Event

Effective Policy to Address the UK’s STEM Gap: Education, Immigration & Women in Science

8 June 2015, 5:30pm

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Monday, 8 June 2015 from 5:30 pm
Pfizer Lecture Theatre, Department of Chemistry, Cambridge, CB2 1EW

Cambridge University Science & Policy Exchange (CUSPE) has organised a panel discussion which takes place on Monday 8 June in Cambridge.

Science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) are fields at the heart of innovation and the UK’s economy, yet recent YouGov research shows that, according to both businesses and academics, nearly 60% of employers of STEM graduates think there is a skills gap in Britain. What policy interventions are needed to maintain the UK as a future STEM leader? At this event, a panel of leaders will discuss the vast number of areas of policy, from education to immigration, which affect the STEM job market and status of the UK from the perspective of academia, industry and government.

Confirmed speakers for this policy debate include (full bios can be found here):

  • Prof Dame Athene Donald - L'Oreal Unesco Laureat, University Gender Equality Champion, and Royal Society Council member and Education Committee Chair, as well as Cambridge Gender Equality Champion.
  • Paul Jackson - Chief Executive of Engineering UK.
  • Sarah Kuijlaars - Vice President of Finance and STEM ambassador, Royal Dutch Shell plc.
  • Niva Thiruchelvam - Head of Student and Short-term Migration Policy, Home Office and Policy Fellow at the Centre for Science and Policy.
How to register

For more information and to register your attendance, click here.

Sponsors

This policy debate has been generously sponsored by Astra Zeneca , Analysys Mason , Medimmune, Science, the Graduate School of Life Sciences, and the School of Biological Sciences.

  • In news articles

    Effective Policy to Address the UK’s STEM Gap

    Science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) are fields at the heart of innovation and the UK’s economy, yet recent YouGov research shows that, according to both businesses and academics, nearly 60% of employers of STEM graduates think there is a skills gap in Britain.