nacme: engineeringchange - nacme - nacme · michelle gottesman and stephanie guaman. (top, middle)...
TRANSCRIPT
Equity and Excellence in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Education 2 0 0 7 A N N U A L R E P O R T
NACME:Engineering Change
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
C O N T E N T S
A Joint Message from the President and the Chairman 2
A Message from the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer 3
Educational Programs 4
Leadership and Policy 9
Research 10
Institutional Advancement and Operations 12
Financial Statements 16
Donors and Partners 18
Board, Officers, and Staff 20
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
A Profile of
o u r M i s s i o n
To provide leadership and support for the national effort to
increase the representation of successful African American,
American Indian, and Latino women and men in engineering
and technology, math-, and science-based careers.
o u r V i s i o n
An engineering workforce that looks like America.
o u r g o a L
Working with our partners to produce an engineering
graduating class that looks like America.
o u r p u r p o s e
Our aim is diversity with equity, our metric is parity in
the workforce, and our methodology is the formation of
partnerships with those corporations, educational institutions,
foundations, nonprofit agencies, and governmental bodies that
share a commitment to these aims.
o u r B e L i e F s
We believe in the concept of the “learning organization,” a
community in which each member is encouraged and assisted
to grow and develop. We believe that we must work not only to
improve our skills and capabilities for performing our individual
responsibilities increasingly well, but also to strive to be
cooperative and effective team members who are committed
collectively to the fulfillment of NACME’s mission and purposes.
Diversity drives innovation. Students at the High School for Construction Trades, Engineering, and Architecture in Queens, N.Y. (on these pages and throughout this report), pave the way for the Academies of Engineering initiative, a joint project with the National Academy Foundation and Project Lead The Way. (Above) Instructor Angel Texidor teaches team building. (Top, left) Michelle Gottesman and Stephanie Guaman. (Top, middle) Juan Lopez. (Left) Ajay Bhatnajar (standing) and Lyndion Mohammed. Photos: ©2007 Frank Koester
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NACME: Engineering Change ©2007 NACME (www.nacme.org). All rights reserved. Produced by A3 Creative Group, LLC (www.a3creativegroup.com).
C O N T E N T S
A Joint Message from the President and the Chairman 2
A Message from the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer 3
Educational Programs 4
Leadership and Policy 9
Research 10
Institutional Advancement and Operations 12
Financial Statements 16
Donors and Partners 18
Board, Officers, and Staff 20
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
A Profile of
o u r M i s s i o n
To provide leadership and support for the national effort to
increase the representation of successful African American,
American Indian, and Latino women and men in engineering
and technology, math-, and science-based careers.
o u r V i s i o n
An engineering workforce that looks like America.
o u r g o a L
Working with our partners to produce an engineering
graduating class that looks like America.
o u r p u r p o s e
Our aim is diversity with equity, our metric is parity in
the workforce, and our methodology is the formation of
partnerships with those corporations, educational institutions,
foundations, nonprofit agencies, and governmental bodies that
share a commitment to these aims.
o u r B e L i e F s
We believe in the concept of the “learning organization,” a
community in which each member is encouraged and assisted
to grow and develop. We believe that we must work not only to
improve our skills and capabilities for performing our individual
responsibilities increasingly well, but also to strive to be
cooperative and effective team members who are committed
collectively to the fulfillment of NACME’s mission and purposes.
Diversity drives innovation. Students at the High School for Construction Trades, Engineering, and Architecture in Queens, N.Y. (on these pages and throughout this report), pave the way for the Academies of Engineering initiative, a joint project with the National Academy Foundation and Project Lead The Way. (Above) Instructor Angel Texidor teaches team building. (Top, left) Michelle Gottesman and Stephanie Guaman. (Top, middle) Juan Lopez. (Left) Ajay Bhatnajar (standing) and Lyndion Mohammed. Photos: ©2007 Frank Koester
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NACME: Engineering Change ©2007 NACME (www.nacme.org). All rights reserved. Produced by A3 Creative Group, LLC (www.a3creativegroup.com).
O ver the past three years, NACME has been actively engaged in developing and implementing a long-term strategic plan designed to guide its middle school-to-workforce-entry continuum of activities The year 2007 was devoted to the refinement of that plan in
light of expanded activities in our pre-engineering program and new thrusts in research and policy studies This year’s strategic planning process was truly an organization-wide one that involved all members of the NACME headquarters team, our board members and liaisons, and representatives from advisory committees and our network of partners Our goal has been to fill the gaps in our portfolio of programs and to create opportunities for synergistic partnerships and innovative leveraging of ideas and resources in order to fulfill our mission
This past year has also been a period in which we have focused on the NACME brand and the ways in
which our programs and activities can be communicated more effectively to a broad range of constituents.
We have created a new logo and a new tagline, both of which telegraph that we are an organization on the
move and one that is dedicated to helping more underrepresented minority students achieve their dream of
becoming engineers.
Since its founding in 1974, NACME has depended upon the generosity, counsel, and encouragement
of corporations, foundations, universities, and individuals who share NACME’s vision of an engineering
graduating class and, ultimately, an engineering workforce that looks like America. As America becomes
inexorably more diverse and finds itself competing for global leadership in scientific and technological
innovation and productivity, our mission becomes critical to our nation’s progress and success. We are
grateful for the tremendous support we have received from our many benefactors and friends and we thank
them for their continuing expressions of confidence and encouragement. We hope that this annual report
will not only assure our current supporters that their beneficence is well directed but also convince others
to back NACME as well.
On the pages of this annual report you will find that NACME is both committed to providing more
opportunities for underrepresented minorities to study engineering and devoted to helping them achieve
success throughout their educational experience. We hope that you will join us on this journey. Our efforts
and your help are more important now than ever before.
John Brooks Slaughter, Ph.D., P.E. William P. Dee, P.E., D.E.E. President and CEO Chairman NACME, Inc. NACME, Inc. President and CEO Malcolm Pirnie, Inc.
A Joint Message from the President and the Chairman
NACME has been a leader in promoting opportunity and inclusiveness in the fields of engineering and technology since its inception in 1974 Over 33 years, NACME has provided more than $100 million to more than 20,000 underrepresented minority engineering students at more than 160
colleges and universities The result has been a growing cadre of highly skilled and educated minority engineers and future business leaders
NACME works with an extraordinary group of donors, universities, and students, and is engaged with some of the most powerful players in the political, business, higher education, and civic sectors. I was therefore honored to join NACME as its executive vice president and chief operating officer at the beginning of 2007. Our pre-engineering programs had recently expanded and our research and policy activities were taking on a new direction. My first action as COO was to build organization-wide belief and commitment to an accelerated strategic plan in which all members of “Team NACME” have some ownership.
In the pages that follow, you will see how the NACME strategy is reenergizing a national effort to increase the numbers of underrepresented men and women in the high-tech workforce. We have set our goals higher still for the coming three-year period.
With national partners, we will create a steady stream of middle school and high school students prepared for college and for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) careers, and enhance the community-college pathway to engineering careers. In our university programs, we will grow the base of scholarship support from $1.7 million to $2.1 million in 2010; increase the capacity of our academic partner institutions to recruit, admit, retain, educate, and graduate minority engineering students; and disseminate the “best practices” developed at our core universities to the universe of engineering schools in America.
Our research will reestablish NACME as the premier source of data and analysis on underrepresented minorities in STEM education, and will drive policy in the national agenda for equity and excellence in education.
Reintroduced to the public through our exciting new brand identity and marketing strategy, NACME will deliver a strengthened value proposition and coordinated program of events and multimedia publications.
Our institution will advance through broader support from corporations, foundations, and individuals, and from major grants.
We intend to make planning a way of life, a way of thinking, throughout NACME. I remain confident of the commitment of every individual in our organization during this next three-year planning horizon, and I invite you to join us on NACME’s renewed journey to success for underrepresented minorities in engineering.
Irving Pressley McPhail, Ed.D.Executive Vice President and Chief Operating OfficerNACME, Inc.
A Message from the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
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O ver the past three years, NACME has been actively engaged in developing and implementing a long-term strategic plan designed to guide its middle school-to-workforce-entry continuum of activities The year 2007 was devoted to the refinement of that plan in
light of expanded activities in our pre-engineering program and new thrusts in research and policy studies This year’s strategic planning process was truly an organization-wide one that involved all members of the NACME headquarters team, our board members and liaisons, and representatives from advisory committees and our network of partners Our goal has been to fill the gaps in our portfolio of programs and to create opportunities for synergistic partnerships and innovative leveraging of ideas and resources in order to fulfill our mission
This past year has also been a period in which we have focused on the NACME brand and the ways in
which our programs and activities can be communicated more effectively to a broad range of constituents.
We have created a new logo and a new tagline, both of which telegraph that we are an organization on the
move and one that is dedicated to helping more underrepresented minority students achieve their dream of
becoming engineers.
Since its founding in 1974, NACME has depended upon the generosity, counsel, and encouragement
of corporations, foundations, universities, and individuals who share NACME’s vision of an engineering
graduating class and, ultimately, an engineering workforce that looks like America. As America becomes
inexorably more diverse and finds itself competing for global leadership in scientific and technological
innovation and productivity, our mission becomes critical to our nation’s progress and success. We are
grateful for the tremendous support we have received from our many benefactors and friends and we thank
them for their continuing expressions of confidence and encouragement. We hope that this annual report
will not only assure our current supporters that their beneficence is well directed but also convince others
to back NACME as well.
On the pages of this annual report you will find that NACME is both committed to providing more
opportunities for underrepresented minorities to study engineering and devoted to helping them achieve
success throughout their educational experience. We hope that you will join us on this journey. Our efforts
and your help are more important now than ever before.
John Brooks Slaughter, Ph.D., P.E. William P. Dee, P.E., D.E.E. President and CEO Chairman NACME, Inc. NACME, Inc. President and CEO Malcolm Pirnie, Inc.
A Joint Message from the President and the Chairman
NACME has been a leader in promoting opportunity and inclusiveness in the fields of engineering and technology since its inception in 1974 Over 33 years, NACME has provided more than $100 million to more than 20,000 underrepresented minority engineering students at more than 160
colleges and universities The result has been a growing cadre of highly skilled and educated minority engineers and future business leaders
NACME works with an extraordinary group of donors, universities, and students, and is engaged with some of the most powerful players in the political, business, higher education, and civic sectors. I was therefore honored to join NACME as its executive vice president and chief operating officer at the beginning of 2007. Our pre-engineering programs had recently expanded and our research and policy activities were taking on a new direction. My first action as COO was to build organization-wide belief and commitment to an accelerated strategic plan in which all members of “Team NACME” have some ownership.
In the pages that follow, you will see how the NACME strategy is reenergizing a national effort to increase the numbers of underrepresented men and women in the high-tech workforce. We have set our goals higher still for the coming three-year period.
With national partners, we will create a steady stream of middle school and high school students prepared for college and for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) careers, and enhance the community-college pathway to engineering careers. In our university programs, we will grow the base of scholarship support from $1.7 million to $2.1 million in 2010; increase the capacity of our academic partner institutions to recruit, admit, retain, educate, and graduate minority engineering students; and disseminate the “best practices” developed at our core universities to the universe of engineering schools in America.
Our research will reestablish NACME as the premier source of data and analysis on underrepresented minorities in STEM education, and will drive policy in the national agenda for equity and excellence in education.
Reintroduced to the public through our exciting new brand identity and marketing strategy, NACME will deliver a strengthened value proposition and coordinated program of events and multimedia publications.
Our institution will advance through broader support from corporations, foundations, and individuals, and from major grants.
We intend to make planning a way of life, a way of thinking, throughout NACME. I remain confident of the commitment of every individual in our organization during this next three-year planning horizon, and I invite you to join us on NACME’s renewed journey to success for underrepresented minorities in engineering.
Irving Pressley McPhail, Ed.D.Executive Vice President and Chief Operating OfficerNACME, Inc.
A Message from the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
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©20
07 K
atha
rine
And
riot
is
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
©20
07 K
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And
riot
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NACME’s pre-engineering programs take students’ interest in STEM subjects to the next level. Meherun Begum (foreground) and Lisa Leandro check for alignment.
NACME STEM Innovation grants provide teachers in inner-city communities with funding for projects that make students aware of STEM career possibilities Five $1,000 grants were awarded to teachers in 2006 to fund the following projects:
Students at Johnson High School in St. Paul, Minnesota,
pitted their high-mileage vehicle against those of some 40
other high schools for the state championship in design.
