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The impact of Sputnik on education

OCT 14, 2007

DOI: 10.1063/PT.5.021570

Physics Today
Economic Principals : Fifty years ago last week, the Soviet satellite known as Sputnik roared into orbit around the Earth, catching the United States completely by surprise. In its way, Sputnik was every bit as galvanizing an event as 9/11.

The real watershed came the next year, however, when Congress passed the National Defense Education Act. President Dwight Eisenhower signed the NDEA into law on September 2, 1958. School reform had been on the table for most of a decade. “Life-adjustment education” was still the fad those days in the nation’s public schools. The professional societies, especially, were poised to act.

What exactly was the $10 billion NDEA? To some, the NDEA was about curriculum reform: the Physical Science Study Committee’s high-school physics course (fifty-six films, a textbook and a slew of novel experiments); various innovative approaches to chemistry; the “new” math (set theory instead of the multiplication tables); the anthropologically-oriented Man: A Course of Study (Bushmen, Eskimos and all that).

In retrospect, however, the real payoff seems to have been the generation of 1958 Â a cohort of students for whom school became harder immediately, with advanced placement offerings proliferating and much more emphasis on math and science. Their sense of possibility shifted. What the GI bill had been to college education, the NDEA was to graduate study, with an emphasis on science and engineering.....

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