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News > DOD research chief says science, tech skills vital
DOD research chief says science, tech skills vital

Posted 6/11/2013 Email story   Print story

    


by Nick Simeone
American Forces Press Service


6/11/2013 - WASHINGTON (AFPS) -- The Defense Department needs to be thinking now about how to best recruit a workforce skilled in science and technology, which will be increasingly vital to national security, a senior DOD official said here yesterday.

Reginald Brothers, deputy assistant secretary of defense for research, told a conference aimed at spurring more young Americans to take up such careers that the pace and adoption of technology are accelerating at such a rate that the department envisions a commensurate need to have a strong, technical and scientific workforce for the nation to remain competitive and secure.

One problem, he said, is that minorities are not choosing those careers in great numbers, and within a few decades, they will be the majority in the workforce.

"We have to be thinking right now [about] how do we motivate, how do we train this population of underrepresented minorities and women?" Brothers said. "Most of these people are not going into these areas."

Brothers and representatives of other federal agencies and industry spoke at the conference, called the "Summit on Meeting the President's STEM Call to Action" to discuss the need for more people to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math, and to explain how federal agencies are responding to President Barack Obama's call to increase those numbers over the next decade.

Brothers said the Defense Department has invested $150 million in 16 such programs. "We're trying to excite minorities and women," he told the audience, noting that part of the challenge is that people considering such careers don't often associate them with the Defense Department.

"We really don't brand ourselves in a way to let people see us," he acknowledged.

The lure of much higher paying jobs offered in Silicon Valley is another challenge the department faces in recruiting people with scientific and technological skills, Brothers said.

"When we see Google, Intel, etc., how do we attract people to our workforce?" he asked. The diversity of work offered at the Defense Department is key, he said.

"If you work at some of these companies, you will be well paid, but you will work on one thing for quite a while," he said. "If you work at the Defense Department, you will work on a variety of problems throughout your career."



tabComments
6/27/2013 1:47:13 AM ET
Acquisitions is a perfect case study of career field dysfunction. The scientists should be dealing with research and theory in their respective disciplines yet they are routinely saddled with program manager responsibilities. Engineers should be focused on becoming familiar with the latest innovations and best practices in their disciplines yet they are also saddled with program manager responsibilities. All the while acquisition managers formally educated in business who are ready to deal with the mundane program manager tasks are told to sit in a corner because they don't have a technical degree. It's insanity
ME, HERE
 
6/17/2013 12:24:22 PM ET
Half of the problem is not putting tech people in tech AFSCs half of the problem is putting nontech people in tech AFSCs and half of the problem is not letting the tech AFSCs do tech. I am an OR analyst not an acquisitions officer Another problem is the fact that tech people often have tech spouses and the AF does its best to destroy the careers of spouses by moving tech way to frequently. And I could go on...
Analyst, USAFA
 
6/14/2013 6:05:46 PM ET
Lt I acknowledge that the AFSC matching does not always go with folks' degrees. The same happened to me when I got mine and I was an Academy grad. However I am glad I did not get my first choice which was science and tech related because the AF aggressively force shaped that AFSC. This article is misleading because it implies the problem is recruiting sci and tech folks. What about retaining the ones recruited in the first place I am an underrepresented minority in a sci and tech-related area and I am concerned about future RIFs.
Capt, USAFA
 
6/13/2013 10:08:41 AM ET
We first need to use the skills of those that studied in tech areas. ROTC and OTS grads in particular are sometimes matched to jobs that have absolutely nothing to do with what they studied in college. Please AF leaders utilize our skills talents and interests. You won't be able to attract those that are passionate about tech jobs if you tell them that they aren't going to be doing a tech job.
Lt, AFB
 
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