Using video and computer technology, students at
the Academy of Applied Mathematics and Technology
in the Bronx, New York, created a public-service
mini-documentary based on their study of the flow of
electricity.
Students at Hazelwood Central High School in Florissant,
Missouri, built a team entry for Purdue University’s
prestigious robotics event, the FIRST Boilermaker
Regional Competition.
As part of a 12-week building course, students from the
High School for Construction Trades, Engineering, and
Architecture in Queens, New York, combined hands-
on projects with field trips to local architectural and
construction sites.
University faculty from throughout Pennsylvania joined
students from Martin Luther King, Jr., High School in
Philadelphia to discuss technology in modern agriculture
following a visit to the Pennsylvania Farm Show.
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Some 40 state legislatures enacted STEM bills, and in August 2007 President George W. Bush signed the America Competes Act, which dramatically increased government funding for teaching STEM subjects and had broad bipartisan support. Businesses backed STEM education with a rich variety of partnerships, programs, and funding. As STEM initiatives and advocates have proliferated, groups such as the National Science Foundation have urged collaboration among federal, state, and local efforts, especially to support K–12 STEM education. What the STEM “movement” needs right now, it seems, is a coordinated effort to link its multiple stakeholders and combine its abundant resources.
Since the organization’s founding in 1974, NACME and its partner organizations have sought to develop a geographically well-planned, carefully sequenced portfolio of initiatives, coordinating resources and activities every step of the way.
NACME has always supported underrepresented minorities along a continuum of educational experience. NACME’s belief is that all young people need to be prepared for college, and all college students need to be prepared for work in a technologically advancing world. Delivering university scholarships remains NACME’s core function. However, the organization has also created programs that include partnerships to form a coherent career development pathway along which a student may journey successfully from middle school to acceptance at and graduation from our nation’s engineering institutions—and into the workplace. In this way NACME helps to strengthen the number of underrepresented Americans in STEM fields.
university Programs NACME’s principal outreach effort, consuming 70 percent of the annual budget, is the awarding of scholarship grants to minority engineering students through a national network of college and university partners. In 2006, nearly one-third of underrepresented minority students in the nation graduating with engineering degrees did so from NACME partner institutions. Since the mid-1990s, the retention-to-graduation rate of NACME scholars has exceeded 83 percent, which is more than twice the national retention average for minority engineering students nationwide and nearly 20 points higher than that of all engineering students regardless of ethnicity. In 2006–07 the number of scholars NACME supported increased by 20 percent. A total of $1.7 million was awarded in scholarships and $2.5 million was made available through universities’ in-kind support.
According to NACME research, underrepresented minority engineering students tend to succeed at colleges and universities where the leadership strongly supports initiatives for inclusion. NACME currently commits grants of $100,000 to $125,000 over five years to each of 27 selected universities that have demonstrated a thorough commitment to diversity. These partner institutions (see page 15) use the grants as scholarships to recruit and retain underrepresented minority engineering students.
The 2006–07 school year was a milestone for the scholarship grant program. NACME commissioned an evaluation of the initial three-year experience of the first group of 13 partner institutions. Dr. Watson Scott Swail, president of the Educational Policy Institute and author of the evaluation, concluded: “The NACME block grant program helps students in a way that can make or break their future. The program is illuminating the engineering pathway and helping to propel careers.”
In July of 2007, NACME conducted its annual University and Corporate Partner Workshop, sponsored by a grant from Chevron. Sixty-five corporate executives, educators, deans, college administrators, and program directors joined the NACME staff at the University of Colorado at Boulder to share information and experiences on engineering education.
These workshops are NACME’s primary vehicle for disseminating information about best practices in recruiting, enrolling, educating, and graduating underrepresented minority students in engineering. The 2007 workshop also featured a discussion of the implications for race-based scholarships in the current climate of ambiguity over affirmative action. Of particular interest, given NACME’s new emphasis on the community-college pathway to engineering, were initial lessons learned from the pilot of the NACME/Qualcomm Community College Pre-Engineering Student Transfer Scholarship Program.
(Continued)
Educational Programs
The 50th anniversary of the Sputnik launch has brought the issue of American competitiveness to the forefront of public policy and discourse. (Above) In Angel Texidor’s class, Steven Boodhoo (left) and Juan Cruz take pride in their work.
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NACME Joins NAF, PLTW in Academies of Engineering InitiativeWhITE PLAINs, NY—“NACME is pleased to be joining the National Academy Foundation and Project Lead The Way in launching a national network of urban-centered, open enrollment, high school Academies of Engineering that will provide students with the science and math skills required to be college-ready for engineering study,” said Dr. John Brooks slaughter, president and CEO of NACME, Inc. “By involving parents, community resources, local corporations, and two-year and four-year colleges in the activities of the academies, we anticipate a dramatic increase in the number of underrepresented minorities prepared to engage in engineering education.”
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
Pre-college initiatives such as the Academies of Engineering combine the strengths of NACME’s partner organizations.
STEM—the acronym for the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics sector of the economy and job market—emerged as this year’s single most important education topic America seemed to reach a consensus that strengthening the STEM education system is
essential to protecting the American economy
NACME’s pre-engineering programs take students’ interest in STEM subjects to the next level. Meherun Begum (foreground) and Lisa Leandro check for alignment.
NACME STEM Innovation grants provide teachers in inner-city communities with funding for projects that make students aware of STEM career possibilities Five $1,000 grants were awarded to teachers in 2006 to fund the following projects:
Students at Johnson High School in St. Paul, Minnesota,
pitted their high-mileage vehicle against those of some 40
other high schools for the state championship in design.
Using video and computer technology, students at
the Academy of Applied Mathematics and Technology
in the Bronx, New York, created a public-service
mini-documentary based on their study of the flow of
electricity.
Students at Hazelwood Central High School in Florissant,
Missouri, built a team entry for Purdue University’s
prestigious robotics event, the FIRST Boilermaker
Regional Competition.
As part of a 12-week building course, students from the
High School for Construction Trades, Engineering, and
Architecture in Queens, New York, combined hands-
on projects with field trips to local architectural and
construction sites.
University faculty from throughout Pennsylvania joined
students from Martin Luther King, Jr., High School in
Philadelphia to discuss technology in modern agriculture
following a visit to the Pennsylvania Farm Show.
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Some 40 state legislatures enacted STEM bills, and in August 2007 President George W. Bush signed the America Competes Act, which dramatically increased government funding for teaching STEM subjects and had broad bipartisan support. Businesses backed STEM education with a rich variety of partnerships, programs, and funding. As STEM initiatives and advocates have proliferated, groups such as the National Science Foundation have urged collaboration among federal, state, and local efforts, especially to support K–12 STEM education. What the STEM “movement” needs right now, it seems, is a coordinated effort to link its multiple stakeholders and combine its abundant resources.
Since the organization’s founding in 1974, NACME and its partner organizations have sought to develop a geographically well-planned, carefully sequenced portfolio of initiatives, coordinating resources and activities every step of the way.
NACME has always supported underrepresented minorities along a continuum of educational experience. NACME’s belief is that all young people need to be prepared for college, and all college students need to be prepared for work in a technologically advancing world. Delivering university scholarships remains NACME’s core function. However, the organization has also created programs that include partnerships to form a coherent career development pathway along which a student may journey successfully from middle school to acceptance at and graduation from our nation’s engineering institutions—and into the workplace. In this way NACME helps to strengthen the number of underrepresented Americans in STEM fields.
university Programs NACME’s principal outreach effort, consuming 70 percent of the annual budget, is the awarding of scholarship grants to minority engineering students through a national network of college and university partners. In 2006, nearly one-third of underrepresented minority students in the nation graduating with engineering degrees did so from NACME partner institutions. Since the mid-1990s, the retention-to-graduation rate of NACME scholars has exceeded 83 percent, which is more than twice the national retention average for minority engineering students nationwide and nearly 20 points higher than that of all engineering students regardless of ethnicity. In 2006–07 the number of scholars NACME supported increased by 20 percent. A total of $1.7 million was awarded in scholarships and $2.5 million was made available through universities’ in-kind support.
According to NACME research, underrepresented minority engineering students tend to succeed at colleges and universities where the leadership strongly supports initiatives for inclusion. NACME currently commits grants of $100,000 to $125,000 over five years to each of 27 selected universities that have demonstrated a thorough commitment to diversity. These partner institutions (see page 15) use the grants as scholarships to recruit and retain underrepresented minority engineering students.
The 2006–07 school year was a milestone for the scholarship grant program. NACME commissioned an evaluation of the initial three-year experience of the first group of 13 partner institutions. Dr. Watson Scott Swail, president of the Educational Policy Institute and author of the evaluation, concluded: “The NACME block grant program helps students in a way that can make or break their future. The program is illuminating the engineering pathway and helping to propel careers.”
In July of 2007, NACME conducted its annual University and Corporate Partner Workshop, sponsored by a grant from Chevron. Sixty-five corporate executives, educators, deans, college administrators, and program directors joined the NACME staff at the University of Colorado at Boulder to share information and experiences on engineering education.
These workshops are NACME’s primary vehicle for disseminating information about best practices in recruiting, enrolling, educating, and graduating underrepresented minority students in engineering. The 2007 workshop also featured a discussion of the implications for race-based scholarships in the current climate of ambiguity over affirmative action. Of particular interest, given NACME’s new emphasis on the community-college pathway to engineering, were initial lessons learned from the pilot of the NACME/Qualcomm Community College Pre-Engineering Student Transfer Scholarship Program.
(Continued)
Educational Programs
The 50th anniversary of the Sputnik launch has brought the issue of American competitiveness to the forefront of public policy and discourse. (Above) In Angel Texidor’s class, Steven Boodhoo (left) and Juan Cruz take pride in their work.
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NACME Joins NAF, PLTW in Academies of Engineering InitiativeWhITE PLAINs, NY—“NACME is pleased to be joining the National Academy Foundation and Project Lead The Way in launching a national network of urban-centered, open enrollment, high school Academies of Engineering that will provide students with the science and math skills required to be college-ready for engineering study,” said Dr. John Brooks slaughter, president and CEO of NACME, Inc. “By involving parents, community resources, local corporations, and two-year and four-year colleges in the activities of the academies, we anticipate a dramatic increase in the number of underrepresented minorities prepared to engage in engineering education.”
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
Pre-college initiatives such as the Academies of Engineering combine the strengths of NACME’s partner organizations.
STEM—the acronym for the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics sector of the economy and job market—emerged as this year’s single most important education topic America seemed to reach a consensus that strengthening the STEM education system is
essential to protecting the American economy
0
25%
50%
75%
Community College Students: Surprised By Success?Beginning Community College Students Who Attained Degrees or Attended 4-Year Colleges, By Degree Expectation
Source: American Association of Community Colleges, www2.aacc.nche.edu/research
21%
39%42%
38% 39%
13% 12%
0%
10%
21%
8% 8%
0%
7%
14%
5% 4% 0% 3%
7%
60%
34%
51%
42%
48%
21%
39%42%
38% 39%
13% 12%
0%
10%
21%
8% 8%
0%
7%
14%
5% 4% 0% 3%
7%
60%
34%
51%
42%
48%
AttainedCertificate or Degree
Attended4-Year College
Attended andStill Enrolled
4-Year College
Attended andNo LongerEnrolled
Total Attending4-Year College or
Attaining Certificatesor Degrees
None Any Credential or Transfer Certificate Associate Degree Transfer to 4-Year Institution
Degree Expectation at First Insitution
Regardless of their stated expectations on entering community college in the 2003–2004 academic year, when surveyed again three years later, more students from the sample group of about 18,600 were attending or had attained a degree from a four-year college than had achieved a lesser goal. NACME programs to facilitate community college transfers into university schools of engineering are a new focus for the organization.
student tool-kit for effective studying. In addition, NACME supports the ACE (Architecture, Construction and Engineering) mentor program, which connects engineering and other professionals with urban high school students. Finally, the NACME Pre-Engineering Scholarship Program awards financial aid to high-performing minority high school seniors who are committed to careers in science and technology, and the STEM Innovation Grant Program gives money to teachers pursuing special classroom projects (see page 5).
