Education: More about Innovation Generation grants
Innovation Generation funding is designed to inspire students to learn about science and generate interest in science-related careers.
The Motorola Foundation's Innovation Generation grants provide $4 million each year to 92 K-12 education programs, that help to strengthen the U.S. position in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) by cultivating a workforce inspired by these subjects. They directly address obstacles to achievement by engaging students particularly girls and under-represented minorities in the practical applications of the concepts engineers and technologists employ every day at Motorola.
The latest research shows that jobs requiring science, engineering or technical training will increase 24 percent between 2004 and 2014 to 6.3 million.1 The disparity between the growing demand for people in these jobs and the country's ability to adequately prepare students to fill them has been widening for decades. The most recent global survey of 15-year-olds' performance in science shows 24 percent of U.S. students surveyed at the lowest level of performance below the level at which students begin to demonstrate the ability to successfully participate in the workforce.2 The lack of skilled graduates in these fields poses a significant threat to sustained U.S. competitiveness in the global economy.
Of 2008 Innovation Generation grantees:
43 percent target African-American students 23 percent serve Latinos 35 percent engage girls specifically
Beyond funding, we are linking recipients of the Innovation Generation Grants with each other through a company-hosted portal that expands the global network of advocates for education in STEM.
Many of the grants also involve volunteer Motorola engineers and scientists, who guide, mentor, tutor and provide valuable insight into the opportunities and excitement of their line of work.
We have provided more than $20 million in funding since 2005 to enable students to invent and learn as part of hands-on, interactive after-school programs, science and math clubs, camps and mentoring programs.
1According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics as cited in U.S. Department of Education Feb. 2006 report "Strengthening Education: Meeting the Challenge of a Changing World."
2According to the Program for International Student Assessment 2006, a triennial survey conducted by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.



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