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The Dulin Report

Browsable archive from the WordPress export.

2015

On Managing Stress, Multitasking and Other New Year's Resolutions Jan 1, 2015 Configuring Master-Slave Replication With PostgreSQL Jan 31, 2015 Trying to Replace Cassandra with DynamoDB ? Not so fast Feb 2, 2015 On apprenticeship Feb 13, 2015 Where AWS Elastic BeanStalk Could be Better Mar 3, 2015 Finding Unused Elastic Load Balancers Mar 24, 2015 Do not apply data science methods without understanding them Mar 25, 2015 Microsoft and Apple Have Everything to Lose if Chromebooks Succeed Mar 31, 2015 Two developers choose to take a class Apr 1, 2015 What can Evernote Teach Us About Enterprise App Architecture Apr 2, 2015 Exploration of the Software Engineering as a Profession Apr 8, 2015 Ordered Sets and Logs in Cassandra vs SQL Apr 8, 2015 Building a Supercomputer in AWS: Is it even worth it ? Apr 13, 2015 Apple is (or was) the Biggest User of Apache Cassandra Apr 23, 2015 My Brief Affair With Android Apr 25, 2015 Why I am not Getting an Apple Watch For Now: Or Ever Apr 26, 2015 The Clarkson School Class of 2015 Commencement May 5, 2015 The Clarkson School Class of 2015 Commencement speech May 5, 2015 We Need a Cloud Version of Cassandra May 7, 2015 Guaranteeing Delivery of Messages with AWS SQS May 9, 2015 Smart IT Departments Own Their Business API and Take Ownership of Data Governance May 13, 2015 Big Data is not all about Hadoop May 30, 2015 The longer the chain of responsibility the less likely there is anyone in the hierarchy who can actually accept it Jun 7, 2015 Your IT Department's Kodak Moment Jun 17, 2015 Attracting STEM Graduates to Traditional Enterprise IT Jul 4, 2015 Book Review: "Shop Class As Soulcraft" By Matthew B. Crawford Jul 5, 2015 The Three Myths About JavaScript Simplicity Jul 10, 2015 Social Media Detox Jul 11, 2015 Big Data Should Be Used To Make Ads More Relevant Jul 29, 2015 On Maintaining Personal Brand as a Software Engineer Aug 2, 2015 Ten Questions to Consider Before Choosing Cassandra Aug 8, 2015 What Every College Computer Science Freshman Should Know Aug 14, 2015 We Live in a Mobile Device Notification Hell Aug 22, 2015 Top Ten Differences Between ActiveMQ and Amazon SQS Sep 5, 2015 Setting Up Cross-Region Replication of AWS RDS for PostgreSQL Sep 12, 2015 I Stand With Ahmed Sep 19, 2015 Banking Technology is in Dire Need of Standartization and Openness Sep 28, 2015 IT departments must transform in the face of the cloud revolution Nov 9, 2015 Operations costs are the Achille's heel of NoSQL Nov 23, 2015 Our civilization has a single point of failure Dec 16, 2015

I Stand With Ahmed

September 19, 2015

This week a precocious 14-year old immigrant Ahmed Mohamed wanted to impress his teachers with a clock he made at home. He built it into one of those pencil boxes you buy at a craft store that look like a small brief case. The teachers and school officials thought it looked suspicious and called the police. The police proceeded to arrest him as a terrorism suspect1.

This is a technology blog and so I won't get into the topics of politics, racism, and terrorism. Let's even set aside the seemingly incompetent reaction of Irving, TX law enforcement who had not evacuated the school. Instead I am going to focus on the topic of STEM education in the United States.

[caption id="attachment_269" align="aligncenter" width="508"]My 8 year old daughter building an Arduino LCD circuit My 8 year old daughter building an Arduino LCD circuit[/caption]

It just so happened that a few days prior to this incident my 8 year old daughter asked if she can bring the Arduino LCD circuit I had built with her to school to show her friends and teachers. I was not even thinking that an elementary school teacher may think a circuit with batteries, wires and a display is a bomb and it may result in her arrest.

To tell the sorry state of American STEM education all one needs to do is take a tour of top engineering universities and visit science and engineering classrooms. A keen observer will find that the majority of students are immigrants. These students have multiple advantages over American students -- they come from cultures that value knowledge and education, families that invest in their childrens future, and teachers who can a tell a bomb from a clock.

Of course, what starts in universities transfers to workplaces. A visit to any software company or even an IT department just about anywhere will reveal that the majority of developers are immigrants as well. They come from India, China, Ukraine, Belarus, Russia, and elsewhere in Asia and Europe.

Meanwhile, American politicians draw crowds of people at campaign rallies fanning the flames of fear over American jobs2. The reality, however, is that a much bigger threat to the future of American middle class jobs starts in schools. When teachers, school, and law enforcement officials can't tell the difference between an explosive and a homemade clock -- how can American kids look up to them ?