New NACME pre-engineering initiatives include partnership in the Academies of Engineering (AOEs) (see press release excerpt, page 4). In 2006,
a collaboration was initiated with the National Academy Foundation (NAF) and Project Lead The Way (PLTW). In 2007, the project, funded by grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Motorola, Verizon, and Xerox, got under way. (Photographs of students attending one of 13 proposed pilot academies, the High School for Construction Trades, Engineering, and Architecture in Queens, New York, are featured in the pages of this report.) The network of 9th-through-12th-grade academies, projected to grow to 110 by 2012, is being established nationally within high schools that serve underrepresented minorities. Courses taught around a broad technical core curriculum prepare students to pursue postsecondary engineering and
Community College Programs With the support of Qualcomm, NACME’s two-year pilot project identifies underrepresented minority students who are strong in the study of math and science at community colleges in San Diego, and encourages them to pursue engineering studies at the University of California at San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering. Project leaders described the engineering school’s remarkable outreach efforts, including an admissions fair where prospective students could fill out applications on the spot and access mentors on campus available to provide guidance on engineering studies. While every one of the project’s eight-student cohort managed the transition successfully in the first year of the pilot, two students took full advantage of the program’s abundant resources and also “gave back”—by participating in statewide symposia and professional development activities, tutoring, and acting as advisors to other students.
Until recently, community colleges have been somewhat overlooked as pathways to engineering careers for underrepresented minority students. Yet with 47 percent of all of the nation’s African American undergraduates, 56 percent of Latino undergraduates, and 57 percent of American Indian undergraduates attending community colleges, NACME is strengthening its focus on two-year colleges.
NACME and Prince George’s Community College in Maryland have joined forces to strengthen the math and science skills of underrepresented minority high school students in preparation for successful completion of STEM majors in college. In the Pipeline Partnership for the Advancement of Engineering Education program, NACME provides scholarships to cover the full tuition and fees for public high school students in Prince George’s County to take calculus and science courses at the community college, and receive career advisement and mentoring. Nine students are currently participating in the program.
As NACME works to grow the base of scholarship grants significantly by 2010, it does so with a renewed commitment to what CEO Dr. John Brooks Slaughter calls “equity and excellence.” Knowing that NACME’s best practices are understood and being applied throughout a national network, the organization looks forward to measuring the success of its university scholarship programs student by student in the coming years. Pre-Engineering Programs The NACME pre-engineering studies strategy expands the organization’s outreach to underrepresented minority communities by targeting students, parents, teachers, counselors, schools, local businesses, and other relevant stakeholders in middle schools and high schools.
In conjunction with The Princeton Review, for example, NACME has published The NACME Guide to Engineering Colleges, which provides minority students and parents with essential information on every accredited engineering school in the United States. NACME has also partnered with learning-system developers Guaranteed 4.0 to distribute a
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NACME is working to bring more underrepresented minority students, such as Adrian Lopez (above), into the engineering education pipeline at an earlier age.
(Continued)
0
25%
50%
75%
Community College Students: Surprised By Success?Beginning Community College Students Who Attained Degrees or Attended 4-Year Colleges, By Degree Expectation
Source: American Association of Community Colleges, www2.aacc.nche.edu/research
21%
39%42%
38% 39%
13% 12%
0%
10%
21%
8% 8%
0%
7%
14%
5% 4% 0% 3%
7%
60%
34%
51%
42%
48%
21%
39%42%
38% 39%
13% 12%
0%
10%
21%
8% 8%
0%
7%
14%
5% 4% 0% 3%
7%
60%
34%
51%
42%
48%
AttainedCertificate or Degree
Attended4-Year College
Attended andStill Enrolled
4-Year College
Attended andNo LongerEnrolled
Total Attending4-Year College or
Attaining Certificatesor Degrees
None Any Credential or Transfer Certificate Associate Degree Transfer to 4-Year Institution
Degree Expectation at First Insitution
Regardless of their stated expectations on entering community college in the 2003–2004 academic year, when surveyed again three years later, more students from the sample group of about 18,600 were attending or had attained a degree from a four-year college than had achieved a lesser goal. NACME programs to facilitate community college transfers into university schools of engineering are a new focus for the organization.
student tool-kit for effective studying. In addition, NACME supports the ACE (Architecture, Construction and Engineering) mentor program, which connects engineering and other professionals with urban high school students. Finally, the NACME Pre-Engineering Scholarship Program awards financial aid to high-performing minority high school seniors who are committed to careers in science and technology, and the STEM Innovation Grant Program gives money to teachers pursuing special classroom projects (see page 5).
New NACME pre-engineering initiatives include partnership in the Academies of Engineering (AOEs) (see press release excerpt, page 4). In 2006,
a collaboration was initiated with the National Academy Foundation (NAF) and Project Lead The Way (PLTW). In 2007, the project, funded by grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Motorola, Verizon, and Xerox, got under way. (Photographs of students attending one of 13 proposed pilot academies, the High School for Construction Trades, Engineering, and Architecture in Queens, New York, are featured in the pages of this report.) The network of 9th-through-12th-grade academies, projected to grow to 110 by 2012, is being established nationally within high schools that serve underrepresented minorities. Courses taught around a broad technical core curriculum prepare students to pursue postsecondary engineering and
Community College Programs With the support of Qualcomm, NACME’s two-year pilot project identifies underrepresented minority students who are strong in the study of math and science at community colleges in San Diego, and encourages them to pursue engineering studies at the University of California at San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering. Project leaders described the engineering school’s remarkable outreach efforts, including an admissions fair where prospective students could fill out applications on the spot and access mentors on campus available to provide guidance on engineering studies. While every one of the project’s eight-student cohort managed the transition successfully in the first year of the pilot, two students took full advantage of the program’s abundant resources and also “gave back”—by participating in statewide symposia and professional development activities, tutoring, and acting as advisors to other students.
Until recently, community colleges have been somewhat overlooked as pathways to engineering careers for underrepresented minority students. Yet with 47 percent of all of the nation’s African American undergraduates, 56 percent of Latino undergraduates, and 57 percent of American Indian undergraduates attending community colleges, NACME is strengthening its focus on two-year colleges.
NACME and Prince George’s Community College in Maryland have joined forces to strengthen the math and science skills of underrepresented minority high school students in preparation for successful completion of STEM majors in college. In the Pipeline Partnership for the Advancement of Engineering Education program, NACME provides scholarships to cover the full tuition and fees for public high school students in Prince George’s County to take calculus and science courses at the community college, and receive career advisement and mentoring. Nine students are currently participating in the program.
As NACME works to grow the base of scholarship grants significantly by 2010, it does so with a renewed commitment to what CEO Dr. John Brooks Slaughter calls “equity and excellence.” Knowing that NACME’s best practices are understood and being applied throughout a national network, the organization looks forward to measuring the success of its university scholarship programs student by student in the coming years. Pre-Engineering Programs The NACME pre-engineering studies strategy expands the organization’s outreach to underrepresented minority communities by targeting students, parents, teachers, counselors, schools, local businesses, and other relevant stakeholders in middle schools and high schools.
In conjunction with The Princeton Review, for example, NACME has published The NACME Guide to Engineering Colleges, which provides minority students and parents with essential information on every accredited engineering school in the United States. NACME has also partnered with learning-system developers Guaranteed 4.0 to distribute a
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c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
NACME is working to bring more underrepresented minority students, such as Adrian Lopez (above), into the engineering education pipeline at an earlier age.
(Continued)
engineering technology degree programs. The academies also ready students for other postsecondary majors that require strong foundations in math, science, and language arts. NACME’s primary role is to provide support to parents, students, and teachers.
Resume Database More than 600 NACME Scholars have submitted resumes to the Online Resume Directory for review by NACME corporate partners. Students’ profiles contain a wealth of current details for potential employers: not only standard employment data, but also information on academic and leadership activities and accomplishments. Through the directory, students are matched with internship and full-time employment opportunities offered by participating companies.
Alumni Pride As part of its 2007 communications initiative, NACME has begun to develop an online community for NACME Scholars, which will provide alumni with the opportunity to communicate with one another in a knowledge-sharing and social networking community.
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
For more than 30 years, the voice of NACME has sought to change opinion, create understanding, and inspire action in the arena where issues of inclusion meet those of
education and the economy
With its network of constituents in business, government, and academia, NACME is working to strengthen the diversity of America’s engineering workforce. Although its members share various other goals, the glue of this network is commitment to ideals of openness, inclusion, and opportunity.
NACME’s core activity is driving programs and scholarships for minority engineering students. Its success in this endeavor gives NACME the opportunity to do firsthand research with significant numbers of students on the issues and outcomes of studying engineering. Findings are brought to light through the expert analysis of NACME’s research partners.
Throughout 2006–2007, NACME raised awareness and furthered the discussion of equity and engineering education issues in testimony before Congress and at interdisciplinary academic symposia. It also published reports, letters to policymakers, and opinion pieces in national and local journals, and took part in major public-speaking engagements.
Leadership and Policy
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February 2007In “After Michigan, What? The Next Steps for Affirmative Action,” a publication of the Education Policy Institute, NACME discusses the origins of affirmative action and the potential impact of recent legislative rulings on the educational opportunities for students of color.
April 2007Addressing a national symposium at the University of Minnesota, Dr. John Brooks Slaughter challenges higher education faculty to “walk the talk” of inclusion in his speech, “Creating a Faculty of Equity and Excellence: Recruiting, Retaining, and Advancing Faculty of Color.” NACME presents strategies for a creative and diverse workforce at the 2007 IBM Technical Leadership Exchange in Anaheim, California, in “Imagine the Possibilities: Building and Keeping a Diverse Workforce.”
May 2007At “Retention 2007,” the Educational Policy Institute’s second annual international conference on student retention, held in San Antonio, Texas, NACME leadership takes a prominent role in panels, presentations, and speeches on the conference theme.
“The issue of affirmative action transcends and encompasses the subject of Retention 2007,” Dr. Slaughter announces in “Leveling the Playing Field: Improving Access to a College Education,” the closing address of the meeting. Dr. Slaughter calls policymakers to a higher moral ground, away from the “designer school mentalities and the pursuit of ‘best in class’ rankings by U.S. News and World Report.” Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail introduces key NACME strategies as copresenter of “Community College Pathways to Engineering Careers for Students of Color.” Chief Financial Officer John Eppolito presents the Academies of Engineering initiative with collaborative partners from the National Academy Foundation and Project Lead The Way. Vice President for University Programs Aileen Walter copresents “Leading-Edge Practices in the Success of Underrepresented Minority Engineering Students.”
July 2007In “Increasing the Representation of Minorities in STEM,” testimony presented at the Congressional Black Caucus Education Summit in Washington, D.C., Dr. Slaughter frames the national discussion of STEM in terms of minority representation, and makes five recommendations for the caucus’s action: to encourage families to pursue first-rate education; to demand of our education system a quality education for all students; to require qualified teachers who are appropriately compensated; to support deserving yet financially needy students; and, in Dr. Slaughter’s words, to “realize that this is a marathon, not a sprint.”
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■House-proud (above, left to right): Samantha Aluarado, Ruben Aluarado, and Lenore Zuniga. From middle school to workplace entry, NACME’s programs help deliver the excitement, satisfaction and rewards to be found in science and engineering.
Sloan Foundation
S ince November 2001, NACME has been proud to partner with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, a $1.8 billion philanthropic
nonprofit that funds work in science and technology education and careers. In support of the foundation, NACME manages two innovative graduate scholarship programs focusing on increasing the number of underrepresented American minorities in mathematics, the natural sciences, and engineering graduate programs. The Minority Ph.D. Program, established by the Sloan Foundation in 1995, offers eligible doctoral candidates the opportunity to pursue their degrees with financial, mentoring, and guidance support through participating faculty and departments approved by the Sloan Foundation. The American Indian Graduate Program, initiated in 2003 through a partnership between the University of Arizona and the Sloan Foundation, was expanded in the fall of 2005 to include the participation of select faculties and departments at Purdue University, at the University of Montana at Missoula, and at Montana Tech of the University of Montana at Butte.
In 2006–07, more than $3 million in scholarship awards was disbursed.
Students such as Rejean Rodriguez (below) can rely on NACME for support along the pathway to an engineering career.
engineering technology degree programs. The academies also ready students for other postsecondary majors that require strong foundations in math, science, and language arts. NACME’s primary role is to provide support to parents, students, and teachers.
Resume Database More than 600 NACME Scholars have submitted resumes to the Online Resume Directory for review by NACME corporate partners. Students’ profiles contain a wealth of current details for potential employers: not only standard employment data, but also information on academic and leadership activities and accomplishments. Through the directory, students are matched with internship and full-time employment opportunities offered by participating companies.
Alumni Pride As part of its 2007 communications initiative, NACME has begun to develop an online community for NACME Scholars, which will provide alumni with the opportunity to communicate with one another in a knowledge-sharing and social networking community.
