s low scores in math and science, what cannot be denied is that we possess far fewer specialists in these fields than the tech industry requires. Representing small business developers, ACT repeatedly hears this concern from our members. And ACT members consistently express the urgent need for a solution in their meetings with lawmakers.

Consider the facts. This year, the U.S. economy will create 120,000 new jobs that require a Bachelor’s Degree in computer science. Yet all our nation’s colleges and universities combined will produce only 40,000 graduates with these skills.

Many talented computer science graduates at American universities are foreign exchange students. We pay to educate them and then bid farewell as they take their talents to companies abroad. Our tech industry would be eager to retain these workers, where they could contribute to the growth of companies here in America, but only a fraction are allowed to stay.

The source of our failure to produce high-skilled tech workers can be traced to the dwindling opportunities for schoolchildren to study computer science. Only 2,100 of our nation’s 42,000 high schools offer AP computer science. This figure has been dropping steadily in recent years and directly contributes to the low number of students majoring in the subject at university. A high-placed executive of a multinational tech company recently explained to me that 98% of their employees studied computer science in high school.

Without the ability to hire qualified applicants domestically, U.S. small business tech companies must look to find high-skilled workers abroad. This is not a long-term solution. There are a limited number of high-skilled worker visas (H-1Bs) available and demand far exceeds supply.

The long-term solution to ending this shortage must focus on our students. We need our government to make a commitment to STEM education at the secondary and university level to produce more graduates ready to enter the high-wage tech industry job market.

Last Friday, Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith appeared at the Brookings Institution and brought forward a proposal that might break the logjam in Washington by raising education funds through measures to address the labor shortage. Smith proposes adding more H-1Bs and Green Cards with higher fees dedicated for the technology industry and using the revenue to fund STEM education programs.

The plan would net $500 million for STEM programs. Here’s how:

• Add 20,000 H-1B visas for tech companies over the next five years
• Raise the cost of these technology H-1Bs from $2,800 to $10,000
• Recapture 15,000 unused green cards annually over five years and charge tech companies $15,000 for them.

This increase in costs would be eagerly met by tech companies and small businesses seeking to fill openings. Allocating this part of the visa pool for technology companies would ensure that those with the greatest demand would bear the added cost. Small businesses and startups would eagerly invest in higher cost visas to attract much needed high tech workers.

While this measure would address immediate staffing needs and long-term education goals, there are other groups that have weighed in on the visa issue. Given our high level of unemployment, some object to the presence of foreign workers in our economy and seek greater funds to address worker displacement.

In his Brookings appearance, Smith identified worker retraining as an area where the technology industry can make a contribution. STEM education need not be confined to secondary and university education. There exists a demand for IT workers throughout all industries and these positions are well compensated. Training centers offer programs that make job-seekers eligible for this type of employment.

Certification programs for IT jobs don’t require a university degree and are easily accessible to those in industries suffering job losses. Many veterans returning to the workplace possess technical skills learned in the armed forces, but lack the certification needed to be considered for most IT jobs. These courses often include placement assistance and provide a direct line to employment. They can be a valuable job retraining resource.

A comprehensive STEM education initiative should include measures to assist workers throughout the employment spectrum. Federal funding for IT certification programs assisting veterans and displaced workers would provide a good complement to funds allocated to secondary and university STEM education.

The shortage of high-skilled workers is an issue that must be addressed for U.S. tech companies to succeed. Investment in STEM education is essential for sustained American leadership in technology innovation and growth markets. While Congress’s latest STEM education setback was unfortunate, Brad Smith’s proposal with IT retraining may offer a path forward. We need to find a solution soon. Our global position will grow weaker the longer we wait.

STEM Education: Providing Opportunity and Changing Lives

Thursday, September 27th, 2012

ACT’s membership has over 5,000 small business app companies who are active advocates expressing concerns felt within the industry. They regularly come to Washington to meet with lawmakers and regulators to convey these views. Although the issues change over time there is one concern that remains constant. The lack of well-trained software developers.

Traveling to developer conferences around the country, the refrain we always hear is “we’re hiring.” There is a shortage of developers in America and companies are having to go to great lengths to find people to fill these high paying jobs.

Take mobile gaming company GREE. TechCrunch posted this photo of a billboard (one of three) they posted advertising jobs alongside a highway in California. They seeking to hire 100 new developers by the end of the year.

TechCrunch: GREE Advertises for Developer Jobs

Our members come to Washington to seek help finding new talent. The problem is our nation’s education system isn’t producing enough students with the necessary math and science skills to pursue engineering degrees. We also aren’t educating students in computer programming skills.

The answer has been a renewed focus on STEM education (science, technology, engineering and math). Advocates have been seeking more resources for training teachers to bring these skills to young students. The president announced an initiative two years ago enlisting the support of CEOs and sought help from the media to create content to make math and science appealing.

Unfortunately, Washington has been unable to get this train started. Last week, the House vote on STEM education failed. It attracted a large majority, but two-thirds support was needed for passage. Scores of other proposals have emerged in the aftermath, but we are still waiting for results.

Enter Ryan Seashore. While efforts at the federal level have sputtered or stalled over the past two years, he has made it his personal crusade to tackle this issue. With a degree in communications and marketing, Ryan was on a career path to promote brands and services, but he became fascinated with the online economy. He believed those who could program possessed the power to affect great change.

After an exhaustive search, Ryan couldn’t find any suitable places to learn these skills. Frustrated, he reached out to teachers and students at area schools he found they and didn’t have these opportunities either.

CodeNow Summer 2012 Graduates

Clearly there was an unmet need and in February 2011, Ryan founded a nonprofit called CodeNow to change that. Through tireless networking and pitches to VCs, CEOs, and small foundations, he was able to raise enough funds to launch a program that provides computer programming training for public schoolchildren whose schools don’t offer these classes.

Ryan likes to say that through CodeNow’s efforts, “We’re encouraging kids to look under the hood of technology to show that they can be builders.”

CodeNow programs provide applicants weekend training in basic programming, assigns online homework, and then hosts a boot camp for those who complete the coursework. Students receive a netbook upon completion of all their training and coursework. The program operates in Washington, DC and serves as a reminder to legislators what more investment can achieve.

Big companies are also making contributions. Microsoft last week launched its YouthSpark initiative, committing over $500 million to programs seeking to bridge the youth opportunity gap of which access to programming education is a big part. The company’s general counsel, Brad Smith, will speaking in Washington about STEM education and the opportunities this new project will bring at a Brookings Institution briefing this afternoon.

We are seeing industry and nonprofits make solid contributions to improve programming opportunities for schoolchildren. These are the future developers and entrepreneurs our country needs to stay competitive. Hopefully, Congress will soon respond to the call and make STEM funding a priority.