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NSF TARGETS CITIES
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
WASHINGTON-
The National Science Foundation plans to award
$105 million to seven large U.S. cities in an effort to improve
K-12 science education in underserved areas.
The awards are part of the NSF's Urban Systemic Initiative
(USI) Program. The goal of the program is to improve science,
mathematics and technology education in areas with a high
percentage of students living at or below the poverty line. The
seven cities chosen are Cleveland, Columbus, Fresno, Los Angeles,
Memphis, New Orleans, and Philadelphia. Many other cities are
eligible to participate. The cities will each receive up to $15
million over five years, beginning with an initial award of $2
million for the first year.
"The USI is a one-of-a-kind federal program that has the
potential to greatly impact urban education," said NSF Director
Neal Lane. "And considering that urban school systems enroll
about half of all school-age children in the U.S., the USI
Program also has significant implications to the nation's overall
education reform effort."
According to NSF Assistant Director for Education and Human
Resources, Luther Williams, a key goal of the USI Program is to
"confront one of the most intractable education issues of our
time -- the disturbing and continuing performance gap between the
mostly poor and predominantly minority children in the inner
cities, and their largely white suburban counterparts."
The USI Program depends on interactive partnerships that
require substantial participation and commitment by the cities
involved. The seven cities have already started moving, having
established revitalized leadership, school budget and school
calendar reconfigurations, math and science requirements, and
programs aimed at the introduction of new technologies.
"Obviously no federal agency can or should dictate what
changes a local school district must make," said Williams. "What
we can do is provide the leverage and the guidance to help the
urban school districts determine and meet their own goals. This
group of awards is doing just that."
Transmitted: 95-02-24 17:59:14 EST
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