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
For more than 30 years, the voice of NACME has sought to change opinion, create understanding, and inspire action in the arena where issues of inclusion meet those of
education and the economy
With its network of constituents in business, government, and academia, NACME is working to strengthen the diversity of America’s engineering workforce. Although its members share various other goals, the glue of this network is commitment to ideals of openness, inclusion, and opportunity.
NACME’s core activity is driving programs and scholarships for minority engineering students. Its success in this endeavor gives NACME the opportunity to do firsthand research with significant numbers of students on the issues and outcomes of studying engineering. Findings are brought to light through the expert analysis of NACME’s research partners.
Throughout 2006–2007, NACME raised awareness and furthered the discussion of equity and engineering education issues in testimony before Congress and at interdisciplinary academic symposia. It also published reports, letters to policymakers, and opinion pieces in national and local journals, and took part in major public-speaking engagements.
Leadership and Policy
8
A N N U A L R E P O R T | 2 0 0 7NA
CM
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NA
CM
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February 2007In “After Michigan, What? The Next Steps for Affirmative Action,” a publication of the Education Policy Institute, NACME discusses the origins of affirmative action and the potential impact of recent legislative rulings on the educational opportunities for students of color.
April 2007Addressing a national symposium at the University of Minnesota, Dr. John Brooks Slaughter challenges higher education faculty to “walk the talk” of inclusion in his speech, “Creating a Faculty of Equity and Excellence: Recruiting, Retaining, and Advancing Faculty of Color.” NACME presents strategies for a creative and diverse workforce at the 2007 IBM Technical Leadership Exchange in Anaheim, California, in “Imagine the Possibilities: Building and Keeping a Diverse Workforce.”
May 2007At “Retention 2007,” the Educational Policy Institute’s second annual international conference on student retention, held in San Antonio, Texas, NACME leadership takes a prominent role in panels, presentations, and speeches on the conference theme.
“The issue of affirmative action transcends and encompasses the subject of Retention 2007,” Dr. Slaughter announces in “Leveling the Playing Field: Improving Access to a College Education,” the closing address of the meeting. Dr. Slaughter calls policymakers to a higher moral ground, away from the “designer school mentalities and the pursuit of ‘best in class’ rankings by U.S. News and World Report.” Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail introduces key NACME strategies as copresenter of “Community College Pathways to Engineering Careers for Students of Color.” Chief Financial Officer John Eppolito presents the Academies of Engineering initiative with collaborative partners from the National Academy Foundation and Project Lead The Way. Vice President for University Programs Aileen Walter copresents “Leading-Edge Practices in the Success of Underrepresented Minority Engineering Students.”
July 2007In “Increasing the Representation of Minorities in STEM,” testimony presented at the Congressional Black Caucus Education Summit in Washington, D.C., Dr. Slaughter frames the national discussion of STEM in terms of minority representation, and makes five recommendations for the caucus’s action: to encourage families to pursue first-rate education; to demand of our education system a quality education for all students; to require qualified teachers who are appropriately compensated; to support deserving yet financially needy students; and, in Dr. Slaughter’s words, to “realize that this is a marathon, not a sprint.”
■
■
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■
■House-proud (above, left to right): Samantha Aluarado, Ruben Aluarado, and Lenore Zuniga. From middle school to workplace entry, NACME’s programs help deliver the excitement, satisfaction and rewards to be found in science and engineering.
Sloan Foundation
S ince November 2001, NACME has been proud to partner with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, a $1.8 billion philanthropic
nonprofit that funds work in science and technology education and careers. In support of the foundation, NACME manages two innovative graduate scholarship programs focusing on increasing the number of underrepresented American minorities in mathematics, the natural sciences, and engineering graduate programs. The Minority Ph.D. Program, established by the Sloan Foundation in 1995, offers eligible doctoral candidates the opportunity to pursue their degrees with financial, mentoring, and guidance support through participating faculty and departments approved by the Sloan Foundation. The American Indian Graduate Program, initiated in 2003 through a partnership between the University of Arizona and the Sloan Foundation, was expanded in the fall of 2005 to include the participation of select faculties and departments at Purdue University, at the University of Montana at Missoula, and at Montana Tech of the University of Montana at Butte.
In 2006–07, more than $3 million in scholarship awards was disbursed.
Students such as Rejean Rodriguez (below) can rely on NACME for support along the pathway to an engineering career.
3%4%
6%
7%
11%
14%
15%
18%
22%
57%38%
4%1%
N A C M E c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
In 2006 NACME formed its Research and Policy Advisory Council to
help broaden its reach and develop a more robust research agenda. NACME is grateful for the continuing participation of these members of the council:
Dr Lisa FrehillExecutive Director Commission on Professionals in Science and Technology (CPST)
Dr Daryl E ChubinDirector, Center for Advancing Science & Engineering CapacityAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Dr gary S MayProfessor and Chair School of Electrical and Computer EngineeringGeorgia Institute of Technology
Dr Jose F MorenoAssistant Professor Latino/a Education & Policy StudiesCalifornia State University at Long Beach
Dr Rocco RussoPresidentRPR Consulting
Dr Watson Scott SwailPresidentEducational Policy Institute
Dr Bevlee W WatfordProgram Director Division of Undergraduate EducationNational Science Foundation
Research and Policy Advisory Council
NA
CM
E
11
2 0 0 7 | A N N U A L R E P O R T
Recently, the Motorola Foundation has taken a national leadership position on the underrepresentation of minorities in multiple sectors of the workforce. Realizing that certain critical baseline data for African American, Latino, and American Indian participation in engineering was more than 10 years old, Motorola and NACME together began the project of updating the data to understand current trends. A portfolio of NACME studies was commissioned, funded by the Motorola Foundation, for release in early 2008.
The trio of full-length reports, one each on African Americans, Latinos, and American Indians, offers detailed data from the continuum of minority engineers’ experience: from college preparation through enrollment and study at all degree levels to participation in the labor force. The reports include statistics and analysis of earnings of minorities in engineering occupations and the respective groups’ representation among engineering education faculty.
For their scope alone, the reports are expected to have impact and value for educators at all levels. Better preparation in STEM subjects is clearly needed across the board for high school and college students. The NACME/Motorola study focuses on detailed differences between and among the STEM-related education needs and participation of the three ethnicities. It can therefore guide educators in the choice of specific strategies for teaching and counseling students in STEM disciplines. Trends analyzed in the reports will be of particular use to workforce planners concerned about where the next generation of qualified engineers is coming from.
Ensuring that the reports reach the largest number of influential readers is one of NACME’s key goals for the project. That target audience includes leaders at:
Universities, including those at the 334 schools of engineering approved by ABET (formerly the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology)State departments of educationNational science and engineering foundations Corporations with an interest in a STEM-prepared workforce.
Also in 2007, NACME established formal partnerships with the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and the Commission on Professionals in Science and Technology (CPST) to collect data for the project and assist in analysis and evaluation.
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■
N A C M E c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
Research
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
NACME’s research studies drive its policymaking efforts and influence its program planning They also provide valuable information and recommendations to NACME’s higher education and corporate partners Other companies, foundations, educational institutions, and government
agencies regularly turn to NACME to provide context for the abundant data on trends in engineering related to underrepresented minorities
NACME revamped its scholarship program in 2003. The program leverages NACME’s partnerships with universities to maximize the retention to graduation of underrepresented minority students. In 2006, NACME commissioned an evaluation of the initial three years of the program, using information gathered from the first 13 institutions to receive the grants. During site visits and extensive interviews with NACME Scholars, engineering school faculty, and senior administrators, NACME asked what impact the program had on students’ GPAs, on their overall performance, and on their staying in programs of study through graduation. Results showed that NACME Scholars averaged a GPA of 3.2, higher than the average for all engineering undergraduates, and that the NACME Scholars’ retention to graduation was 83 percent, 20 percentage points higher than that of engineering undergraduates in general.
10
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30%30%15%31%
NACME Partner InsitutionsNational Data for Engineering Degrees Awarded – 2006
Source: CPST, data derived from EWC
2,000
0
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
AfricanAmericans
AmericanIndians
Latinos Total
1,126 456 67
3,673
4,957
1,500
9,086
2,693
All Institutions
NACME Institutions
During the period 2004–2015, enrollment in degree-granting institutions is expected to grow 28 percent for African American students, versus only 6 percent for white non-Hispanics. NACME backs students such as Sha-ron Campbell (above) through partnerships in the classroom and eligibility for scholarships for engineering studies.
3% – Biomedical 4% – Info Systems / Computer Science 6% – Industrial Engineering 7% – Chemical
11% – Computer 14% – Civil Engineering 15% – Other Engineering 18% – Electrical Engineering 22% – Mechanical Engineering
2006-07NACME Scholars by Ethnicity
1% – Other4% – American Indian
38% – African American 57% – Latino
2006-07NACME Scholars by Discipline
NACME partner universities account for nearly one-third of undergraduate engineering degrees awarded to underrepresented minorities nationwide.
3%4%
6%
7%
11%
14%
15%
18%
22%
57%38%
4%1%
N A C M E c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
In 2006 NACME formed its Research and Policy Advisory Council to
help broaden its reach and develop a more robust research agenda. NACME is grateful for the continuing participation of these members of the council:
Dr Lisa FrehillExecutive Director Commission on Professionals in Science and Technology (CPST)
Dr Daryl E ChubinDirector, Center for Advancing Science & Engineering CapacityAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Dr gary S MayProfessor and Chair School of Electrical and Computer EngineeringGeorgia Institute of Technology
Dr Jose F MorenoAssistant Professor Latino/a Education & Policy StudiesCalifornia State University at Long Beach
Dr Rocco RussoPresidentRPR Consulting
Dr Watson Scott SwailPresidentEducational Policy Institute
Dr Bevlee W WatfordProgram Director Division of Undergraduate EducationNational Science Foundation
Research and Policy Advisory Council
NA
CM
E
11
2 0 0 7 | A N N U A L R E P O R T
Recently, the Motorola Foundation has taken a national leadership position on the underrepresentation of minorities in multiple sectors of the workforce. Realizing that certain critical baseline data for African American, Latino, and American Indian participation in engineering was more than 10 years old, Motorola and NACME together began the project of updating the data to understand current trends. A portfolio of NACME studies was commissioned, funded by the Motorola Foundation, for release in early 2008.
The trio of full-length reports, one each on African Americans, Latinos, and American Indians, offers detailed data from the continuum of minority engineers’ experience: from college preparation through enrollment and study at all degree levels to participation in the labor force. The reports include statistics and analysis of earnings of minorities in engineering occupations and the respective groups’ representation among engineering education faculty.
For their scope alone, the reports are expected to have impact and value for educators at all levels. Better preparation in STEM subjects is clearly needed across the board for high school and college students. The NACME/Motorola study focuses on detailed differences between and among the STEM-related education needs and participation of the three ethnicities. It can therefore guide educators in the choice of specific strategies for teaching and counseling students in STEM disciplines. Trends analyzed in the reports will be of particular use to workforce planners concerned about where the next generation of qualified engineers is coming from.
Ensuring that the reports reach the largest number of influential readers is one of NACME’s key goals for the project. That target audience includes leaders at:
Universities, including those at the 334 schools of engineering approved by ABET (formerly the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology)State departments of educationNational science and engineering foundations Corporations with an interest in a STEM-prepared workforce.
Also in 2007, NACME established formal partnerships with the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and the Commission on Professionals in Science and Technology (CPST) to collect data for the project and assist in analysis and evaluation.
■
■
■
■
N A C M E c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
Research
c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
NACME’s research studies drive its policymaking efforts and influence its program planning They also provide valuable information and recommendations to NACME’s higher education and corporate partners Other companies, foundations, educational institutions, and government
agencies regularly turn to NACME to provide context for the abundant data on trends in engineering related to underrepresented minorities
NACME revamped its scholarship program in 2003. The program leverages NACME’s partnerships with universities to maximize the retention to graduation of underrepresented minority students. In 2006, NACME commissioned an evaluation of the initial three years of the program, using information gathered from the first 13 institutions to receive the grants. During site visits and extensive interviews with NACME Scholars, engineering school faculty, and senior administrators, NACME asked what impact the program had on students’ GPAs, on their overall performance, and on their staying in programs of study through graduation. Results showed that NACME Scholars averaged a GPA of 3.2, higher than the average for all engineering undergraduates, and that the NACME Scholars’ retention to graduation was 83 percent, 20 percentage points higher than that of engineering undergraduates in general.
