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InternetNews February 1, 2006 Roy Mark |
Tech Embraces Bush Call For U.S. Competitiveness Praise rolls in for President Bush's new agenda focused on increased spending on innovation and education in the U.S. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2008 Robert W. Lucky |
U.S. Engineers and the Flat Earth The recent report concludes that high-quality jobs are necessary for both individual and national prosperity and that advances in science and engineering are needed to create such jobs. |
CIO August 1, 2005 Gary Beach |
Bricklayers or Architects? The inadequate math and science education of America's youth is a serious issue in the workplace and for the country's future economic strength. |
National Defense June 2007 Lawrence P. Farrell Jr. |
Education Trends Portend Trouble for Defense One of the most troubling trends in the U.S. is that our schools are producing fewer U.S.-born science and math graduates than countries such as China, Taiwan, South Korea, India and Mexico. |
InternetNews August 3, 2007 Roy Mark |
Competition Bill Passed to President's Desk The America Competes Act calls for doubling spending on research and math, science and engineering education. |
InternetNews May 12, 2004 Roy Mark |
Lieberman Raps Parties Over Offshoring Unless policymakers find middle ground between free trade and protectionism, high-end IT jobs will be next to go, the senator says. |
BusinessWeek November 6, 2006 Nichola Saminather |
Biotech's Beef There is a disconnect between what universities are teaching and what biotech wants. |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2008 Jill Jusko |
Inflation Outpaces Federal Funding: By the Numbers Academics lose federal R&D dollars for science and engineering. |
IndustryWeek April 21, 2010 |
The Competitive Edge -- Is U.S. R&D Investment Holding Up? Data trends suggest that U.S. dominance of high-technology manufacturing is under pressure. |
InternetNews August 15, 2005 Roy Mark |
Game Over: Next Year's H1-B Visas Already Gone Early run on visa pool prompts tech calls for increased allocations. |
Chemistry World November 24, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
US universities face federal R&D funding fall American universities experienced a continuing decline in federal research and development funding in fiscal year 2014, according to new data from the US National Science Foundation. |
Global Services November 26, 2007 |
The Future of Engineering Services Outsourcing By 2010, expect to see further evidence of the transformation of the offshore engineering services market as it learns to meet the increasingly diverse and increasingly strategic needs of global corporations. |
BusinessWeek December 6, 2004 |
How America Can Meet "The China Price" Managing a new Sino-American economy will require compromise, finesse, and tough policy choices. Start by cutting the budget deficit. And boost funds for education. |
BusinessWeek December 12, 2005 Gail Edmondson |
Looking For Innovation In The East, Where The Engineering Pool Is Deep The former East Bloc is an R&D gold mine for Microsoft, Nokia, and others. |
National Defense December 2010 Cynthia D. Miller |
JETS Promotes Engineering, Math To U.S. High School Students Though science, technology, engineering and math education is receiving a lot of press today, there have been organizations dedicated to the advancement of the fields for many decades. |
InternetNews April 26, 2007 Roy Mark |
Congress Gets Competitive With Bills Senate, House approve legislation aimed at improving America's global competitiveness. |
Global Services July 30, 2007 Amrita Singh |
Re-engineered Globally As outsourcing moves up several notches from writing code and answering calls, companies such as Boeing, Rolls Royce, Smiths Aerospace and General Motors are betting on getting their engineering components designed abroad. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2006 Robert W Lucky |
Unsystematic Engineering If systems engineering is so valuable, why is it so seldom practiced? In recent years, a number of well-known universities have begun new programs in systems engineering. Maybe now is the time for these programs to become successful. |
InternetNews January 31, 2006 Roy Mark |
Bush May Pump Tech in State of the Union Address President Bush is expected to call for America to regain its flagging global leadership in IT. |
Chemistry World July 24, 2012 Laura Howes |
Calls to match skills to industry A report, published today by the House of Lords science and technology committee has called for more science students at both the undergraduate and postgraduate level, to drive the UK's economic growth. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2008 Erico Guizzo |
The EE Gender Gap Is Widening Electrical engineering faces an age-old question: What do women want? |
IndustryWeek August 1, 2003 John Teresko |
Outsourcing And R&D A global perspective and a knowledge network for acquiring technology will offer companies a competitive advantage. |
T.H.E. Journal October 2006 Jeff Weinstock |
Math Needs a Makeover Our most pressing educational crisis may boil down to an image problem. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 Prachi Patel |
Where the Engineering Jobs Are The news is good but not great for engineers looking for work in 2010 |
InternetNews November 29, 2004 Roy Mark |
H-1B Visa Expansion Draws Praise High tech interests scored a late victory in Congress when the lame duck legislature increased the 2005 H-1B visa ceiling by 20,000 foreign workers. The visas are limited to workers with graduate degrees from U.S. universities. |
