
Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX) speaking at a STEM diversity symposium in 2012.
(Image credit – NASA / Carla Cioffi)
Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX) speaking at a STEM diversity symposium in 2012.
(Image credit – NASA / Carla Cioffi)
On May 7, House Science Committee Chair Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX) reintroduced the STEM Opportunities Act
The legislation would expand collection of demographic data on federal research grant applicants and promote the identification and dissemination of best practices for increasing diversity in STEM. It also emphasizes the National Science Foundation’s role in supporting research and initiatives related to broadening participation.
At a May 9 hearing
The STEM Opportunities Act would substantially expand current federal efforts to collect demographic information. It would require agencies with annual R&D budgets greater than $100 million to collect demographic data on all grant applicants, which would then be aggregated and summarized by NSF. Another provision requires NSF to carry out a survey of STEM faculty demographics at U.S. institutions of higher education at least every five years.
The bill also instructs NSF to support research that uses the data and to back efforts to improve undergraduate STEM education and increase the diversity of faculty. The agency is currently focusing
To promote the use of best practices across STEM diversity efforts, the bill includes a number of directions for the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. These include collecting and disseminating guidance to universities and federal laboratories on addressing cultural and institutional barriers to recruiting, retaining, and advancing members of underrepresented groups in STEM positions. A separate provision would require OSTP to issue guidance to agencies on providing flexibility to grantees who take on caregiver roles, such as for a newborn child or sick family member. A third provision would require agencies to implement recommendations from a 2016 report
A new provision in the latest version of the bill directs NSF to target grants toward computer science education within its Tribal Colleges and Universities Program. Lucas highlighted the provision at the May 9 hearing, remarking, “It is important that we also increase STEM opportunities for American Indian and Alaska Native students, who are often overlooked in this discussion. … Access to computer science resources and the development of computing skills is critical for underrepresented students in both rural and urban communities.”
From left: Former astronaut Mae Jemison, AAAS Senior Advisor Shirley Malcom, American Council on Education Vice President Lorelle Espinosa, Ohio State University Chief Diversity Officer James Moore III, and Intel Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer Barbara Whye.
(Image credit – Office of Rep. Lizzie Fletcher (D-TX))
Last week’s hearing featured a panel of five STEM diversity experts representing academia, professional societies, and the private sector who testified in support of the STEM Opportunities Act and recommended additional actions.
Mae Jemison, the first woman of color to be an astronaut, offered advice based on her personal experiences and work as chair of a forthcoming National Academies study
Concerning why it has been so difficult to make progress, Jemison asserted,
Commitment and actions to effectively implement and sustain change means upsetting the status quo. Those comfortable, resourced, and well positioned in the existing culture — male and female, majority and minority — will be uncomfortable.
Offering a view from the private sector, Barbara Whye, Intel’s chief diversity and inclusion officer, recommended more should be done to hold institutions accountable for making progress. She suggested the committee include provisions that require “concrete measurable outcomes related to expanding availability and access to STEM offerings for students from pre-K to college, increasing diverse faculty representation, and increasing the employability of students that complete a STEM education.”
The STEM Opportunities Act joins several other bills currently pending in Congress that aim to improve the accessibility and culture of STEM education and careers.
Early this year, Johnson and Lucas reintroduced the Combating Sexual Harassment in Science Act
Other bills include the bipartisan Building Blocks of STEM Act