10
A N N U A L R E P O R T | 2 0 0 7NA
CM
E
30%30%15%31%
NACME Partner InsitutionsNational Data for Engineering Degrees Awarded – 2006
Source: CPST, data derived from EWC
2,000
0
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
AfricanAmericans
AmericanIndians
Latinos Total
1,126 456 67
3,673
4,957
1,500
9,086
2,693
All Institutions
NACME Institutions
During the period 2004–2015, enrollment in degree-granting institutions is expected to grow 28 percent for African American students, versus only 6 percent for white non-Hispanics. NACME backs students such as Sha-ron Campbell (above) through partnerships in the classroom and eligibility for scholarships for engineering studies.
3% – Biomedical 4% – Info Systems / Computer Science 6% – Industrial Engineering 7% – Chemical
11% – Computer 14% – Civil Engineering 15% – Other Engineering 18% – Electrical Engineering 22% – Mechanical Engineering
2006-07NACME Scholars by Ethnicity
1% – Other4% – American Indian
38% – African American 57% – Latino
2006-07NACME Scholars by Discipline
NACME partner universities account for nearly one-third of undergraduate engineering degrees awarded to underrepresented minorities nationwide.
Institutional Advancement and Operations
The U.S. economy is reduced by more than $100 billion and our science and engineering corporations are suffering $4.5 billion annually in lost productivity simply because of our inability to create and sustain a diverse workforce. Beyond productivity, the overall cost of the shortfall of minority engineers to our nation and the world is incalculable.
NACME’s 40-member board of directors, its 16-member staff, and its 47 university partners are united in their commitment to increase minority participation in engineering education and the workforce. The organization’s proven program results, judicious fiscal management, efficient operations, and focused strategies have inspired trust in NACME for more than 30 years. One manifestation of this trust is NACME’s success in the area of institutional advancement. As the financial statements on pages 16 and 17 of this report show, in Fiscal Year 2007, contributions from donors increased by $1.7 million over the previous year, driven primarily by the NACME bi-annual awards dinner and foundation grants in addition to core support from corporations.
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c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
“…Cosby started and finished the night by telling the relatively affluent audience that their money was good. Indeed, important. But there is much more to it than money.
He said we needed to ‘massage the brain(s)’ of these students. Make engineering exciting and motivate students to work their way toward STEM careers, which must start at middle school due to the enhanced mathematics and science curriculum necessary for admissions.”
—Watson Scott Swail“Cosby and the Engineering Kids,”
Educationalpolicy.org, October 20, 2006
Honoring LeadersNACME recognizes those who have made forward strides in the
struggle towards equity and excellence for underrepresented minorities in engineering.
On October 17, 2006, NACME presented awards to:The NACME Corporate Citizenship Award: AT&T, Inc., for outstanding corporate support of educational initiatives.The NACME Founder’s Award: Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr., and Family, for decades of exceptional accomplishments and unwavering support.The NACME Diversity Vision Award: Linda G. Alvarado of Alvarado Construction, for setting a personal example and inspiring underrepresented minority youth.The NACME University Rising Star Award: The University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) and North Carolina A & T State University, for extraordinary diversity initiatives and dedication.The NACME Courage Award: Bill Cosby, for his steadfast personal commitment to education.
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Despite decades of work by organizations dedicated to improving minorities’ access to the sciences, today only 4 percent of underrepresented minority high school graduates complete the math and science courses necessary to enter the engineering field
DevelopmentIf America is to sustain its leadership in research, technological development, and manufacturing, the numbers of persons from underserved and underrepresented communities who are prepared to enter engineering education and pursue technical careers must increase dramatically.
This vision was shared with 530 of America’s most influential citizens, including NACME Founder’s Award winner Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr., and Family, at NACME’s 2006 Awards Dinner and Celebration, a black-tie event held at the Waldorf=Astoria hotel in New York on October 17, 2006. Corporate and individual dinner sponsors contributed $1 million for NACME scholarships in support of the event, while universities committed $3.4 million of in-kind scholarship support. Net proceeds for the event were used to provide additional scholarships for underrepresented minority engineering students. Bill Cosby’s appearance was a highlight of the evening.
Marketing and CommunicationsIn 2007, NACME embarked on a strategic effort to improve and explain its expanded portfolio of programs to key constituencies: students, parents, educators, corporations, government officials, financial supporters, and the media.
Guided by A3 Creative Group, a national education communications firm, NACME has refined the vision for the organization, and rebranded itself with an expression of that vision. The dynamic logo and the tagline, “Creating Opportunities, Ensuring Success,” now appear on everything NACME publishes, from publications to proposals. Along with the new look and message, NACME is telling its story clearly and compellingly throughout all of its program areas.
For example, NACME’s core focus is to support the engineering education and career development of minority youth. This support includes disbursing scholarships but is not limited to that activity. To raise awareness of that support among 13- to 24-year-olds, NACME created the “NACME Backs Me” brand. The message to minority youth: NACME is with you at every critical point in your path to engineering.
(Continued)
NACME’s Special Night
In 2007 NACME welcomed new leadership, a new communications strategy, and a new brand identity. (Above) Rafael Ramirez (left) and Kevin Buitrago project—and protect—the vision.
NACME Names Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail
Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
WhITE PLAINs, NY—February 15, 2007—The National Action Council for
Minorities in Engineering, Inc. (NACME), the nation’s largest private source of
scholarships for African American, American Indian and Latino women and men
in engineering and technology, today announced the appointment of Dr. Irving
Pressley McPhail as executive vice president and chief operating officer. With more
than 30 years’ experience as a teacher, scholar, advocate, and senior executive in
higher education and public school administration, McPhail has an outstanding
record of promoting racial and ethnic equity and diversity at all levels of education.
Diana Natalicio and William P. Dee
Linda G. Alvarado
Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr.
Bill Cosby and Dr. John Brooks Slaughter
Institutional Advancement and Operations
The U.S. economy is reduced by more than $100 billion and our science and engineering corporations are suffering $4.5 billion annually in lost productivity simply because of our inability to create and sustain a diverse workforce. Beyond productivity, the overall cost of the shortfall of minority engineers to our nation and the world is incalculable.
NACME’s 40-member board of directors, its 16-member staff, and its 47 university partners are united in their commitment to increase minority participation in engineering education and the workforce. The organization’s proven program results, judicious fiscal management, efficient operations, and focused strategies have inspired trust in NACME for more than 30 years. One manifestation of this trust is NACME’s success in the area of institutional advancement. As the financial statements on pages 16 and 17 of this report show, in Fiscal Year 2007, contributions from donors increased by $1.7 million over the previous year, driven primarily by the NACME bi-annual awards dinner and foundation grants in addition to core support from corporations.
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“…Cosby started and finished the night by telling the relatively affluent audience that their money was good. Indeed, important. But there is much more to it than money.
He said we needed to ‘massage the brain(s)’ of these students. Make engineering exciting and motivate students to work their way toward STEM careers, which must start at middle school due to the enhanced mathematics and science curriculum necessary for admissions.”
—Watson Scott Swail“Cosby and the Engineering Kids,”
Educationalpolicy.org, October 20, 2006
Honoring LeadersNACME recognizes those who have made forward strides in the
struggle towards equity and excellence for underrepresented minorities in engineering.
On October 17, 2006, NACME presented awards to:The NACME Corporate Citizenship Award: AT&T, Inc., for outstanding corporate support of educational initiatives.The NACME Founder’s Award: Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr., and Family, for decades of exceptional accomplishments and unwavering support.The NACME Diversity Vision Award: Linda G. Alvarado of Alvarado Construction, for setting a personal example and inspiring underrepresented minority youth.The NACME University Rising Star Award: The University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) and North Carolina A & T State University, for extraordinary diversity initiatives and dedication.The NACME Courage Award: Bill Cosby, for his steadfast personal commitment to education.
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Despite decades of work by organizations dedicated to improving minorities’ access to the sciences, today only 4 percent of underrepresented minority high school graduates complete the math and science courses necessary to enter the engineering field
DevelopmentIf America is to sustain its leadership in research, technological development, and manufacturing, the numbers of persons from underserved and underrepresented communities who are prepared to enter engineering education and pursue technical careers must increase dramatically.
This vision was shared with 530 of America’s most influential citizens, including NACME Founder’s Award winner Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr., and Family, at NACME’s 2006 Awards Dinner and Celebration, a black-tie event held at the Waldorf=Astoria hotel in New York on October 17, 2006. Corporate and individual dinner sponsors contributed $1 million for NACME scholarships in support of the event, while universities committed $3.4 million of in-kind scholarship support. Net proceeds for the event were used to provide additional scholarships for underrepresented minority engineering students. Bill Cosby’s appearance was a highlight of the evening.
Marketing and CommunicationsIn 2007, NACME embarked on a strategic effort to improve and explain its expanded portfolio of programs to key constituencies: students, parents, educators, corporations, government officials, financial supporters, and the media.
Guided by A3 Creative Group, a national education communications firm, NACME has refined the vision for the organization, and rebranded itself with an expression of that vision. The dynamic logo and the tagline, “Creating Opportunities, Ensuring Success,” now appear on everything NACME publishes, from publications to proposals. Along with the new look and message, NACME is telling its story clearly and compellingly throughout all of its program areas.
For example, NACME’s core focus is to support the engineering education and career development of minority youth. This support includes disbursing scholarships but is not limited to that activity. To raise awareness of that support among 13- to 24-year-olds, NACME created the “NACME Backs Me” brand. The message to minority youth: NACME is with you at every critical point in your path to engineering.
(Continued)
NACME’s Special Night
In 2007 NACME welcomed new leadership, a new communications strategy, and a new brand identity. (Above) Rafael Ramirez (left) and Kevin Buitrago project—and protect—the vision.
NACME Names Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail
Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
WhITE PLAINs, NY—February 15, 2007—The National Action Council for
Minorities in Engineering, Inc. (NACME), the nation’s largest private source of
scholarships for African American, American Indian and Latino women and men
in engineering and technology, today announced the appointment of Dr. Irving
Pressley McPhail as executive vice president and chief operating officer. With more
than 30 years’ experience as a teacher, scholar, advocate, and senior executive in
higher education and public school administration, McPhail has an outstanding
record of promoting racial and ethnic equity and diversity at all levels of education.
Diana Natalicio and William P. Dee
Linda G. Alvarado
Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr.
Bill Cosby and Dr. John Brooks Slaughter
Through NACME’s network of corporate and university partners, $4 7 million in
scholarship support is awarded to 1,200 to 1,400 students per year
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NACME Partner Institutions
W E S TArizona State University at TempeCalifornia State University at Los AngelesCalifornia State University at SacramentoNorthern Arizona UniversityPrairie View A&M UniversityUniversity of California at San DiegoUniversity of Colorado at BoulderUniversity of HoustonUniversity of Southern CaliforniaUniversity of Texas at El PasoUniversity of Texas at San AntonioUniversity of Washington
M I D W E S TKansas State UniversityKettering UniversityMarquette UniversityMichigan Technological UniversityPurdue UniversityUniversity of AkronUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Missouri at Rolla
S O u T h E A S TFlorida International UniversityGeorgia Institute of TechnologyHoward UniversityJackson State UniversityLouisiana State UniversityNorth Carolina A&T State UniversityNorth Carolina State UniversityPolytechnic University of Puerto RicoTennessee Technological UniversityTuskegee UniversityUniversity of Central FloridaUniversity of Maryland at Baltimore CountyVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
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Current NACME Partner Insitutions47 Partner Institutions as of May 2007
Source: CPST, data derived from EWC
WEST355 Students at12 Institutions
SOUTHEAST492 Students at13 Institutions
MIDWEST196 Students at8 Institutions NORTHEAST
226 Students at14 Institutions
A new website, www.NACMEBacksMe.org is full of valuable information for students, parents, and educators. The NACME website, www.NACME.org, is also being redesigned to provide richer information to corporate and foundation partners and potential sponsors.
To inform the national discussion of public policy regarding minority engineering education and employment issues, the organization has initiated educational programs that provide information to policymakers, news writers, educators, and the public. NACME has developed new distribution channels for its research reports and editorials, and has identified opportunities for its executive team to engage in public programs on engineering education and diversity.
The role of communications in ensuring NACME’s financial stability is to make known the value of an investment in NACME. In addition to supporting a network of talented students through scholarships, NACME’s donors are investing in real action to solve serious national problems affecting all businesses. NACME illustrates this value to constituents through a spectrum of targeted publications, development initiatives, and individual contact points.
