Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS April Meeting 2017
Volume 62, Number 1
Saturday–Tuesday, January 28–31, 2017; Washington, DC
Session U7: Physics Drives Our Economy, Connects the World, Creates the FutureCareers Industry Invited Prize/Award Undergraduate
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Sponsoring Units: FIP Chair: Cherrill Spencer, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory Room: Delaware A |
Monday, January 30, 2017 3:30PM - 4:06PM |
U7.00001: Where do Foreign Student STEM graduates work after they graduate? Invited Speaker: Neil Ruiz Foreign students and entrepreneurs add path-breaking innovative ideas and billions of dollars to the United States economy. This presentation takes a look at where foreign students originate, what degrees and subjects they are pursuing in the U.S., and where they work after they graduate from U.S. universities. With a special focus on STEM degrees and physics, Dr. Ruiz will show how foreign students open up markets in their hometown cities which facilitates trade, foreign direct investment and knowledge transfer. In addition, they infuse revenue into local communities, and they help fill demand for jobs requiring specific skills in local U.S. labor markets. He argues that America's business, educational, and community leaders need to develop better strategies that retain their talents after they graduate. [Preview Abstract] |
Monday, January 30, 2017 4:06PM - 4:42PM |
U7.00002: Bridging the Divide- Adventures of an academic entrepreneur Invited Speaker: Thirumalai Venkatesan Academic research and entrepreneurship are simultaneously synergistic and conflicting as careers and my talk is about the challenges of bridging these careers. After a research career at Bell Labs and Bellcore which led to the invention of the Pulsed Laser Deposition Process I started Neocera as a company to translate products arising from academic research. Leaving Bell and building the company in Maryland as a Professor at UMD was a great learning experience. Managing creative people to productize, focusing on marketing/sales and managing cash flows constituted a world significantly different from what one encounters in the academia. Survival is key and a hasty decision can be the difference between success and bankruptcy. In my talk I will discuss the various lessons I learnt from the process and how one handles the challenges to eventually make an economic and societal impact. [Preview Abstract] |
Monday, January 30, 2017 4:42PM - 5:18PM |
U7.00003: Wheatley Award 2017 Winner: How Physics Can Help Africa Transform, from a Problem to an Opportunity Invited Speaker: Neil Turok Africa represents the world's greatest untapped pool of scientific and technical talent. The African Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) is providing outstanding postgraduate training and research opportunities to gifted students across the continent. Its alumni proceed to employment in fields ranging from epidemiology to natural resource management, information technology and mathematical finance, to engineering and pure research in physics and mathematics. Many have already had a major impact in revitalising Africa's universities, in tackling major epidemics, and in raising skills levels in industry and government. AIMS has opened six centres of excellence so far, in South Africa, Senegal, Ghana, Cameroon, Tanzania, and, most recently, Rwanda, and plans to grow to a network of fifteen centres over the next decade. Its 1200 alumni are at the leading edge of Africa's transformation into a knowledge-based society. [Preview Abstract] |
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