[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 34 (Tuesday, March 8, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1399-S1400]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TEACHING GEOGRAPHY IS FUNDAMENTAL ACT
Ms. MIKULSKI. Mr. President, I rise in strong support of the Teaching
Geography is Fundamental Act, introduced by Senator Cochran and myself
last week. Increasing geography literacy is essential to STEM
education, and investing in our children's science
[[Page S1400]]
education is essential to making America smarter and more innovative.
This bill would authorize the Secretary of Education to meet that
critical need by doling out competitive grants to proven nonprofits
with a track record of promoting geography literacy in our schools
through activities such as teacher professional development and
research. As chairwoman of the appropriation subcommittee that funds
National Science Foundation, NSF, I have directed National Science
Foundation's education team to work with experts like National
Geographic to strengthen geography education. NSF is now working with
National Geographic Society to explore new ways to improve geography
teaching, training, and research in our schools. This pilot program has
proven successful and deserves national support.
For a number of years, I have promoted geography locally in my home
State of Maryland by working with geographic trailblazers like National
Geographic Society's Chesapeake watershed education programs and Pat
Noonan's Chesapeake Bay Interpretive Buoys--bringing real-time
environmental information to Maryland schoolchildren in a meaningful
and understandable way. I can tell that making geography education
local is where to start. Hook a child's interest with what they know,
and their geographic knowledge will open up to the rest of the world.
I strongly support this bill because I know it can enhance tremendous
work already being done. National Geographic is a great example of an
organization that could partner with the Department of Education to
provide schools with the intellectual and organizational capacity to
effectively teach geography literacy. It is an institution whose
members have explored the world's tallest peaks and discovered our
ocean's deepest depths. They support exploration and discovery--from
Peary and Hanson's expedition to the North Pole in 1906 to Ballard's
discovery of the Titanic in 1985. But they also fund geography
education programming through grants to educational organizations and
by providing professional development to classroom teachers. Their
magazine alone has an incredible impact because of its loyal and
massive readership of more than 360 million people. There is no need
for the administration to reinvent the wheel when there are willing
geographic partners ready and willing to take this Teaching Geography
is Fundamental bill and run with it.
We live in an age when our innovative economy is becoming ever more
global and new cyber technology connects schoolchildren not only to
their friend across the street but to their friend across the ocean,
Better geography literacy at a young age--along with an understanding
and appreciation of other cultures--is so important nowadays. I think
it is both fitting and appropriate that we continue to encourage that
curiosity with our children, and this bill helps us get there. That is
why I am proud to cosponsor this bill, and I encourage my colleagues to
support it as well.
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