January 24, 2010
Stimulating
From Thomas Friedman's column in this morning's New York Times:
Obama should bring together the country's leading innovators and ask them: "What legislation, what tax incentives, do we need right now to replicate you all a million times over" -- and make that his No. 1 priority. Inspiring, reviving and empowering Start-up America is his moon shot.And to reignite his youth movement, he should make sure every American kid knows about two programs that he has already endorsed: The first is National Lab Day. Introduced last November by a coalition of educators and science and engineering associations, Lab Day aims to inspire a wave of future innovators, by pairing veteran scientists and engineers with students in grades K-12 to inspire thousands of hands-on science projects around the country.
Any teacher in America, explains the entrepreneur Jack Hidary, the chairman of N.L.D., can go to the Web site NationalLabDay.org and enter the science project he or she is interested in teaching, or get an idea for one. N.L.D. will match teachers with volunteer scientists and engineers in their areas for mentoring.
"As soon as you have a match, the scientists and the students communicate directly or via Skype and collaborate on a project," said Hidary. "We have a class in Chicago asking for civil engineers to teach them how to build a bridge. In Idaho, a class is asking for a scientist to help them build a working river delta inside their classroom."
The president should also vow to bring the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship, or NFTE, to every low-income neighborhood in America. NFTE works with middle- and high-school teachers to help them teach entrepreneurship. The centerpiece of its program is a national contest for start-ups with 24,000 kids participating. Each student has to invent a product or service, write up a business plan and then do it. NFTE (www.NFTE.com) works only in low-income areas, so many of these new entrepreneurs are minority kids.
In November, a documentary movie -- "Ten9Eight" -- was released that tracked a dozen students all the way through to the finals of the NFTE competition. Obama should arrange for this movie to be shown in every classroom in America. It is the most inspirational, heartwarming film you will ever see. You can obtain details about it at www.ten9eight.com.
This year's three finalists, said Amy Rosen, the chief executive of NFTE, "were an immigrant's son who took a class from H&R Block and invented a company to do tax returns for high school students, a young woman who taught herself how to sew and designed custom-made dresses, and the winner was an African-American boy who manufactured socially meaningful T-shirts."
You want more good jobs, spawn more Steve Jobs. Obama should have focused on that from Day 1. He must focus on that for Year 2.
I've been lucky enough to see Ten9Eight--and it is indeed a wonderfully inspirational portrait of teens discovering the motivational power of entrepreneurship. Inner city kids in particular need to be able to envision ways out of poverty--and to be able to grasp what they can personally do to improve their lives and their prospects. The NFTE is doing amazing things in this regard. As the White House regroups after Tuesday's election, I hope this film--and the kid-centered approach to meaningful cultural change it documents--will be a big part of that.
Trackback Pings:
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.erinoconnor.org/movabletype/mt-tb.cgi/1801
Comments:
Excellent advice for Obama. Unfortunately, I simply don't think he thinks that way. Every bit of evidence I've seen from his first year in office indicates that he prefers top-down, command-and-control "solutions" to all problems. Letting people think for themselves, provide for themselves and succeed for themselves just doesn't seem to be part of his political makeup.
Scott -- I hear you. And reading the papers and watching the talking heads this morning, it didn't look like the White House is getting the message, even after the Massachusetts election. I get the impression that the Obama administration thinks the problem is one of public relations--of marketing its policies better to the public (bringing in Plouffe, etc.)--rather than one of substance, of the public rejecting these big-spending, intrusive, top-down policies. I guess we'll see where we are on Wednesday night with the State of the Union address.
This is about more than Obama, though; Friedman's advice will fall on deaf ears because the permanent political/administrative class here in D.C. is made up of people who, whatever their other strengths, are not entrepreneurial by nature.
I've lived here for fifteen years, and my northwest D.C. neighborhood listserv regularly buzzes with daydreams: "I wish we had a hardware store within walking distance"; "I wish our commercial strip had a diner"; "I wish someone provided a computer-recycling service." Occasionally I do see Washingtonians take that entrepreneurial leap, but here among the people who run the nation's capital, there's an implicit belief that starting businesses is something that other people do.
The programs for kids sound great. But...
When politicians try to incentivize business, they often distort things toward whatever is fashionable at the moment. For example, I knew someone who started a small manufacturing business circa 2000. (Clean light manufacturing, no environmental issues) The county had an "incubator" program for startups (free office space, etc) but he was told he wasn't eligible because the county wanted to focus on "high tech" businesses...ie, development of a web site selling underwear on-line would count; developing a fabricated-metal product would not)
I doubt if very many of those "high-tech" businesses that the county supported are still in the land of the living....
Post a comment:
![[Critical Mass]](/archives/cmlogo.gif)