Texas CEO Magazine May|June 2014 | Page 4

publisher’s letter ceo magazine May|June 2014 Volume 5, Issue 3 THE TALENT PIPELINE In the latest high school rankings from U.S. News, Texas has 300 ranked high schools out of 1,492 high schools in the state. Texas also has the top ranked high school in the U.S., the School for the Talented and Gifted in Dallas, which is an advanced placement (AP) magnet school inside DISD. Of the top ten ranked high schools in our state, seven are magnet schools and three are charter schools. Three of the schools are in Dallas, three are in Houston and there are two schools each in Austin and in the Rio Grande Valley. For the most part, the top ten schools are also STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) ranked. That’s what this issue is about, STEM education in Texas. We chose this topic because of the workplace hiring challenges faced by companies who need STEM talent. We wondered what the talent pipeline looks like for those who need to hire engineers as well as machine operators with a solid math education. Most STEM focused schools teach students with a concept called projectbased learning, or PBL. PBL is a way to teach students based on real-world practices. Through PBL, students work in teams to complete hands-on projects, from conceptualization and planning, all the way through creation and presentation of the final product. PBL has personal responsibility, communication and collaboration at its core. PBL experts believe this approach to learning helps students retain more knowledge by allowing them to use their TEX S Publisher Pat Niekamp Managing Editor Ray Niekamp Art Director Tania Roberts Sales Truby Chiaviello Potomac Media 202-363-3741 Photography Shannon Drawe Jonathan Garza Leah Overstreet Social Marketing Manager Will Pate Writer & Editor Dacia Rivers Web Developer Jeff Rose Branding & Web Design Andrew Niekamp skills to create, answer questions and solve problems. It isn’t just the magnet schools using project-based learning. Manor New Technology High School, east of Austin, is an example of what happens in a diverse, lower socioeconomic community that committed to PBL eight years ago. Manor New Tech has a 99.4 percent graduation rate and 100 percent of graduates have been accepted into college. Those numbers look even better when you consider that 62 percent of students who attend the school are first-generation college attendees and 52 percent of students qualify for free or reduced cost lunches. It isn’t just high schools that commit to PBL – Irving’s Valley Ranch Elementary (part of Coppell ISD) is another example of a PBL campus. Coppell ISD also has a PBL high school, New Tech High School. As you might expect, there are two driving forces in STEM education through our universities – one is called the T-STEM Coalition and the other is UTeach. Read on. Pat Niekamp, Publisher [email protected] Contributors Melinda Brijalba Mary Marg