Completed
Regional focus
North America
Topics
A panel will review, assess, and provide guidance on the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistic’s approach to measuring the science and engineering (S&E) workforce population in the United States. The panel will develop a framework for measuring the S&E workforce that provides flexibility to examine emerging issues related to this unique population while at the same time allowing for stability in the estimation of key trends.
Featured publication
Consensus
·2018
The National Science Foundation's National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES), one of the nation's principal statistical agencies, is charged to collect, acquire, analyze, report, and disseminate statistical data related to the science and engineering enterprise in the United Stat...
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Description
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, Committee on National Statistics (CNSTAT), at the request of the National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES), will convene an ad hoc panel to review, assess, and provide guidance on NCSES's approach to measuring the science and engineering (S&E) workforce population in the United States. Given the evolving data needs of NCSES stakeholders and the budget climate uncertainty under which NCSES operates, a priority for the panel is to develop a framework for measuring the S&E workforce that provides flexibility to examine emerging issues related to this unique population while at the same time allowing for stability in the estimation of key trends.
The framework developed by the panel should provide direction on measuring the S&E workforce population in terms of content, data sources, survey design, survey methodology, data collection, data processing, data integration, and data dissemination. The panel should consider the challenges involved in:
- measuring the S&E workforce over multiple decades,
- using a variety of data sources given that the availability of these sources could change over time,
- taking advantage of lessons learned from how other developed countries collect information on scientists and engineers,
- employing the most efficient and effective methodology at any given time, and
- meeting the evolving data needs of policy makers, researchers, and the public.
At the end of its review, the panel will issue a report with findings, recommendations, and priorities for improving the relevance, accuracy, timeliness, and cost-effectiveness of S&E workforce data for the next decade and beyond.
Collaborators
Committee
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Committee Membership Roster Comments
No comments
Sponsors
National Science Foundation
Staff
Krisztina Marton
Lead
Anthony Mann
Major units and sub-units
Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education
Lead
Committee on National Statistics
Lead