N O R T h E A S TBucknell UniversityThe City College of the City University of New YorkClarkson UniversityCornell UniversityDrexel UniversityFairfield UniversityNew Jersey Institute of TechnologyPolytechnic UniversityRensselaer Polytechnic InstituteRochester Institute of TechnologyStevens Institute of TechnologySyracuse UniversityTemple UniversityUniversity of Bridgeport
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New Communities for Donors
A new initiative to attract major gifts, the Leadership Gift Society is helping to reach new donors. On its Roll of Honor,
the society recognizes individuals who make annual gifts of more than $1,000, and those who include bequest provisions for NACME in their estate planning.
America’s largest private source of scholarships for African American, American Indian, and Latino engineering students reaches thousands through a national delivery system focused on higher-education partners.
DALLAs, November 2006—
ExxonMobil Foundation has made a
$270,000 contribution to the National
Action Council for Minorities in
Engineering (NACME), which will
be used to support various programs
including scholarships for minority
engineering students. Over 30 years,
ExxonMobil has provided NACME
with more than $10 million in support.
ExxonMobil Donates $270,000 to NACME:
Grant Brings Total support Up to $10 Million
Over the Past 30 Years
Lean and balanced operations support NACME’s work to strengthen diversity in the American engineering workforce. (Above) Student Erick Davila works on a project.
Students, parents, teachers, counselors, and college faculty turn to NACME publications for up-to-date guidance on education opportunities in engineering for underrepresented minorities.
Strategic and Operational PlanningFor a national enterprise with a decades-long legacy of achievement, NACME has a small staff. In order to reach its objectives, NACME’s staff of 16 must stay focused on priorities and work toward them incrementally. In the spring of 2007, Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail began a new analysis of NACME’s operations to determine where best to apply the organization’s limited resources.
NACME is developing a model for financial growth that will lessen dependency on current sources of income and create new revenue streams. The organization is also exploring other categories of institutions, such as community colleges, in order to expand its national footprint, and is streamlining NACME’s internal systems so that staff can work more productively toward real-world goals.
Through NACME’s network of corporate and university partners, $4 7 million in
scholarship support is awarded to 1,200 to 1,400 students per year
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NACME Partner Institutions
W E S TArizona State University at TempeCalifornia State University at Los AngelesCalifornia State University at SacramentoNorthern Arizona UniversityPrairie View A&M UniversityUniversity of California at San DiegoUniversity of Colorado at BoulderUniversity of HoustonUniversity of Southern CaliforniaUniversity of Texas at El PasoUniversity of Texas at San AntonioUniversity of Washington
M I D W E S TKansas State UniversityKettering UniversityMarquette UniversityMichigan Technological UniversityPurdue UniversityUniversity of AkronUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Missouri at Rolla
S O u T h E A S TFlorida International UniversityGeorgia Institute of TechnologyHoward UniversityJackson State UniversityLouisiana State UniversityNorth Carolina A&T State UniversityNorth Carolina State UniversityPolytechnic University of Puerto RicoTennessee Technological UniversityTuskegee UniversityUniversity of Central FloridaUniversity of Maryland at Baltimore CountyVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
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Current NACME Partner Insitutions47 Partner Institutions as of May 2007
Source: CPST, data derived from EWC
WEST355 Students at12 Institutions
SOUTHEAST492 Students at13 Institutions
MIDWEST196 Students at8 Institutions NORTHEAST
226 Students at14 Institutions
A new website, www.NACMEBacksMe.org is full of valuable information for students, parents, and educators. The NACME website, www.NACME.org, is also being redesigned to provide richer information to corporate and foundation partners and potential sponsors.
To inform the national discussion of public policy regarding minority engineering education and employment issues, the organization has initiated educational programs that provide information to policymakers, news writers, educators, and the public. NACME has developed new distribution channels for its research reports and editorials, and has identified opportunities for its executive team to engage in public programs on engineering education and diversity.
The role of communications in ensuring NACME’s financial stability is to make known the value of an investment in NACME. In addition to supporting a network of talented students through scholarships, NACME’s donors are investing in real action to solve serious national problems affecting all businesses. NACME illustrates this value to constituents through a spectrum of targeted publications, development initiatives, and individual contact points.
N O R T h E A S TBucknell UniversityThe City College of the City University of New YorkClarkson UniversityCornell UniversityDrexel UniversityFairfield UniversityNew Jersey Institute of TechnologyPolytechnic UniversityRensselaer Polytechnic InstituteRochester Institute of TechnologyStevens Institute of TechnologySyracuse UniversityTemple UniversityUniversity of Bridgeport
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New Communities for Donors
A new initiative to attract major gifts, the Leadership Gift Society is helping to reach new donors. On its Roll of Honor,
the society recognizes individuals who make annual gifts of more than $1,000, and those who include bequest provisions for NACME in their estate planning.
America’s largest private source of scholarships for African American, American Indian, and Latino engineering students reaches thousands through a national delivery system focused on higher-education partners.
DALLAs, November 2006—
ExxonMobil Foundation has made a
$270,000 contribution to the National
Action Council for Minorities in
Engineering (NACME), which will
be used to support various programs
including scholarships for minority
engineering students. Over 30 years,
ExxonMobil has provided NACME
with more than $10 million in support.
ExxonMobil Donates $270,000 to NACME:
Grant Brings Total support Up to $10 Million
Over the Past 30 Years
Lean and balanced operations support NACME’s work to strengthen diversity in the American engineering workforce. (Above) Student Erick Davila works on a project.
Students, parents, teachers, counselors, and college faculty turn to NACME publications for up-to-date guidance on education opportunities in engineering for underrepresented minorities.
Strategic and Operational PlanningFor a national enterprise with a decades-long legacy of achievement, NACME has a small staff. In order to reach its objectives, NACME’s staff of 16 must stay focused on priorities and work toward them incrementally. In the spring of 2007, Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail began a new analysis of NACME’s operations to determine where best to apply the organization’s limited resources.
NACME is developing a model for financial growth that will lessen dependency on current sources of income and create new revenue streams. The organization is also exploring other categories of institutions, such as community colleges, in order to expand its national footprint, and is streamlining NACME’s internal systems so that staff can work more productively toward real-world goals.
Statement of Activities
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Statement of Financial Position Total All Funds
2007 2006Assets:Cash and cash equivalents $ 2,553,437 $ 2,212,678
Short-term investments 8,765,876 6,571,821
Pledges receivable 654,630 850,136
Prepaid expenses and other assets 120,998 39,435
Long-term investments 1,086,989 1,066,120
Leasehold improvements, office furniture and equipment 112,594 181,660
Security deposit 48,038 48,038
Restricted cash 24,683 24,495
TOTAL ASSETS $ 13,367,243 $ 10,994,383
Liabilities and Net Assets:LIABILITIES:
Sloan Foundation – program fund advance $ 3,022,322 $ 1,835,358
Accounts payable and accrued expenses 25,292 10,926
Tenant deposits 24,683 24,495
Deferrals 438,477 1,428,106
Deferred compensation 166,828 160,000
Total Liabilities $ 3,677,601 $ 3,458,885
NET ASSETS:
Unrestricted $ 6,043,736 $ 4,671,119
Temporarily restricted 2,725,845 1,958,260
Permanently restricted 920,061 906,120
Total Net Assets $ 9,689,642 $ 7,535,498
Total Liabilities and Net Assets $ 13,367,243 $ 10,994,383
For the year ended August 31, 2007 (with comparative data for 2006), NACME, Inc. (not-for-profit corporation) Total All Funds2007 2006
Public Support and Revenue:Contributions $ 5,316,217 $ 3,635,668
Contributions in-kind 3,260,685 3,739,266
Interest and dividends 368,149 403,472
Other income 124,191 112,907
TOTAL PuBLIC SuPPORT AND REVENuE $ 9,069,242 $ 7,891,313
Expenses:PROgRAM SERVICES:
Scholarship programs $ 5,766,887 $ 5,930,444
Education programs and training 72,886 144,794
Information dissemination 362,859 416,597
Research and policy 271,151 342,631
Total Program Services $ 6,473,782 $ 6,834,466
Development 765,576 734,721
Management and general 617,450 761,154
Total expenses $ 7,856,808 $ 8,330,341
Excess (deficiency) of operating public support and revenue over expenses $ 1,212,433 $ (439,028)
OThER INCOME (ExpENSES):
gain (loss) On Investments $ 941,711 $ 199,172
Total other income (expenses) $ 941,711 $ 199,172
Change in Net Assets $ 2,154,145 $ (239,856)
Net Assets at Beginning of Year $ 7,535,499 $ 7,775,355
NET ASSETS AT END OF YEAR $ 9,689,642 $ 7,535,499
For the year ended August 31, 2007 (with comparative data for 2006), NACME, Inc. (not-for-profit corporation)
These financial statements are a condensed version of the audited statements of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc., for the year ending August 31, 2007.
NACME will be pleased to provide complete copies along with all footnotes and the unqualified report of our auditors, upon request.
You may obtain a copy of the latest annual report filed with the N.Y. State Board of Social Welfare by writing to the Secretary, State of New York, 162 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12231, Attention: Charitable Registration Division.
Management’s Statement of Financial ResponsibilityThe management takes full responsibility for the integrity and accuracy of the NACME financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Our corporate governance policies and practices include the following:
A majority of our Board is comprised of independent directors.Only independent directors are members of the Executive, Governance, Development and Finance Committees.The Executive, Governance, Development and Finance Committees make appropriate use of charters that clearly detail each Committee’s responsibilities.The Finance Committee retains the independent auditors and regularly reviews the financial condition of the company. The independent auditor has free access to the Finance Committee.
We are committed to providing financial information that is transparent, timely, complete, relevant and accurate.
Dr. John Brooks Slaughter John C. Eppolito President and CEO Vice President, Administration, and CFO
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Statement of Activities
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Statement of Financial Position Total All Funds
2007 2006Assets:Cash and cash equivalents $ 2,553,437 $ 2,212,678
Short-term investments 8,765,876 6,571,821
Pledges receivable 654,630 850,136
Prepaid expenses and other assets 120,998 39,435
Long-term investments 1,086,989 1,066,120
Leasehold improvements, office furniture and equipment 112,594 181,660
Security deposit 48,038 48,038
Restricted cash 24,683 24,495
TOTAL ASSETS $ 13,367,243 $ 10,994,383
Liabilities and Net Assets:LIABILITIES:
Sloan Foundation – program fund advance $ 3,022,322 $ 1,835,358
Accounts payable and accrued expenses 25,292 10,926
Tenant deposits 24,683 24,495
Deferrals 438,477 1,428,106
Deferred compensation 166,828 160,000
Total Liabilities $ 3,677,601 $ 3,458,885
NET ASSETS:
Unrestricted $ 6,043,736 $ 4,671,119
Temporarily restricted 2,725,845 1,958,260
Permanently restricted 920,061 906,120
Total Net Assets $ 9,689,642 $ 7,535,498
Total Liabilities and Net Assets $ 13,367,243 $ 10,994,383
For the year ended August 31, 2007 (with comparative data for 2006), NACME, Inc. (not-for-profit corporation) Total All Funds2007 2006
Public Support and Revenue:Contributions $ 5,316,217 $ 3,635,668
Contributions in-kind 3,260,685 3,739,266
Interest and dividends 368,149 403,472
Other income 124,191 112,907
TOTAL PuBLIC SuPPORT AND REVENuE $ 9,069,242 $ 7,891,313
Expenses:PROgRAM SERVICES:
Scholarship programs $ 5,766,887 $ 5,930,444
Education programs and training 72,886 144,794
Information dissemination 362,859 416,597
Research and policy 271,151 342,631
Total Program Services $ 6,473,782 $ 6,834,466
Development 765,576 734,721
Management and general 617,450 761,154
Total expenses $ 7,856,808 $ 8,330,341
Excess (deficiency) of operating public support and revenue over expenses $ 1,212,433 $ (439,028)
OThER INCOME (ExpENSES):
gain (loss) On Investments $ 941,711 $ 199,172
Total other income (expenses) $ 941,711 $ 199,172
Change in Net Assets $ 2,154,145 $ (239,856)
Net Assets at Beginning of Year $ 7,535,499 $ 7,775,355
NET ASSETS AT END OF YEAR $ 9,689,642 $ 7,535,499
For the year ended August 31, 2007 (with comparative data for 2006), NACME, Inc. (not-for-profit corporation)
These financial statements are a condensed version of the audited statements of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc., for the year ending August 31, 2007.
NACME will be pleased to provide complete copies along with all footnotes and the unqualified report of our auditors, upon request.