Entrepreneur January 2004 Joshua Kurlantzick |
Promised Land More and more American entrepreneurs are embarking on the road to China -- and many have already found their fortunes. |
CFO October 1, 2003 Abe De Ramos |
The China Syndrome U.S. companies are beginning to outsource technology research and development to India and China. Will a meltdown in tech jobs follow? |
CIO September 1, 2002 Xu & Varon |
The China Syndrome Companies hoping to do business in China will have to play by China's rules. The world's largest market hasn't changed, even with the country's joining the World Trade Organization last year. |
National Defense April 2007 Grace Jean |
Keeping Pace with Retiring Engineers With a large percentage of Defense Department scientists poised to retire during the next few years, and a diminishing pool of younger talent from which to fill their ranks, the nation's technological prowess may be on a downward trend. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2011 John Blau |
Germany Faces a Shortage of Engineers Even loosening immigration won't fill the gap, say experts |
Chemistry World September 9, 2014 Hepeng Jia |
R&D share for basic research in China dwindles Although China has dramatically increased its science and technology spending in recent years, the proportion of the research budget being spent on basic and applied research is shrinking. |
InternetNews October 29, 2004 Jim Wagner |
David Fu, VP and General Manager, Greater China Business, Unisys David Fu talks about the role Unisys and other firms need to play in coming years to be successful in China. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2007 Stephen Cass |
Where the Jobs Are A survey of 752 IEEE members about the past, present, and future technological trends. Overall, the news is encouraging for the tech industry, albeit not spectacular. |
Fast Company March 2004 Hout & Hemerling |
China's Next Great Thing Though China's factories fill our shelves, it has yet to produce truly powerful global companies or brands. That's about to change. |
InternetNews March 12, 2004 Michael Singer |
Microsoft, HP Court Developers in Beijing The two software vendors ink separate .NET and Linux development deals with China's Ministry of Information Industry. |
IndustryWeek June 23, 2010 |
By The Numbers -- The Expense of R&D Among U.S.-owned businesses and U.S. affiliates of foreign companies, much of the R&D remained in the United States. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2008 Susan Karlin |
Qatar University Opens EE Doors To Women A small but oil-rich country needs all the electrical engineers it can produce. |
Chemistry World August 23, 2014 |
Falling behind: boom, bust & the global race for scientific talent Michael Teitelbaum's book provides an interesting history of US science and engineering workforce studies and actions, and sensible recommendations and principles given the ever-changing workforce. |
The Motley Fool January 9, 2004 Seth Jayson |
China's Bank Bailout The Chinese government dips into reserves again to help shore up its banks. |
Food Engineering February 1, 2007 Kevin T. Higgins |
Outsourcing Engineering Refining Priorities for New Age Engineers The balancing act that engineering teams must master is outsourcing nonessential jobs while retaining the personnel and talent necessary for innovation. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2008 Jean Kumagai |
Rensselaer to Require All Engineering Students to Study Abroad A new effort to internationalize American engineering education. |
BusinessWeek February 7, 2005 Catherine Arnst |
Getting Girls To The Lab Bench To remain competitive, the U.S. must close the gender gap in science. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 28, 2006 Sean Silverthorne |
Meeting China's Need for Management Education On a recent trip to China, Steven C. Wheelwright noted an increasing interest in entrepreneurship, globalization, and competitiveness. Most of all, the Chinese have an increasing thirst for management education. |
ifeminists September 1, 2004 Wendy McElroy |
China's Missing Women Part of what China faces now are the unintended consequences of a two-decade long attempt to socially engineer the Chinese family. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Michael J. Mandel |
Commentary: Meeting the Asian Challenge As India and China ascend the economic ladder, here are steps that America can take to boost the four key components of innovation: R&D spending, education, finance for invention, and the national willingness to take risks. |
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
China.Net China will soon be No. 1 in Web users. That will unleash a world of opportunity |
Food Engineering February 1, 2007 Joyce Fassl |
Promoting the Profession Retaining engineering knowledge within manufacturing operations as well as laying the groundwork to foster more interest in engineering careers may be some of the toughest problems the food industry will face in the next decade. |
Wired December 2004 Bruce Sterling |
The New Space Race Americans might wonder why developing countries like India and China would spend precious resources in space. But those countries have good reasons - more compelling ones than the US has. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2008 Prachi Patel-Predd |
The Biggest Career Choice Of All Is When to Start Grad school may cost you more than you think |
IEEE Spectrum September 2011 Prachi Patel |
Where the Jobs Are in 2011: Software Engineering Mobile applications and cloud computing are driving demand for new engineering grads |