SSTI Digest

Geography: Florida

The Difficult Task of Clogging the Brain Drain

Growing and keeping an educated workforce, one ready to help build a technology-based economy, is one of the greatest challenges even the most high-tech areas. The problem can be quite severe. For example, a new statewide survey of Florida college students, conducted by Leadership Florida and Nova Southeastern University, revealed that only 48 percent of the students plan to remain in Florida after graduation. (For a copy of the Florida survey report see http://www.leadershipflorida.org/survey.asp



Who Will Stay and Who Will Leave?, a forthcoming report from the Southern Technology Council (STC), provides one of the first in-depth looks at what factors influence graduate migration behavior after college. With emphasis on recent science and engineering graduates, STC identified several individual, institutional, and state-level predictors of student retention using a series of regression analyses of 44 different variables. 



While a few of the results are somewhat predictable, the report is full of surprises that may help policy makers in thinking and rethinking efforts to clog the brain drain. 



For example, one might expect high school students that stay in-state to attend college also will seek jobs in-state after graduation. STC’s statistical analysis of behavior patterns of 7,000 students bears this out but to the remarkable degree that generally in-state students are 10 times as likely to remain in-state as are out-of-state students. The policy implications of this single finding, then would support the efforts of many areas to provide scholarships to entice the best high school students to stay in-state for their college education. But, statistics from the Georgia HOPE Scholarship program, on which many other states’ efforts are modeled, revealed that while the Georgia program was celebrating its 500,000 recipient last Fall, six out of ten scholarship recipients once in college failed to maintain the B average required to remain in the program. Georgia HOPE program officials are exploring alternatives to correct the problem. 



A new University of Georgia study <http://www.terry.uga.edu/hope/hope.enrollments.pdf> showed the HOPE

scholarship program has been influential in keeping the state's brightest high school students in-state for college – a significant goal based on the STC findings regarding the likelihood of students remaining in-state after school. Three-fourths of high school students scoring over 1500 on the SAT now remain in state for higher education; only 23 percent stayed in Georgia prior to the creation of the scholarship program. Additionally, results showed 96 percent of the in-state students at the University of Georgia received HOPE scholarship funds. 



However, the STC analysis reveals that paying for all of its brightest students to attend college in-state may not necessarily help a state stop the brain drain, particularly if the state is trying to increase the number of science and engineering graduates. STC found that graduates are less likely to be employed in-state if they: 

People

Dr. Frederick Humphries, president of Florida A&M University and SSTI Board member, has announced he will retire this summer from the university.

IT Florida Issues Annual Report

Encouraging venture capital investments, creating R&D tax exemptions, and establishing three new technology-based organizations are just a few of the recommendations included in the first annual report of ITFlorida.com. The 34-member Information Service Technology Development Task Force was created by state legislation last year to assess the health of Florida's information technology industry. The Task Force also was required to recommend policies and legislation that would advance telecommunication networks and information technologies within the state.

Florida Space Research Institute Off the Ground

The Florida legislature recently approved legislation creating the Florida Space Research Institute (FSRI), an independent, industry-led organization designed to coordinate the space-related research capabilities of several public and private universities. FSRI will strive to expand the universities’ involvement in space research and education, and to insure that state academic resources are available to support the space-related needs of industry, NASA, and the military.

People

Brent Gregory has announced his resignation as Vice President for Technology Development with Enterprise Florida to accept a position in the private sector.

People

Jay F. Honeycutt, the director of NASA's Kennedy Space Center (KSC), has announced his plans to retire from NASA in early 1997. He became director in 1995.

Position Available

The South Florida Manufacturing Technology Center (SFMTC), a regional office of the Florida Manufacturing Extension Partnership, is currently seeking a Director. SFMTC is located in Pompano Beach, Florida and serves seven counties along Florida's southeast coast: Broward, Dade, Martin, Monroe, Okeechobee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie.

The Director will manage contracts, develop operational procedures, evaluate Center progress and monitor economic impacts on its clients and the manufacturing community, and communicate the Center's mission to government, industry and the community. The Director must interact with the SFMTC board, ensure accountability for project funding and administer the Center's budget. The Director is the contact point with the Florida Manufacturing Extension Partnership and is responsible to the FMEP director for program quality and performance.

The ideal candidate will have a master's degree in management or engineering with 10 years experience in the following areas: leadership of a large staff; responsibility for budget development; entrepreneurial experience; manufacturing, engineering or technical expertise; coordinating with institutional and government entities; knowledge of the issues and problems facing smaller manufacturers.

For more information, please contact:

Jon Gardner Chairman,

Barnett Bank of Broward County

901 Southeast 17th Street Causeway

Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33316

954/ 527-8507

Position Available at Florida MEP

The Florida Manufacturing Extension Partnership (FMEP) is seeking a Director who possesses the skills that are needed for the corporation to excel. The applicant should be an innovator and entrepreneur as well as a leader and a team builder with excellent communication skills.

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