IEEE-USA President's Column

JANUARY 2008
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Russell Lefevre, Ph.D.
2008 IEEE-USA President |
IEEE-USA Seeks to Continue Enhancing the U.S.
Engineering Enterprise
I would like to wish happy New Year to all our
members and their families. IEEE-USA had a very
successful year in 2007 and I hope that 2008
will be equally successful. I want to thank 2007
IEEE-USA President John Meredith for his
outstanding leadership this past year. He has
been a passionate advocate for our priorities
and has had outstanding success in his
endeavors.
I also want to thank all of IEEE-USA's committed
volunteers and dedicated staff for their hard
work. It is because of their efforts that 2007
was one of our most successful years.
Upon entering a new year it is customary for
IEEE-USA's president to provide U.S. IEEE
members with an outline of his or her goals for
2008. Before I do that, I'd like to begin by
pointing out current and future challenges faced
by the United States and the engineering
profession. Past President Meredith, in his
first column, pointed out many of the issues to
be addressed, and we have been diligent in
following his lead. However, because of
circumstances beyond our full control, the
situation hasn't improved significantly.
In his remarks, John pointed out concerns
detailed in the National Academies report,
Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing and
Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future.
This report was the impetus for Congress to pass
the America Competes Act, legislation that
bolsters research in science, technology,
engineering and mathematics and improves
educational programs. IEEE-USA lobbied actively
in favor of the bill, which will help the United
States maintain its global leadership in science
and technology.
Unfortunately, the act only authorized the
legislation, and in the hectic end of the 2007
congressional session, the funding
— or appropriations — failed to meet the
authorization goals. As a result, many of our
priorities will require even more attention in
2008.
Norm Augustine, an IEEE fellow who chaired the
committee that produced the Gathering Storm
report, wrote a follow-on treatise entitled,
Is America Falling Off the Flat Earth?
He concluded that we must excel in innovation.
To that end, he makes two observations: (1)
America must repair its failing K-12 educational
system, particularly in mathematics and science,
and (2) the federal government must markedly
increase its investment in basic research. These
issues dovetail with IEEE-USA priorities that
have been in place since 2006 when Ralph Wyndrum
served as IEEE-USA president. I plan to continue
working toward these priorities in 2008.
Here are the strategic goals IEEE-USA will focus
on this year. These goals generally align with
the
IEEE's Envisioned Future 3- to 5-year goals
relating to promoting career success,
professional competency through education,
balanced dialog on technology-related issues,
advocating policies that enhance quality of life
and the environment, and member involvement.
IEEE-USA will focus on:
1. Promoting innovation and competitiveness
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Urging Congress and the administration to
fund federal science and technology programs
at levels authorized in the America
Competes Act
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Continuing to implement and evaluate
progress of
IEEE-USA's Innovation Institute
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Promoting immigration reforms that enable
our country to admit technical talent as new
Americans rather than as "guest workers"
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Identifying and recommending policies to
strengthen U.S. manufacturing capabilities.
This is a particular goal of mine.
2. Supporting K-12 math and science education to
encourage technical literacy and train future
technologists
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Supporting expansion of the IEEE Educational
Activities Board's (EAB) Teacher in Service
Program into Region 6 with awards and grants
that encourage teacher-engineer partnerships
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Supporting other national pre-university
programs (e.g. JETS, Future City
Competition,
etc.)
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Helping promote the IEEE-sponsored PBS
"Design Squad" television program
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Urging Congress to support funding for key
federal K-12 science, technology,
engineering and mathematics (STEM)
educational programs
-
Publicizing the
TryEngineering.org Web portal
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Encouraging our members to volunteer to help
local school districts enhance their
technical instruction
3. Providing serious, career-long continuing
education to maintain a competitive U.S.
workforce and preserve careers
4. Offering increased member value in products
and services
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Adding to and continuously improving
IEEE-USA's Career Navigator and its
career-related online tools and resources
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Offering a full schedule of
career-enhancement workshops and Webinars
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Targeting assistance to mid- and late-career
engineers in the form of a "Globalization
Toolkit" This is a particular priority of
2007 President Meredith.
As you can see, IEEE-USA is working diligently
on behalf of U.S. IEEE members and has ambitious
plans for 2008. Our volunteers and staff are
working hard to improve your career prospects,
promote U.S. innovation and competitiveness and
enhance the U.S. engineering enterprise.
If you have some good ideas or suggestions on
how we can do a better job representing your
interests, feel free to contact me (president@ieeeusa.org)
or other members of our
volunteer leadership. I look forward to
working with you in the coming year.
Please join us in keeping the United States the
most technologically advanced nation on earth.
Updated:
15 January 2008
Contact: Pender M. McCarter,
p.mccarter@ieee.org
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