You may obtain a copy of the latest annual report filed with the N.Y. State Board of Social Welfare by writing to the Secretary, State of New York, 162 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12231, Attention: Charitable Registration Division.
Management’s Statement of Financial ResponsibilityThe management takes full responsibility for the integrity and accuracy of the NACME financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Our corporate governance policies and practices include the following:
A majority of our Board is comprised of independent directors.Only independent directors are members of the Executive, Governance, Development and Finance Committees.The Executive, Governance, Development and Finance Committees make appropriate use of charters that clearly detail each Committee’s responsibilities.The Finance Committee retains the independent auditors and regularly reviews the financial condition of the company. The independent auditor has free access to the Finance Committee.
We are committed to providing financial information that is transparent, timely, complete, relevant and accurate.
Dr. John Brooks Slaughter John C. Eppolito President and CEO Vice President, Administration, and CFO
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Corporate and Foundation Donors
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FOuNDER’S C IRCLE ($10,000 and over)
Arnold A. AllemangWilliam P. DeeDonaldson Family TrustLloyd G. Trotter
ChAIRMAN’S CIRCLE ($5,000 to $9,999)
Craig R. BarrettWes BushRichard E. HeckertHarry J. LongwellWillie C. MartinRichard M. MorrowCharles E. RedmanJohn J. TracyWilliam M. Zeitler
BENEFACTOR ($2,500 to $4,999)
Mary Jane HellyarJerry M. HultinDeborah MorrissettJ. Stephen SimonJohn Brooks Slaughter
PATRON ($1,000 to $2,499)
John E. BethancourtEileen M. CampbellMaria B. CannonG. Wayne CloughMario R. CristanchoJulian C. DalzellRaymond C. DempseyKenneth J. DiskenJohn C. and Joanne EppolitoPatrick FinnMichael L. KingGary S. MayIrving P. and Christine J. McPhailHector MotroniJoseph A. PattiTerry R. SeamonsSonya V. StewartNicholas V. TomassoAndrew ValentineJames C. VardellPeter WileyGene WashingtonGregory G. WeaverMichael J. WeirWilliam A. Wulf
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Donors and PartnersIndividual Donors Partners
$200,000 to $499,999 AT&T, Inc.California Community FoundationThe Wright Brothers FoundationExxonMobil CorporationGeneral Electric
$100,000 to $199,9993MAmgen, Inc.BAE SystemsBP plcCisco Systems, Inc.The Dow Chemical CompanyGenentech, Inc.General Motors CorporationHewlett-Packard CompanyLockheed Martin Corporation
$50,000 to $99,999 Alcoa FoundationAT&T FoundationThe Barkley FundBechtelS.D. Bechtel, Jr., FoundationThe Boeing CompanyBristol-Myers Squibb CompanyChevron CorporationChrysler CorporationConsolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc.Deloitte & Touche LLPDuPont CompanyEaton Charitable FundEntergy CorporationFord Motor CompanyIBM CorporationIntel CorporationMalcolm Pirnie, Inc.Marathon Oil CompanyMerck & Co., Inc.Northrop Grumman FoundationOraclePitney Bowes, Inc.Qualcomm IncorporatedRaytheon CompanyShell Oil Company Sony Electronics, Inc.Toyota Motor North America, Inc.Xerox Corporation
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universities Supporting NACME with In-Kind Scholarships
Precision and creativity meet in the work of Surin Jadbir (above). Contributions to NACME reach targeted groups of minority students while at the same time strengthening American innovation and competitiveness.
SPONSOR ($500 to $999)
Johnny M. BledsoeArthur P. BursonMonica E. EmersonCharles L. GregoryShelton A. HowardAnthony D. JacksonJohn A. LubbeRichard J. MartinoMark E. RussellStephen StaffordPatricia A. StricklandMorris TanenbaumVernon T. VeiraJoseph E. WallPhilip T. WoodrowJohn K. Woodworth
FRIEND (up to $499)
Jason ArmsteadJulian M. BabadSusan R. BaileyScott BallardJohn BaylisSue A. Bidstrup AllenErwin W. BieberMark R. BlyNorman K. BucknorMontika D. BushRaluca CadarHenry ChapmanDaryl E. ChubinWilliam H. ClarkJennifer CunninghamTimothy DeinesNadine T. DennisLouvenia Effinger-EvansDonovan D. FaircloughFelicia FieldsSandra FloresDavid T. FordEverett G. ForemanJose A. GallardoRita A. GonzalesGustavo D. GonzalezMelonia GuthrieCarol HarrisShirley Harrison-JohnsonDavid J. HernandezSimone C. Peterson HrudaRosalind HudnellFrank Ingram
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Ifiok ItuenAlex JohnsonJacqueline T. KellyPamela Leigh-MackVelma G. LewisDonald LyleDonald McKinnonLuis J. Mendez-MediavilChristine MichelDebra MuchowReginald MurchisonDiana Natalicio
Elizabeth R. Neblett In Memory of Richard Neblett, former NACME president and CEO
Kendrick P. PattersonKevin R. PetersJerry PritchettSabrina D. Quarles ColemanLouis RanaReynard A. RichardsRonald F. RobertsJorge A. RodriguezThomas M. SalasCarolina J. SanchezPedro Santiago-RiveraPatrick A. SenaWilliam J. ShelmonEric SheppardRobert SpencerScott StallardSylvia V. SyracuseRussell ToneyLamont TruttlingCarlos VillalobosAileen WalterLars M. WellsGregory M. WilkinsEric WilliamsT. Hudson WilliamsRonald WinderSandra WyattLaura Zeno
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$500,000 and over Drexel University
$200,000 to $499,999 Georgia Institute of TechnologyRensselaer Polytechnic Institute
$100,000 to $199,999 Clarkson UniversityNew Jersey Institute of TechnologyPolytechnic University of Puerto RicoPurdue University
$50,000 to $99,999 Louisiana State UniversityNorth Carolina A&T State UniversityPolytechnic UniversityUniversity of Washington
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$25,000 to $49,999The Ahmanson FoundationAir Products and Chemicals, Inc.Eastman Kodak CompanyGeorgia-Pacific CorporationInternational Paper Company FundPACCAR Inc.Symantec CorporationUnited Engineering Foundation, Inc.
$10,000 to $24,999ADC Telecommunications, Inc.Alvarado Development CompanyAndersen CorporationBooz Allen HamiltonFluor CorporationGlobalSantaFe Corporate ServicesLubrizol CorporationLucent TechnologiesNorris FoundationPitney Bowes Literacy and Education FundPPG Industries FoundationTransocean, Inc.Underwriters Laboratories, Inc.United Technologies CorporationWhirlpool Corporation
$2,500 to $9,999
Amerada Hess CorporationAmerican Bureau of ShippingBayer FoundationCaterpillar FoundationDominion Resources, Inc.Energizer Holdings, Inc.Geomatrix Consultants, Inc.The Medtronic FoundationNew York Power AuthorityPublic Service Electric and Gas Company Sonalysts
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For the Year Ended August 31, 2007
$25,000 to $49,999 Bucknell UniversityThe City College of the City University of New YorkKansas State UniversityMichigan Technological UniversityUniversity of AkronUniversity of BridgeportUniversity of Colorado at BoulderUniversity of Maryland at Baltimore CountyUniversity of Missouri at Rolla
$10,000 to $24,999 Fairfield UniversityJackson State UniversityKettering UniversityMarquette UniversityStevens Institute of TechnologySyracuse UniversityTennessee Technological UniversityUniversity of Southern California
$5,000 to $9,999 Cornell UniversityThe University of Texas at El PasoVirginia Polytechnic University
$2,500 to $4,999 Howard UniversityNorthern Arizona UniversityTemple UniversityUniversity of Houston
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$100 to $2,499Bank of America CorporationBose CorporationCeridian CorporationConsumers UnionHarris CorporationHatfield FoundationJohn Deere & CompanyJohn Wiley & Sons, Inc.Kenyon & Kenyon LLPMine Safety Appliances CompanyNational Society of Professional EngineersNordson CorporationOccidental Petroleum CorporationProfessionals For NonProfitsRolls-Royce North AmericaSiemens Networks, LLCTata Consultancy Services, Inc.Universal Instruments Corporation
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Corporate and Foundation Donors
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FOuNDER’S C IRCLE ($10,000 and over)
Arnold A. AllemangWilliam P. DeeDonaldson Family TrustLloyd G. Trotter
ChAIRMAN’S CIRCLE ($5,000 to $9,999)
Craig R. BarrettWes BushRichard E. HeckertHarry J. LongwellWillie C. MartinRichard M. MorrowCharles E. RedmanJohn J. TracyWilliam M. Zeitler
BENEFACTOR ($2,500 to $4,999)
Mary Jane HellyarJerry M. HultinDeborah MorrissettJ. Stephen SimonJohn Brooks Slaughter
PATRON ($1,000 to $2,499)
John E. BethancourtEileen M. CampbellMaria B. CannonG. Wayne CloughMario R. CristanchoJulian C. DalzellRaymond C. DempseyKenneth J. DiskenJohn C. and Joanne EppolitoPatrick FinnMichael L. KingGary S. MayIrving P. and Christine J. McPhailHector MotroniJoseph A. PattiTerry R. SeamonsSonya V. StewartNicholas V. TomassoAndrew ValentineJames C. VardellPeter WileyGene WashingtonGregory G. WeaverMichael J. WeirWilliam A. Wulf
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Donors and PartnersIndividual Donors Partners
$200,000 to $499,999 AT&T, Inc.California Community FoundationThe Wright Brothers FoundationExxonMobil CorporationGeneral Electric
$100,000 to $199,9993MAmgen, Inc.BAE SystemsBP plcCisco Systems, Inc.The Dow Chemical CompanyGenentech, Inc.General Motors CorporationHewlett-Packard CompanyLockheed Martin Corporation
$50,000 to $99,999 Alcoa FoundationAT&T FoundationThe Barkley FundBechtelS.D. Bechtel, Jr., FoundationThe Boeing CompanyBristol-Myers Squibb CompanyChevron CorporationChrysler CorporationConsolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc.Deloitte & Touche LLPDuPont CompanyEaton Charitable FundEntergy CorporationFord Motor CompanyIBM CorporationIntel CorporationMalcolm Pirnie, Inc.Marathon Oil CompanyMerck & Co., Inc.Northrop Grumman FoundationOraclePitney Bowes, Inc.Qualcomm IncorporatedRaytheon CompanyShell Oil Company Sony Electronics, Inc.Toyota Motor North America, Inc.Xerox Corporation
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universities Supporting NACME with In-Kind Scholarships
Precision and creativity meet in the work of Surin Jadbir (above). Contributions to NACME reach targeted groups of minority students while at the same time strengthening American innovation and competitiveness.
SPONSOR ($500 to $999)
Johnny M. BledsoeArthur P. BursonMonica E. EmersonCharles L. GregoryShelton A. HowardAnthony D. JacksonJohn A. LubbeRichard J. MartinoMark E. RussellStephen StaffordPatricia A. StricklandMorris TanenbaumVernon T. VeiraJoseph E. WallPhilip T. WoodrowJohn K. Woodworth
FRIEND (up to $499)
Jason ArmsteadJulian M. BabadSusan R. BaileyScott BallardJohn BaylisSue A. Bidstrup AllenErwin W. BieberMark R. BlyNorman K. BucknorMontika D. BushRaluca CadarHenry ChapmanDaryl E. ChubinWilliam H. ClarkJennifer CunninghamTimothy DeinesNadine T. DennisLouvenia Effinger-EvansDonovan D. FaircloughFelicia FieldsSandra FloresDavid T. FordEverett G. ForemanJose A. GallardoRita A. GonzalesGustavo D. GonzalezMelonia GuthrieCarol HarrisShirley Harrison-JohnsonDavid J. HernandezSimone C. Peterson HrudaRosalind HudnellFrank Ingram
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Ifiok ItuenAlex JohnsonJacqueline T. KellyPamela Leigh-MackVelma G. LewisDonald LyleDonald McKinnonLuis J. Mendez-MediavilChristine MichelDebra MuchowReginald MurchisonDiana Natalicio
Elizabeth R. Neblett In Memory of Richard Neblett, former NACME president and CEO
Kendrick P. PattersonKevin R. PetersJerry PritchettSabrina D. Quarles ColemanLouis RanaReynard A. RichardsRonald F. RobertsJorge A. RodriguezThomas M. SalasCarolina J. SanchezPedro Santiago-RiveraPatrick A. SenaWilliam J. ShelmonEric SheppardRobert SpencerScott StallardSylvia V. SyracuseRussell ToneyLamont TruttlingCarlos VillalobosAileen WalterLars M. WellsGregory M. WilkinsEric WilliamsT. Hudson WilliamsRonald WinderSandra WyattLaura Zeno
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$500,000 and over Drexel University
$200,000 to $499,999 Georgia Institute of TechnologyRensselaer Polytechnic Institute
$100,000 to $199,999 Clarkson UniversityNew Jersey Institute of TechnologyPolytechnic University of Puerto RicoPurdue University
$50,000 to $99,999 Louisiana State UniversityNorth Carolina A&T State UniversityPolytechnic UniversityUniversity of Washington
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$25,000 to $49,999The Ahmanson FoundationAir Products and Chemicals, Inc.Eastman Kodak CompanyGeorgia-Pacific CorporationInternational Paper Company FundPACCAR Inc.Symantec CorporationUnited Engineering Foundation, Inc.
