report on the professional science master’s national initiative

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Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative NPSMA National Conference 19 November 2010 Carol B. Lynch Senior Scholar in Residence and Director, Professional Master’s Programs Council of Graduate Schools

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Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative. NPSMA National Conference 19 November 2010 Carol B. Lynch Senior Scholar in Residence and Director, Professional Master’s Programs Council of Graduate Schools. Growth In PSM Programs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Report on the Professional Science Master’s National

Initiative

NPSMA National Conference19 November 2010

Carol B. LynchSenior Scholar in Residence and

Director, Professional Master’s ProgramsCouncil of Graduate Schools

Page 2: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Growth In PSM Programs

0

10

20

30

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50

60

70

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Number ofPrograms

Page 3: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative
Page 4: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative
Page 5: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

PSM Expansion Initiatives – Systems and States

North Carolina – Currently, 4 campuses have 14 PSM programs, with additional in the planning stages (received NSF SMP award).

Cal. State System – 22 programs (6 from previous CGS/Sloan master’s focused initiative) with more under development (received NSF SMP awards).

Page 6: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

PSM Expansion Initiatives

SUNY – 10 PSM programs on 6 campuses (3 in existence from first Sloan grants), with 23 planned; 16 campuses involved (received SMP award).

Florida - 11 PSM programs; planning 18 additional programs as part of regional economic development.

Page 7: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

PSM Expansion Initiatives

University of Massachusetts – 14 PSMs – many collaborative – on four of the five campuses in the UMass system, Boston, Dartmouth, Lowell and Amherst – more being planned.

University of Illinois – 3 PSM programs at Urbana-Champaign with more planned.

Page 8: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

PSM Expansion Initiatives

Rutgers, the State U. of New Jersey – 6 PSM programs with 8 under development (received NSF SMP award).

University of North Texas – 3 PSM programs were developed at the flagship campus at Denton.

Page 9: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

HBCU Mid-Atlantic PSM Alliance

9 Charter Members:

Bowie State, Delaware State, Howard, Morgan State, Norfolk State, U. District of Columbia, U. MD Eastern Shore, Virginia State, American U. (associate member).

UDC has 2 new PSM programs. UMES received NSF SMP award. 14 PSMs planned (American has 3).

Page 10: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Expansion Initiatives (planned)

NGA PSM Policy Academy resulted in initiatives in various stages in 5 states: NM, AZ, VA, PA, OR.

(UNM received NSF SMP award).

PA State System of Higher Education planning 8 programs on 6 campuses.

Page 11: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Expansion Initiatives (planned)

City University of New York – planning 16 programs on 6 campuses.

Washington State University – has 1 PSM program, planning 3 more for a total of all 4 campuses.

Minnesota State Colleges

Page 12: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

CGS/NSF Workshop on the Role and Status of the

Master’s Degree in STEM

Page 13: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Tony Carnevale, labor economist

Highest projected job growth (through 2018) will be in STEM fields.

25% of STEM jobs will require a graduate degree.

Master’s level jobs will increase at 17% - out-pacing the overall economy.

Greatest number of jobs (dispersed across many industries) will be in the life sciences.

Page 14: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

The Roles of Master’s Education in STEM

75% of graduate enrollment is at the Master’s level.

60% of Master’s enrollments are women. There is a trend towards increasing

professionalization of Master’s degrees. A clear functional distinction should be

made between the role of a traditional research Master’s and a professional Master’s degree.

Page 15: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Students with research master’s degrees are more likely to complete PhD degrees (the degree helps the student to decide on a goal of a research career and gives PhD admissions relevant information).

Professional Master’s prepare students for careers and should be designed appropriately.

Page 16: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Master’s Completion Project

Main Findings:• Limited data exist on master’s completion and

attrition.• Differing methodologies preclude meaningful

comparisons.• Little research on factors contributing to

completion and attrition at the master’s level.• Reliable data collection is critical!

Page 17: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Master’s Completion Project

New Project• Completion and Attrition in STEM Master’s

Programs• Sloan Foundation-funded• 27-month project• Builds on exploratory study

Page 18: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Master’s Completion Project

Research questions:• Typology, definitions and templates• Completion and attrition rates• Factors related to student success• Promising practices to improve outcomes• Larger project? Separate out PSM?

