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Recent Testimony
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October 07, 2005Gingrich and Markoff at CSTBFormer House Speaker Newt Gingrich joined yesterday's meeting of the National Academies' Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, ostensibly to talk about health care and IT -- though he probably only spent a couple of minutes total on the topic. Instead, the board and those of us in the audience got Gingrich's take on what's wrong with America's innovation ecosystem and his plan for addressing it. The presentation was very interesting -- Gingrich is a remarkable extemporaneous speaker, even in front of an audience that I suspect was not full of Gingrich "fans." I jotted down some brief notes as he outlined his recommendations and I reprint them here, just because I thought it was a nicely structured approach. According to Gingrich, we need to: 1) Dramatically, radically overhaul math and science education by:I thought it was a very interesting talk. John Markoff, tech reporter for the NY Times (we've covered a few of his stories, including this really important one, here in this space) also participated in the meeting, running through his history of the rise of the personal computer, as told in his book What the Dormouse Said. Markoff also talked a bit about his frustration with what's happening with tech coverage in journalism and at the Times -- a move to cover much more of the business side of technology with less emphasis on the exciting stories about the science -- but understood the pressures facing the publishers given the absolutely grim financial situations newspapers find themselves in at the moment. We've seen this in the advocacy community. The one "case" for the need to support fundamental research that seems to get the most traction both in the press and among policymakers at the moment is the "innovation" case -- that is, the linkage between fundamental research performed by the nation's universities and federal labs and innovation in U.S. industries. I suppose that's not surprising. But more often it would be nice, I think -- especially if one of our goals is inspiring the next generation of scientists and engineers -- to see stories covering the excitement of the path to discovery, the quest for knowledge.... Anyway, on the whole, I thought it was a very enjoyable morning at the National Academies. Posted by PeterHarsha at October 7, 2005 11:09 AM | TrackBackPosted to Policy |