Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Webinar Roundtable on Student Retention and Student-to-Professional Transitions

Join us for this AGI GeoConnection webinar!  We especially encourage geoscience students and early-career geoscientists to participate in this webinar.

"A Secure Future for Energy, Environment and Hazard Mitigation: Retaining students through the Student-to-Professional Continuum in the Geosciences. "

The geoscience profession is facing critical human resource issues as a result of its aging workforce and trickle of new graduates entering core geoscience occupations. Since the mid-1990's the geoscience degree completion rates have hovered near 12 percent for undergraduates and near 20 percent for graduate students. Furthermore, data from the National Science Foundation’s 2006 statistical databases indicates that only 30 percent of geoscience graduates work in core geoscience occupations. The majority of the geoscience workforce will be retiring over the next decade and data from federal sources, professional societies, and industry indicate this growing imbalance in the profession’s age demographics. Over the past three years, the age demographics for geoscientists in academia and the federal government indicate an acceleration in the loss of senior geoscientists from the profession.

Because of increasing pressure to address issues such as energy supply, climate and other environmental concerns, and as seen with the Japan disaster, strengthening hazard mitigation, there is an expected 23 percent increase in geoscience jobs over the next decade on top of a wave of nearly 50 percent of existing geoscientists retiring during the same time. The U.S. is beginning to see the loss of fundamental technical skills in the geoscience workforce, both within academia and in the applied sectors. Across all fields, future geoscientists will need solid fundamental skills in both geoscience and mathematics that can be applied to different geoscience challenges including water resources, energy, minerals, hazards and climate issues. Given the current trends, many core and specialty geoscience sub-disciplines that are also economically critical are at risk of extinction. Without properly targeted investment in the retention geoscience university students and the successful transition of geoscience graduates into core geoscience occupations, the sustainability of U.S. geoscience academic infrastructure and pursuit of basic geoscience research is at risk.

This roundtable will be a live web-cast. The roundtable will commence with a brief presentation that highlights these main issues and will be followed by Skype chat-based discussion groups on the following topics.

1. How do we successfully retain geoscience students in US university programs?
2. How do we successfully transition geoscience graduates into geoscience occupations?

Roundtable moderators will present their discussion group summaries at the end of the roundtable session. If you would like to serve as a roundtable moderator, please contact Leila Gonzales at lmg@agiweb.

This webinar is co-sponsored by the YES Network's USA National Chapter.

This webinar has been submitted to the Obama Administration’s “Roundtables with Young Americans” initiative, and we have also requested that a person from the Administration be in attendance during this session.  *Note: If you would like to have your contact information included in the final report submitted to the Obama Administration's Youth Team, please make sure to fill in the name, address, and email fields on the registration page.

For more information, including registration details, please visit AGI's GeoWebinar page.

Monday, March 14, 2011

YES Network sessions at the GSA 2011 meeting

Time is moving fast this year! We already have three sessions accepted for the Geological Society of America's 2011 annual meeting in Minneapolis, MN this October, a short course that we're co-organizing with the Arizona State Geological Survey and AGI, and a networking luncheon that we're co-organizing with GSA and AGI. We have a lot of activities (yes, even more than what I just listed) planned for GSA. See the YES Network website for more info : http://www.networkyes.org/index.php/meetings/gsa_2011/

So, you ask, "How can I get involved?". Here are some ideas to get you started.
  • Submit an abstract to one of the YES Network's topical sessions, and invite others whom you think might be interested in these sessions to submit abstracts as well.
  • Join the planning team and help us organize the different YES Network activities. Email Mary Seid (yesnetwork.usa[at]gmail.com) to let her know you'd like to be part of the organizing team. 
 Stay tuned for more posts!