Bayer Corporation will host a STEM Education Diversity Forum in December, the second such forum the company has held in the last three years. (STEM = science, technology, engineering and mathematics).
The purpose of the forum is to encourage and help business executives from the various STEM industries – biotechnology, information technology, engineering and beyond – to get involved and support STEM education programs in order to build a strong and diverse national STEM pipeline, the feeder for our future workforce.
The forum, part of Bayer’s award-winning Making Science Make Sense® initiative, will be held on Thursday, December 11, 2008, at the Hotel Nikko in San Francisco. Bayer is holding the forum as a public service; there is no charge to attend.

Titled “Bridging the Diversity Gap: Introducing STEM Industries to K-12 Best Practice Programs,” the forum is an outgrowth of a recent survey commissioned by Bayer Corporation. The survey found wide agreement among the Fortune 1000 STEM CEOs polled that they and their companies have a responsibility to support pre-college, STEM-education programs that are developing the next generation of innovators, particularly those who have traditionally been underrepresented in STEM.
Thus, the forum will showcase for these executives an array of best practice elementary and secondary education programs that are helping all students – especially girls, African-Americans, American Indians and Hispanics – achieve in STEM subjects.
In addition, the forum will offer executives practical advice about creating their own business-education partnerships. They will be urged to support these and/or other exemplary programs that are closing achievement gaps by helping them to scale-up or replicate them in their local communities.
Dr. Mae C. Jemison will act as moderator. In addition to serving as Bayer’s longtime national Making Science Make Sense spokesperson, she is the nation’s first African-American female astronaut, a chemical engineer, physician and the CEO of an emerging STEM company. She will lead the forum’s two morning panels, Best Practice Elementary STEM Education Programs and Best Practice Secondary STEM Education Programs, and participate in an afternoon panel about developing an action plan for moving STEM education forward and creating industry-education partnerships.
“Innovation has long been at the heart of America’s global competitiveness, our economic prosperity, our quality-of-life and our national security,” explained Greg Babe, President and CEO, Bayer Corporation. ”In light of the enormous challenges the United States is facing today, what will keep this country prosperous and competitive are the scientific and technological innovations we make within the STEM fields – fields that are at risk today.”
Bayer is currently seeking nominations for best practice K-12 STEM education programs to profile in the second volume of the compendium. Directors of these education programs are invited to visit Bayer’s web site to download and complete a submission form.