$10,000 to $24,999ADC Telecommunications, Inc.Alvarado Development CompanyAndersen CorporationBooz Allen HamiltonFluor CorporationGlobalSantaFe Corporate ServicesLubrizol CorporationLucent TechnologiesNorris FoundationPitney Bowes Literacy and Education FundPPG Industries FoundationTransocean, Inc.Underwriters Laboratories, Inc.United Technologies CorporationWhirlpool Corporation
$2,500 to $9,999
Amerada Hess CorporationAmerican Bureau of ShippingBayer FoundationCaterpillar FoundationDominion Resources, Inc.Energizer Holdings, Inc.Geomatrix Consultants, Inc.The Medtronic FoundationNew York Power AuthorityPublic Service Electric and Gas Company Sonalysts
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For the Year Ended August 31, 2007
$25,000 to $49,999 Bucknell UniversityThe City College of the City University of New YorkKansas State UniversityMichigan Technological UniversityUniversity of AkronUniversity of BridgeportUniversity of Colorado at BoulderUniversity of Maryland at Baltimore CountyUniversity of Missouri at Rolla
$10,000 to $24,999 Fairfield UniversityJackson State UniversityKettering UniversityMarquette UniversityStevens Institute of TechnologySyracuse UniversityTennessee Technological UniversityUniversity of Southern California
$5,000 to $9,999 Cornell UniversityThe University of Texas at El PasoVirginia Polytechnic University
$2,500 to $4,999 Howard UniversityNorthern Arizona UniversityTemple UniversityUniversity of Houston
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$100 to $2,499Bank of America CorporationBose CorporationCeridian CorporationConsumers UnionHarris CorporationHatfield FoundationJohn Deere & CompanyJohn Wiley & Sons, Inc.Kenyon & Kenyon LLPMine Safety Appliances CompanyNational Society of Professional EngineersNordson CorporationOccidental Petroleum CorporationProfessionals For NonProfitsRolls-Royce North AmericaSiemens Networks, LLCTata Consultancy Services, Inc.Universal Instruments Corporation
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Board, Officers, and StaffBoard of Directors
William P DeePresident and CEOMalcolm Pirnie, Inc.Chairman, NACME, Inc.
John Brooks Slaughter President and CEONACME, Inc.
Arnold A AllemangSenior AdvisorThe Dow Chemical Company
Quincy L AllenCorporate Vice President President, Production Systems GroupXerox Corporation
Craig R BarrettChairman of the BoardIntel Corporation
John E Bethancourt Executive Vice PresidentTechnology & ServicesChevron Corporation
Erwin W BieberVice President, EngineeringElectronics & Integrated Solutions BAE Systems
Mark R BlyGroup Vice President of Exploration & Production Angola, Gulf of Mexico & TrinidadBP plc
Arthur P BursonVice PresidentCentral EngineeringMerck & Co., Inc.
Wes BushPresident and Chief Operating Officer Northrop Grumman Corporation
Eileen CampbellVice President Human ResourcesMarathon Oil Company
Maria B CannonVice PresidentU.S. Enterprise Sales Systems EngineeringCisco Systems, Inc.
g Wayne CloughPresidentGeorgia Institute of Technology
Julian C DalzellVice President, Human Resources Shell Oil Products U.S.
Kenneth J DiskenSenior Vice PresidentHuman Resources Lockheed Martin Corporation
Felicia FieldsVice PresidentHuman ResourcesFord Motor Company
Deborah greenmanHuman Resources Manager Team Member RelationsToyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing
Charles L gregoryDeputy President Television Operations of AmericaSony Electronics, Inc.
Mary Jane hellyarPresident, Display and Components, and Senior Vice PresidentEastman Kodak Company
Wayne M hewettVice President Supply Chain and Operations General Electric Company
Jerry M hultinPresidentPolytechnic University
Willie C MartinPresident, U.S. RegionVice President, Operations, North AmericaDuPont
Dennis M MooneyVice President, Global EngineeringGlobal Vehicle Systems and IntegrationGeneral Motors Corporation
Deborah L MorrissettVice PresidentRegulatory Affairs, Product DevelopmentChrysler LLC
Diana NatalicioPresidentThe University of Texas at El Paso
Joseph A PattiVice President, Human ResourcesBristol-Myers Squibb Company
Kevin R PetersSenior Vice President Global Network OperationsAT&T, Inc.
Louis RanaPresident and Chief Operating OfficerConsolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc. Charles E RedmanRegion President, Europe, Africa, Middle East, and Southwest AsiaBechtel
Mark E RussellVice President, Engineering Integrated Defense SystemsRaytheon Company
Terry R SeamonsSenior Vice PresidentHuman Resources and AdministrationEntergy Corporation
Judith SimSenior Vice President and Chief Marketing OfficerOracle Corporation
J Stephen SimonSenior Vice PresidentExxonMobil Corporation
Scott StallardSenior Vice President and General Manager, Enterprise Storage and Servers Business UnitTechnology Solutions GroupHewlett-Packard Company
John J TracySenior Vice PresidentEngineering, Operations & Technology The Boeing Company
Yannis P TsavalasVice President and Chief Technology OfficerEaton Corporation
Charles M VestPresident National Academy of Engineering
Joseph E WallSenior Vice President and Chief Technology OfficerPitney Bowes, Inc.
gregory g WeaverSenior Client PartnerDeloitte & Touche LLP
John K WoodworthSenior Vice PresidentCorporate Supply Chain Operations3M
William M ZeitlerSenior Vice President and Group ExecutiveIBM Systems Group
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c r e a t i n g o p p o r t u n i t i e s , e n s u r i n g s u c c e s s
OFFICERS
John Brooks SlaughterPresident and CEO
Irving Pressley McPhailExecutive Vice President and COO
John C EppolitoVice President Administration and CFO
John A LubbeVice President Institutional Advancement
Aileen WalterVice President University Programs
James C Vardell IIICorporate Secretary, NACME, Inc.PartnerCravath, Swaine & Moore
Officers and Staff
STAFF
Raluca CadarProgram Manager Pre-engineering
Jennifer CunninghamExecutive Assistant to the President
Nadine DennisDirector, Development
Melonia guthrieProgram Manager University Programs
Alex JohnsonAdministrative Support
Velma g LewisProgram Manager Communications and Alumni Relations
Julie SaltzmanProgram Manager Community College and Sloan Programs
Carolina SanchezDirector, Information Technology
Sylvia SyracuseManager, Development
Nicholas V TomassoDirector, Communications
Laura ZenoManager, Office Operations
(Left to right) Irving Pressley McPhail, executive vice president and COO; John A. Lubbe, vice president, Institutional Advancement; Aileen Walter, vice president, University Programs; John Brooks Slaughter, president and CEO; and John C. Eppolito, vice president, Administration, and CFO.
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Board, Officers, and StaffBoard of Directors
William P DeePresident and CEOMalcolm Pirnie, Inc.Chairman, NACME, Inc.
John Brooks Slaughter President and CEONACME, Inc.
Arnold A AllemangSenior AdvisorThe Dow Chemical Company
Quincy L AllenCorporate Vice President President, Production Systems GroupXerox Corporation
Craig R BarrettChairman of the BoardIntel Corporation
John E Bethancourt Executive Vice PresidentTechnology & ServicesChevron Corporation
Erwin W BieberVice President, EngineeringElectronics & Integrated Solutions BAE Systems
Mark R BlyGroup Vice President of Exploration & Production Angola, Gulf of Mexico & TrinidadBP plc
Arthur P BursonVice PresidentCentral EngineeringMerck & Co., Inc.
Wes BushPresident and Chief Operating Officer Northrop Grumman Corporation
Eileen CampbellVice President Human ResourcesMarathon Oil Company
Maria B CannonVice PresidentU.S. Enterprise Sales Systems EngineeringCisco Systems, Inc.
g Wayne CloughPresidentGeorgia Institute of Technology
Julian C DalzellVice President, Human Resources Shell Oil Products U.S.
Kenneth J DiskenSenior Vice PresidentHuman Resources Lockheed Martin Corporation
Felicia FieldsVice PresidentHuman ResourcesFord Motor Company
Deborah greenmanHuman Resources Manager Team Member RelationsToyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing
Charles L gregoryDeputy President Television Operations of AmericaSony Electronics, Inc.
Mary Jane hellyarPresident, Display and Components, and Senior Vice PresidentEastman Kodak Company
Wayne M hewettVice President Supply Chain and Operations General Electric Company
Jerry M hultinPresidentPolytechnic University
Willie C MartinPresident, U.S. RegionVice President, Operations, North AmericaDuPont
Dennis M MooneyVice President, Global EngineeringGlobal Vehicle Systems and IntegrationGeneral Motors Corporation
Deborah L MorrissettVice PresidentRegulatory Affairs, Product DevelopmentChrysler LLC
Diana NatalicioPresidentThe University of Texas at El Paso
Joseph A PattiVice President, Human ResourcesBristol-Myers Squibb Company
Kevin R PetersSenior Vice President Global Network OperationsAT&T, Inc.
Louis RanaPresident and Chief Operating OfficerConsolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc. Charles E RedmanRegion President, Europe, Africa, Middle East, and Southwest AsiaBechtel
Mark E RussellVice President, Engineering Integrated Defense SystemsRaytheon Company
Terry R SeamonsSenior Vice PresidentHuman Resources and AdministrationEntergy Corporation
Judith SimSenior Vice President and Chief Marketing OfficerOracle Corporation
J Stephen SimonSenior Vice PresidentExxonMobil Corporation
Scott StallardSenior Vice President and General Manager, Enterprise Storage and Servers Business UnitTechnology Solutions GroupHewlett-Packard Company
John J TracySenior Vice PresidentEngineering, Operations & Technology The Boeing Company
Yannis P TsavalasVice President and Chief Technology OfficerEaton Corporation
Charles M VestPresident National Academy of Engineering
Joseph E WallSenior Vice President and Chief Technology OfficerPitney Bowes, Inc.
gregory g WeaverSenior Client PartnerDeloitte & Touche LLP
John K WoodworthSenior Vice PresidentCorporate Supply Chain Operations3M
William M ZeitlerSenior Vice President and Group ExecutiveIBM Systems Group
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OFFICERS
John Brooks SlaughterPresident and CEO
Irving Pressley McPhailExecutive Vice President and COO
John C EppolitoVice President Administration and CFO
John A LubbeVice President Institutional Advancement
Aileen WalterVice President University Programs
James C Vardell IIICorporate Secretary, NACME, Inc.PartnerCravath, Swaine & Moore
Officers and Staff
STAFF
Raluca CadarProgram Manager Pre-engineering
Jennifer CunninghamExecutive Assistant to the President
Nadine DennisDirector, Development
Melonia guthrieProgram Manager University Programs
Alex JohnsonAdministrative Support
Velma g LewisProgram Manager Communications and Alumni Relations
Julie SaltzmanProgram Manager Community College and Sloan Programs
Carolina SanchezDirector, Information Technology
Sylvia SyracuseManager, Development
Nicholas V TomassoDirector, Communications
Laura ZenoManager, Office Operations
(Left to right) Irving Pressley McPhail, executive vice president and COO; John A. Lubbe, vice president, Institutional Advancement; Aileen Walter, vice president, University Programs; John Brooks Slaughter, president and CEO; and John C. Eppolito, vice president, Administration, and CFO.
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NACME, a charitable not-for-profit organization, welcomes your tax-deductible contribution.
Visit www.nacme.org/contribute to support our work today.
©2007 NACME, Inc.440 Hamilton Avenue, Suite 302White Plains, NY 10601-1813
Telephone.: 914-539-4010Fax: 914-539-4032