95-7275. Collection of Information Submitted for OMB Review  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 57 (Friday, March 24, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 15609-15610]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-7275]
    
    
    
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    NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
    
    
    Collection of Information Submitted for OMB Review
    
        In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act and OMB Guidelines, 
    the National Science Foundation is posting an expedited notice of 
    information collection that will affect the public. Interested persons 
    are invited to submit comments by April 7, 1995. Copies of materials 
    may be obtained at the NSF address or telephone number shown below.
        (A) Agency Clearance Officer. Herman G. Fleming, Division of 
    Contracts, Policy, and Oversight, National Science Foundation, 4201 
    Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230, or by telephone (703) 306-1243. 
    Comments may also be submitted to:
        (B) OMB Desk Officer. Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, 
    ATTN: Dan Chenok, Desk Officer, OMB, 722 Jackson Place, Room 3208, 
    NEOB, Washington, DC 20503.
    
    Title: NSF Review of Undergraduate Education in Science, Mathematics, 
    Engineering, and Technology.
    Affected Public: Individuals, state or local governments, nonprofit 
    institutions.
    Respondents/Reporting Burden: 100 respondents: average two hours per 
    response.
    Abstract: The NSF Organic Act as amended requires the NSF to oversee 
    the health of the Nation's undergraduate education in science, 
    mathematics, engineering, and technology, and to provide leadership 
    education in these areas. This planed up-to-date collection of 
    information from national leaders will help us to identify important 
    improvements and critical problems that NSF can help to address.
    
        Dated: March 20, 1995.
    Herman G. Fleming,
    Reports Clearance Officer.
    
    National Science Foundation,
    4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230
    
    Office of the Assistant Director for Education and Human Resources
    
    NSF Review of Undergraduate Education
    
        The Education and Human Resources (EHR) Directorate of the 
    National Science Foundation (NSF) is undertaking a general review of 
    the condition and needs of undergraduate education in the United 
    States in the areas of science, mathematics, engineering, and 
    technology (SMET). The project will consult widely with students, 
    educators, and employers. It is planned to take about a year to 
    complete the review, which will produce a set of recommendations for 
    accelerating the process of improving undergraduate education. 
    Acting in an advisory capacity to Luther S. Williams, Assistant 
    Director of NSF, for EHR, are members of the EHR Advisory Committee, 
    Subcommittee for Undergraduate Education:
    
    Sadie Bragg, Borough of Manhattan Community College,
    Federick P. Brooks, Jr., University of North Carolina, (Ex Officio)
    Melvin George, University of Minnesota, (Chair)
    James Rosser, California State University at Los Angeles,
    David Sanchez, Texas A&M University, and
    Carolyn Meyers, Georgia Institute of Technology, (Consultant)
    
        The Foundation undertakes this review of the central enterprise 
    of undergraduate education at a critical moment. The national 
    efforts, including those of the NSF, to improve precollege education 
    in SMET have been extensive and have involved efforts to create both 
    innovative local improvement and larger systemic changes. The 
    support of undergraduate educational improvement is more recent and 
    has emphasized innovative improvement projects at single sites. The 
    necessity for and possibility of larger-scale changes in 
    undergraduate education is the primary question that the study will 
    investigate. The Foundation recognizes that it raises this question 
    at a time that the nation's colleges and universities are facing 
    unprecedented financial and programmatic challenges. It is expected 
    that the review will reveal ways of strengthening the effectiveness 
    of these institutions in undergraduate education. The provision of 
    excellent educational services requires a robust infrastructure 
    whose components at all institutions include faculty, curriculum, 
    and capabilities for teaching and scholarship. The condition of 
    these components will be examined.
        The goals of improved undergraduate education in SMET are:
         Citizens who are empowered to be full participants in a 
    scientific and technological society;
         A technically well-prepared workforce who can both 
    participate and lead in the high performance workplace of advanced 
    technologies;
         Teachers who are both scientifically and pedagogically 
    well-prepared, and scientists and engineers who are well-prepared 
    for their occupations;
         Young people with diverse backgrounds successfully 
    involved in SMET in numbers that reflect their representation in the 
    population.
        Consistent with its chartered responsibility to ``initiate and 
    support * * * science education programs at all levels * * *'', the 
    NSF seeks to ascertain the extent of effective innovation in 
    undergraduate education in SMET, and what next steps, if any, should 
    be taken to cause large-scale improvements to take place. The 
    specific areas of inquiry listed below are designed to provide 
    guidance on the question of how the nation should capitalize on its 
    recent investment in the improvement of undergraduate education:
         What are the innovations and what is the evidence that 
    a significant number of them represent superior practice of 
    undergraduate education? The areas of inquiry regarding superior 
    practice will involve: curriculum of all types and levels, faculty 
    maintenance and development, pedagogy, instructional technology, 
    instrumentation and facilities, research opportunities for students 
    and faculty, and connections of instructional programs to the world 
    of work.
         What are the unmet needs of those who are receiving and 
    have received undergraduate SMET instruction?
         What are the infrastructural needs across the diverse 
    providers of undergraduate instruction in order to implement the 
    best instructional practice and meet the needs of students and 
    employers?
         What are the problems in the context of an 
    institution's entire undergraduate enterprise that need to be 
    addressed to achieve the goals of undergraduate SMET education?
        The effort through which the Foundation plans to address these 
    questions will consist of three phases. Phase I will involve direct, 
    systematic investigation of the considered points of view of 
    Americans across a broad spectrum who might be considered the 
    ``customers'' of the diverse educational programs and settings that 
    deliver undergraduate education. It will also involve 
    [[Page 15610]] intensive study of existing reports and data on the 
    subject, and open-ended inquiry to experienced providers of 
    undergraduate education. Phase II of the project will rely upon a 
    preliminary summary of the findings from Phase I prepared by NSF 
    staff that will be presented for comment and elaboration to a large 
    number of persons experienced in undergraduate education, 
    particularly to those faculty and administrators attending key 
    professional society meetings. In Phase III, the NSF will seek to 
    publicize and encourage implementation of those practices that will 
    achieve improved science and engineering literacy; a technically 
    capable workforce; well-prepared teachers, scientists and engineers; 
    and greater participation in SMET careers by women and minorities.
        For further information contact the Division of Undergraduate 
    Education (DUE) of EHR, Robert F. Watson, Division Director.
    
    [FR Doc. 95-7275 Filed 3-23-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7555-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/24/1995
Department:
National Science Foundation
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
95-7275
Pages:
15609-15610 (2 pages)
PDF File:
95-7275.pdf