KnightInShiningArmorDis92
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2020
- Messages
- 95
As someone who went to public schools in an average suburban middle class part of America during the 2000s I don't recall anyone I knew from my school years who went into science or engineering.
I don't recall anyone from my elementary school years saying they dreamed of being an astronaut let alone a scientist or engineer.
I heard the 1960s "Space Race" inspired many of the youth of America during that era to go into science and engineering and they ended up giving us the tech boom of the 1990s.
It seems like American society in the 90s and 2000s were more excited by Hollywood level wealth and materialism rather than build a better future.
Could 90s and 2000s America done a better job at inspiring youth to go into science and engineering?
I don't recall anyone from my elementary school years saying they dreamed of being an astronaut let alone a scientist or engineer.
I heard the 1960s "Space Race" inspired many of the youth of America during that era to go into science and engineering and they ended up giving us the tech boom of the 1990s.
It seems like American society in the 90s and 2000s were more excited by Hollywood level wealth and materialism rather than build a better future.
Could 90s and 2000s America done a better job at inspiring youth to go into science and engineering?
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