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Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute President Shirley Ann Jackson Calls for New Approaches To Harness the Power of Science and Technology To Address Global Challenges
—In Speech to the Royal Academy of Engineering
She Envisions a “New Polytechnic” To Enhance Leadership and
Education in the New Digital Economy—
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute President Shirley Ann
Jackson has called for a new way of working and learning to
harness the power of science and technology—particularly in the
arenas of “Big Data,” high performance computing, and web
science—for the urgent purpose of developing answers to the
intersecting challenges of energy, food, water, health, and
national security, climate change, and natural resource
allocation, which are fundamental to our daily lives and to the
long-term viability of the planet.
President Jackson spoke at the Royal Academy of Engineering,
in London, England, delivering the 2013 ERA Foundation
International Lecture on Tuesday, January 22, 2013.
Calling for increased collaboration across disciplines and
sectors, Jackson said, “The urgent, global concerns that we
face in the 21st century, and beyond, are more complex and even
more subject to intersecting vulnerabilities. These challenges
… will take all that we have in terms of ingenuity,
collaboration, and good judgment. These are challenges of
unprecedented magnitude, too complex to be resolved by the
independent actions of those working in isolation. Because they
are critical to our world, and to the ultimate survival of
humankind, they demand the best of our imagination and
creativity, careful deliberation, tremendous resourcefulness,
and the strictest focus and discipline.”
Envisioning a “new Polytechnic,” Jackson noted that
“effective use of advanced technological, collaborative
platforms strongly suggests the need for a shift beyond
traditional leadership, both in process and in personal
approach.”
As the world becomes more digitally interconnected and data
driven, Jackson said we “will use data in ever more
sophisticated ways, while exploiting our ubiquitous
interconnectivity. In fact, the interconnectivity of people and
things is generating massive amounts of data. To make sense of
all that data requires us to exploit that very
interconnectivity to collaborate in new ways. It requires us to
break out of disciplinary silos, exploit new technological
tools, employ high performance computing, data aggregation, and
analytics.”
“The new Polytechnic requires that leaders acquire
new skills for a digitally interconnected environment, that
they balance authority with engagement, understand nuances of
culture and language, seek new ways to establish trust among,
within, and between virtual teams. With more diverse, digitally
connected audiences—participants who may never before have had
a voice, and may even be volunteers—and with less hierarchical
dynamics, there will be concerns about trust on multiple
levels. Leaders must recognize value in divergent perspectives
and manage opposing expectations. And, they must accomplish all
this in a virtual environment where the leader may never look
participants in the eye or shake their hands,” President
Jackson said. “To bring people together, new leaders must
have the ability to ‘translate’ between and among disciplines
and sectors. They will need to incorporate analyses and
insights from diverse fields including the cognitive and social
sciences, and bring them to bear on a given challenge.”
Jackson believes that a more interdisciplinary approach
“will impact research in powerful new ways. It will impact the
profession of teaching as we enlist the next generations of
students in this construct, and educate them to be leaders in
the digital economy.”
“To address access to clean water, food and energy security,
health security and disease mitigation, and other urgent global
challenges, the new Polytechnic—utilizing advanced technology
to combine a multiplicity of perspectives and disciplines—can
lead to greater vision and deeper understanding, and is our
best bet for assuaging the human hunger to know and to remedy,
and the human desire for uplifted lives,” President Jackson
said.
For the text of the lecture, titled “The
New Polytechnic: Collaboration and Leadership Across
Disciplines and Sectors to Address Urgent Global Challenges,”
go to
http://www.rpi.edu/president/speeches/ps012213-era.html
Background on President Jackson
A theoretical physicist, Dr. Jackson has held senior
leadership positions in government, industry, research, and
academe. Her research and policy focus includes global energy
security and the national capacity for innovation, including
addressing what she has dubbed the “Quiet Crisis” of looming
gaps in the science, technology, and engineering workforce and
reduced support for basic research. Dr. Jackson was chairman of
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission from1995 to 1999, and
currently is a member of the President’s Council of Advisors on
Science and Technology (PCAST), co-chairs the President’s
Innovation and Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC), and is a
member of the U.S. Department of State International Security
Advisory Board (ISAB). She is a member of the British Royal
Academy of Engineering, the U.S. National Academy of
Engineering, the American Philosophical Society, and a Fellow
of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American
Physical Society, and the American Association for the
Advancement of Science (AAAS). She is a Regent of the
Smithsonian Institution, and a member of the Board of the
Council on Foreign Relations and The Brookings Institution. She
is a vice-chair of the Council on Competitiveness and
co-chaired its Energy Security, Innovation and Sustainability
initiative. She also is a member of the Board of
Directors of global companies including IBM and FedEx.
About Rensselaer
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, founded in 1824, is the
nation’s oldest technological research university. The
university offers bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees in
engineering, the sciences, information technology,
architecture, management, and the humanities and social
sciences. Institute programs serve undergraduates, graduate
students, and working professionals around the world.
Rensselaer faculty are known for pre-eminence in research
conducted in a wide range of fields, with particular emphasis
in biotechnology, nanotechnology, computation and information
technology, the media arts and technology, and energy and the
environment. The Institute is well known for its success in the
transfer of technology from the laboratory to the marketplace
so that new discoveries and inventions benefit human life,
protect the environment, and strengthen economic
development.
For more information about Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute go to: http://www.rpi.edu/
For information about the Royal Academy of
Engineering go to: http://www.raeng.org.uk/
For information about the Royal Academy of
Engineering’s 2013 ERA Foundation International Lecture go
to:
http://www.raeng.org.uk/events/pdf/ERA_InternationalLecture2013.pdf
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Published
January 23,
2013 |
Contact: Theresa Bourgeois
Phone: (518) 276-2840
E-mail: bourgt@rpi.edu |
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