An influential national commission is being revived to address how changes in the global economy should shape American education and training.
The National Center on Education and the Economy, a nonprofit group based in Washington, announced last week that it has re-established the Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce, a bipartisan group that in 1990 produced the report 鈥淎merica鈥檚 Choice: High Skills or Low Wages.鈥
That report concluded that the United States could continue to enjoy a high standard of living only if it abandoned low-skill, low-wage jobs to developing countries. Among other things, it recommended a 鈥渘ational standard of educational excellence鈥 that all students would be expected to meet by age 16, or soon thereafter, based on passing a series of performance assessments.
The newly formed blue-ribbon commission will consider how American education will have to change given that nations such as China and India are now producing large numbers of educated people willing to work for relatively low salaries.
鈥淲hat Americans still don鈥檛 realize is that our economic preeminence rests squarely on our education pre-eminence,鈥 said Marc S. Tucker, the president of the NCEE, 鈥渁nd we aren鈥檛 pre-eminent any more.鈥
The 27-member panel includes former governors, senators, Cabinet secretaries, business and labor leaders, civil rights leaders, and education and job-training experts.
The commission鈥檚 work, which is being funded by the Seattle-based Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Baltimore-based Annie E. Casey Foundation, and the Menlo Park, Calif.-based William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, will conclude with a final report in the next six months.