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CHIPS and Science Act Supports New STEM Opportunities

by Gloria Kee, Vice President of Product Management, Model N April 3, 2023

Many economists and business leaders hail the CHIPS and Science Act as a win for the U.S. semiconductor and manufacturing industries. Nearly all surveyed executives believe the law will alleviate their supply chain issues. But this bill has another significant winner — groups underrepresented in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM).

The CHIPS Act will invest more than $50 billion in semiconductor manufacturing, research and development, and workforce development, including efforts to create new opportunities for historically underserved students and communities. The focus on diversity has received less attention but is no less critical than infrastructure investments and tax incentives.

Diversity in STEM is critical. People from diverse backgrounds bring different perspectives to increase customer insight, improve decision-making, and inspire innovation. The CHIPS and Science Act’s concerted effort to make STEM careers more accessible is a win for everyone.

The CHIPS and Science Act’s commitment to diversity

The CHIPS and Science Act explicitly declares the necessity of diversity in science by creating the chief diversity and inclusion officer position at the National Science Foundation. This role provides vision, strategic leadership, and management for programs and initiatives related to diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility.

The legislation funds STEM education from kindergarten to graduate school and authorizes investments to expand the diversity of funded research institutions, offering more research opportunities for people across the country. New initiatives will specifically support Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and other minority-serving institutions. Funding will allow all institutions to provide new opportunities to historically-underserved students and communities.

The investment does not stop at education and access. The legislation also gives agencies and institutions tools to combat sexual and gender-based harassment in the sciences and demands accountability from organizations receiving incentives. Recipients must show significant community and worker investments to ensure the incentives support equitable economic growth and development.

The importance of making STEM careers accessible

STEM applications surround us, from our computers to our roads. Growing up, math and science were not spaces where women were encouraged to succeed. I remember walking into my engineering classes in college and often found myself as one of maybe twenty women in a class of one hundred. As classes became more specialized in my upper division courses, the number of women in those classes would shrink even further, with only three women in a class of thirty. Thankfully, the landscape has evolved.

According to the National Science Foundation, more women and Black, Hispanic, American Indian, and Alaska Native people are working in STEM than a decade ago but remain underrepresented. Women only comprise 35% of the workforce, and collectively, Hispanic, Black, American Indian, and Alaska Native people only make up a quarter.

Building STEM diversity benefits us all. Here are two examples.

  • Accessible and equitable discoverieshttps://www.wiley.com/edge/diversity-in-tech-2021-us-report/
    People with different backgrounds have varied perspectives and life experiences, bringing more user insight to project design and helping to identify bias in data, processes, and results. For example, certain clinical trial designs could unwittingly exclude certain patients from participating. Or a new technology design may be inaccessible to someone with a disability. Diverse teams are more likely to recognize and account for different needs.
  • A robust talent pipeline and reduced skills gaps
    More than half of companies struggle to hire diverse employees. Education and opportunity gaps contribute to the challenge. By making STEM jobs and training accessible, especially in historically under-served areas, we tap into new talent.

Research and development are not the only STEM careers — technical positions are equally important. In the 1990s and 2000s, the U.S. semiconductor industry focused more on research and development and outsourced production to reduce overhead. As a result, the sector lost essential domain engineering and production knowledge and reduced the availability of trained technologists and engineers. The reliance on foreign entities is part of the reason the industry fell behind other countries.

The CHIPS and Science Act aims to remedy the problem by building a new workforce, one even more diverse than before. These up-and-coming experts will fill many open positions and create a strong pipeline for the future, as we require more skilled workers in STEM fields.

Through its diversity provisions, the CHIPS and Science Act will strengthen not only the U.S. semiconductor industry but also the STEM ecosystem and the country as a whole. We must all participate in this effort to build a strong and equitable future — we cannot succeed without contributions from everyone.

This article was originally published on IndustryToday.com.
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