(1) A state priority is established for
institutions of higher education, including community colleges,
to encourage growing numbers of enrollments and degrees in the
fields of engineering, technology, biotechnology, sciences,
computer sciences, and mathematics.
(2) In meeting this state priority, the legislature
understands and recognizes that the demands of the economic
marketplace and the desires of students are not always on
parallel tracks. Therefore, institutions of higher education
shall determine local student demand for programs in the fields
of engineering, technology, biotechnology, sciences, computer
sciences, and mathematics and submit findings and proposed
alternatives to meet demand to the higher education coordinating
board and the legislature by November 1, 2008.
(3) While it is understood that these areas of emphasis
should not be the sole focus of institutions of higher education.
It is the intent of the legislature that steady progress in these
areas occur. The higher education coordinating board shall track
and report progress in the fields of engineering, technology,
biotechnology, sciences, computer sciences, and mathematics
including, but not limited to, the following information:
(a) The number of students enrolled in these fields on a
biennial basis;
(b) The number of associate, bachelor's, and master's
degrees conferred in these fields on a biennial basis;
(c) The amount of expenditures in enrollment and degree
programs in these fields; and
(d) The number and type of public-private partnerships
established relating to these fields among institutions of higher
education, including community colleges, and leading corporations
in Washington state.
(4) Institutions of higher education, including community
colleges, shall be provided discretion and flexibility in
achieving the objectives under this section. Examples of the
types of institutional programs that may help achieve these
objectives include, but are not limited to, establishment of
institutes of technology, new polytechnic-based institutions, new
divisions of existing institutions, and a flexible array of
delivery models, including face-to-face learning, interactive
courses, internet-based offerings, and instruction on main
campuses, branch campuses, and other educational centers.
(5) The legislature recognizes the global needs of the
economic marketplace for technologically prepared graduates, and
the relationship between technology industries and higher
education. Institutions of higher education, including community
colleges, are strongly urged to consider science, engineering,
and technology program growth in areas of the state that exhibit
a high concentration of aerospace, biotechnology, and technology
industrial presence. Expanded science and technology programs
can gain from the proximity of experienced and knowledgeable
industry leaders, while industry can benefit from access to new
sources of highly trained and educated graduates.
[2006 c 180 § 2.]
NOTES:
Findings -- Intent -- 2006 c 180: "(1) The legislature
recognizes the vital importance to the state's economic
prosperity and the economic benefit of placing a priority on
enrolling and conferring degrees upon students in the fields of
engineering, technology, biotechnology, science, computer
science, and mathematics.
(2) The legislature has significant concerns that other
countries are outpacing the United States in graduating qualified
engineers, and that major corporations within Washington state
are searching out-of-state and even outside the United States to
find the qualified and trained employees they need.
(3) Data compiled by the technology alliance shows that
Washington state ranks thirty-fourth among the fifty states in
the percentage of residents who have earned a science or
engineering degree, per capita.
(4) Data collected by the office of financial management
indicates that between the academic years of 1993-94 and 2003-04
at public four-year institutions of higher education in
Washington state:
(a) There was a twelve percent decline in the number of
full-time equivalents enrolled in the fields of engineering and
related technologies; and
(b) There was nearly a nine percent decline in the number of
bachelor's degrees conferred in the fields of engineering and
related technologies.
(5) Data collected by the office of financial management
also shows that for the 2003-04 academic year, only four percent
of all full-time equivalents were enrolled in engineering and
related technologies and just two percent of all full-time
equivalents were enrolled in computer science studies at public
four-year institutions of higher education in the state.
(6) Therefore, it is the intent of the legislature to
promote increased access, delivery models, enrollment slots, and
degree opportunities in the fields of engineering, technology,
biotechnology, sciences, computer sciences, and mathematics. It
is recognized that these areas of study and training are
integrally linked to ensuring that Washington state's economy can
compete nationally and globally in the twenty-first century
marketplace. It is also recognized that community colleges play
a unique role in supporting degree attainment in the fields of
science, technology, engineering, and mathematics through the
development of transferable curricula and the maintenance of
viable articulation agreements with both public and private
universities." [2006 c 180 § 1.]