Page 19: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Master’s Completion Project

Research tasks:• Refine taxonomy and standardize definitions• Determine study parameters• Issue RFP to CGS members• Collect completion and attrition data• Conduct interviews and focus groups• Administer surveys to students• Use data to identify promising practices

Page 20: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Prospects for Federal Support for PSM Programs

and Students

Page 21: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

NSF SMP 22 awards made 9 biosciences, 4 environmental sciences,

2 disaster planning/climate science and solutions, 2 renewable energy, 2 software/wireless systems engineering, 1 regulatory affairs, 1 math modeling

2:1 research universities : master’s level 2 HSIs, 1 HBC

Page 22: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

NSF Highest Priority Performance Goal

Goal: Improve the education and training of an innovative Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) workforce through evidence-based approaches that includes collection and analysis of performance data, program evaluation and other research.

Measure: By the end of FY 2011, at least six major National Science Foundation STEM workforce development programs at the graduate/postdoctoral level have evaluation and assessment systems providing findings leading to program re-design or consolidation for more strategic impact in developing STEM workforce problem solvers, entrepreneurs, or innovators.

Page 23: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Other agencies with interest: Dept. of Education – FIPSE had invitational

priority for PSMs and has funded others as well. Dept. of Homeland Security – working with CGS

to interest DHS Centers of Excellence to develop PSMs.

Dept. of Energy – submitted request for PSM-type master’s as part of “RE-ENERGYZE”.

Dept. of Labor – through regional agencies. NOAA – interested in providing internships.Be creative in looking for funding sources!

Page 24: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

PSM Recognition Project - A Quality Control Initiative

Page 25: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Goals

Convene two representative stakeholder groups.

Establish PSM Guidelines with broad consensus.

Recommend a more formal process for sustainable quality control.

Establish qualifications and an organizational structure to manage the process.

Page 26: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Background Rapid increase in programs and

expanding funding possibilities (good things) greatly increase workload.

CGS PSM promotion project not resourced to handle the increased load.

Increase in diversity of institutions applying and competition for funds increases complexity of process and the stakes involved in PSM affiliation.

Page 27: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Current Process and Guidelines for a PSM Degree

Total credits equivalent to a standard master’s degree . Majority of program course work in graduate-level

science and/or mathematics courses. Professional skills component developed in consultation

with prospective employers. Professional skills are usually enhanced by internships

and problem-based projects sponsored by employers. Employer advisory board engaged. Formal recognition currently granted by CGS (see

application process on www.sciencemasters.com).

Page 28: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Outcomes to date Stakeholder Group I - a broadly representative group

included senior university administrators, PSM program directors, employers from the business and government sectors, professional society leaders, policymakers, representatives from CGS, the Sloan Foundation, and the NPSMA.

Group I developed criteria for PSM “recognition” including a) core requirements in both technical courses and the professional skills (i.e. “plus”) courses, b) other essential components of PSM programs (e.g. the recruitment of employer advisory boards; internships or employer sponsored projects); and c) a commitment to annual reporting of enrollment and degree data and tracking the employment history of graduates.

Page 29: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Stakeholder Group II, mainly representative of academicians with less representation from other sectors was charged to “…recommend a process and organizational structure that will insure the quality and recognition of the PSM into the future.”

Group II further revised the PSM Guidelines, incorporating information from the public comments.

Group II also outlined a process and organizational structure for assessing PSM programs and a financial scenario to support the recommended process.

Page 30: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Stakeholder II – second meeting

Further refined plan: “journal review” model with governing board of interested organizations (e.g. NPSMA, CGS, AAAS, disciplinary societies as appropriate).

Recommended 5 and 10 year reviews. Depend on cadre of trained expert volunteer

reviewers. Recommended characteristics of certifying

organization: objectivity, legitimacy, infrastructure, ability to manage reviewers (recruitment, training, logistics).

Page 31: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

Costs and Further Work Bare bones maybe $200 K annually. Need to determine fee for review and

possible annual “maintenance” fee. Need to discuss with potential “hosts” and

consortium members. Possible “in kind” contributions would

impact financial plan. Goal to “hand off” mid 2012.

Page 32: Report on the Professional Science Master’s National Initiative

For more information: contact the CGS PSM Project Team

Carol B. Lynch, Senior Scholar and Project Director([email protected])

Sally Francis, Senior Scholar and Co-Project Director([email protected])

Eleanor Babco, Senior Consultant ([email protected])

Leontyne Goodwin, Program Manager([email protected])

Josh Mahler, Program and Operations Associate([email protected])

www.sciencemasters.com and www.cgsnet.org