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About Project 2061

Comet Halley

Project 2061 began its work in 1985-the year Halley's Comet was last visible from earth. Children starting school now will see the return of the Comet in 2061-a reminder that today's education will shape the quality of their lives as they come of age in the 21st century amid profound scientific and technological change.

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) founded Project 2061 in 1985 to help all Americans become literate in science, mathematics, and technology. (Link to report on two events celebrating Project 2061's 20th Anniversary.) Its work has earned the project a reputation as the "single most visible attempt at science education reform in American history" (Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, 1996). Or, as journalist Julia Steiny recently described it in the Providence Journal, "Project 2061 is the ultimate science project."

With its 1989 landmark publication Science for All Americans, Project 2061 set out recommendations for what all students should know and be able to do in science, mathematics, and technology by the time they graduate from high school. Science for All Americans laid the groundwork for the nationwide science standards movement of the 1990s. Benchmarks for Science Literacy, published in 1993, translated the science literacy goals in Science for All Americans into learning goals or benchmarks for grades K–12. Many of today's state and national standards documents have drawn their content from Benchmarks.

With nearly 200,000 copies of Science for All Americans and more than 100,000 copies of Benchmarks sold, Project 2061 has "changed the national climate for science education reform" (SRI International, 1996). These AAAS publications are the foundation for Project 2061's ongoing efforts to reform curriculum, instruction, and assessment. With recent publications like Atlas of Science Literacy and Designs for Science Literacy, Project 2061 continues to influence the direction of science education reform.

Whether evaluating textbooks and assessments or creating conceptual strand maps for educators, Project 2061 staff use their expertise as teachers, researchers, and scientists to help make science literacy a reality for all students. Through groundbreaking research and innovative books, CD-ROMs, and professional development workshops, Project 2061 is changing the way educators and members of the public think about the priorities and purposes of science, mathematics, and technology education.


Listen to Dr. Jo Ellen Roseman

Dr. Jo Ellen Roseman is director for Project 2061. She is responsible for overseeing all of the project's programs and activities in the areas of curriculum, instruction, assessment, and research.

Click below to see a video of Dr. Roseman discuss:


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Translations:
Proyecto 2061 en español