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2014 Annual Report
40 Years Inspiring Excellence
1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
1974 2014
40 Years Inspiring Excellence
This year we celebrate four decades of progress in leading the national effort to increase the representation of successful African American, American Indian, and Latino young women and men in engineering education and careers.
1977 1981
The first NACME Forum is held in Washington, D.C.The National Advisory
Council for Minorities in Engineering is established.
1974 1975
The first NACME Scholarships awarded to 84 students at 25 engineering schools.
1980
The National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering is formed when NACME merges with three other organizations — the Committee on Minorities in Engineering, the Minority Engineering Education Effort, and the National Fund for Minority Engineering Students.
NACME and AT&T/Bell Labs create Engineering: What’s It All About?, an engineering awareness publication for pre-engineering students.
The vision to create an engineering workforce that looks like America begins.
nacme.org 1
Since 1977, the number of URMs who have completed their engineering bachelor’s degree has dramatically increased. In 2012, for the �rst time, URMs earned more than 10,000 engineering degrees.
11,768 13.4%
of all engineering degrees
2013
2,810 5.7%
of all engineering degrees
1977
1974The organization that became NACME was formed by a group of corporate executives at the urging of minority leaders, business interests, and the academic community. The intent was to work toward achieving greater diversity in the �eld of engineering as a necessary workforce and economic imperative for the United States.
2014NACME’s Board of Directors, currently comprised of 39 major corporations and institutions,
has backed our mission of supporting URM student scholarships and programs. The 80 percent retention rate of NACME Scholars earning engineering degrees is further
boosting the number of underrepresented minority engineers critical to our workforce.
1,306%increase in the number of bachelor’s degrees earned by URM females from 1974 (only 189) to 2013, when that number stood at 2,658.
24,000underrepresented minority students (URMs)have been supported by NACME at 160 colleges and universities since its creation in 1974.
7,000+Latinos earned over 7,000 engineering bachelor’s degrees in 2013 (9.0 percent of all degrees), up from 1,290 in 1977 (2.6 percent of all degrees).
$142 millionin scholarships and support have been provided by NACME to URM engineering students.
Source: National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, IPEDS Completions Survey by Race, 1977-2013, Integrated Science and Engineering Resources Data System (WebCASPAR) (https://webcaspar.nsf.gov) [12/01/14].
The Reginald H. Jones Distinguished Service Award is established with General Electric Foundation.
1984
Corporate commitment to the NACME minority engineering effort tops $4 million.
NACME rebrands for its 10th Anniversary
1986
Inaugurates training for Minority Engineering Program (MEP) directors.
1983
NACME completes �rst full year of Technical Assistance to 36 pre-college projects.
1985
Publishes Improving the Retention and Graduation of Minorities in Engineer-ing with The National Association of Multicultural Engineering Program Advocates (NAMEPA).
1987
Publishes A Report to the Field, an analysis of trends in minority engineering education.
2 NACME 2014 Annual Report
A Message from the Chairman
NACME’s mission is to increase the number of underrepresented minority
engineering students in the engineering workforce. It is essential that we increase the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) talent pipeline that is so critical to our country’s competitiveness, national security, and growth. NACME is leveraging the U.S. industrial base, business leadership, and academic partnerships to achieve its vision that the STEM workforce represents the diverse composi-tion of our nation.
I have been an active member of the NACME Board of Directors since 2004, and have proudly served as vice chairman since 2011. I am now honored to chair the board as of October of last year. Personally, I also take great satisfaction in knowing I am part of something that not only will make our country stronger, but also has made a difference in so many people’s lives. Since its start in 1974, more than 24,000 minority engineering students have received scholarship support from NACME and have gone on to make a difference in their chosen �elds of profession.
For the last 40 years, NACME has become a signi�cant contributor in the shaping of our STEM pipeline. The board and I will build on this successful legacy and position NACME for the future by develop-ing a roadmap that clearly artic- ulates and solidi�es NACME’s future efforts. This roadmap will be developed in partnership with industry and academia to ensure that our alignment remains strong and our success will continue into the future.
NACME’s Board Companies provide leadership and strategic vision, recognizing the compelling need to close the gap in the
number of underrepresented minorities in the engineering workforce. Through this partner-ship with industry, we can ensure the U.S. maintains its innovation and technology edge in an increasingly competitive world.
Along with the other board companies, Raytheon Company bene�ts from and supports NACME’s efforts to increase the representation of African American, American Indian, and Latino women and men who are pursuing careers in STEM. These programs align closely with Raytheon’s core values, including embracing diversity and inclusion, accepting diverse opinions, and ful�lling our corporate commitment to STEM education.
NACME’s Board consists of global companies with facilities, businesses, and customers in nearly every corner of the world and employees from widely diverse backgrounds. Diversity of talent and thought is a cornerstone in providing solutions for the global market. To achieve and sustain success, our organizations must re�ect the world in which we live and work. We need to continue building a culture around recogniz-ing, respecting, and leveraging individual and cultural differences. As the global environment evolves
and becomes even more competi-tive, the next steps in our journeys to inclusiveness are critical.
While our work here is by no means complete, I believe that we are creating environments that encourage and enable all individu-als and groups to contribute to their fullest potential by realizing their unique capabilities, experiences, and perspectives for the collective bene�t of all. Accepting environ-ments foster networking and facilitate collaboration, thereby forging strong, trusting, and productive relationships that can be leveraged for mutual bene�t.
NACME is an excellent example of how different industries can come together to focus on issues that relate to common needs, and address issues far bigger than any individual �rm could tackle alone successfully.
As the Chairman of the NACME Board of Directors, I look forward to continuing my support of this organization in the pursuit of its goals.
Mark E. Russell Corporate Vice President Engineering, Technology, and Mission Assurance Raytheon Company
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
1988 1992
Produces PBS television special, America 2000: Education for a Competitive Work Force.
1993
Establishes the W. Lincoln Hawkins Undergraduate Research Fellowship.
1989
Vice President Dan Quayle, participates in FORUM ’89. NACME’s �rst Amazing
Spider-Man comic book is published through Marvel Comics.
Publishes Academic Gamesmanship: Becoming a “Master” Engineering Student.
1990
NACME Research Letter is launched.
nacme.org 3
Message from the President and Chief Executive Offi cer
As I refl ect on the signifi -
cance of 2014 in the life
and times of NACME, there
are two immediate thoughts that
come to mind: fi rst, how far
NACME has come in the past four
decades since our founding in
1974; and second, how exciting
the landscape ahead is for
NACME as we unveil our new
strategic plan, Connectivity 2020.
NACME takes great pride in the
demonstrable efforts to increase
diversity with equity in engineering
education and careers. Connectiv-
ity 2020 further compels the
organization to achieve high levels
of impact in the effort to shape
an American STEM workforce
where diversity drives global
competitiveness.
During its fi rst 40 years, NACME
worked diligently to realize the
current NACME vision: an
engineering workforce that looks
like America. In fact, NACME has
helped grow the number of
underrepresented minorities in the
engineering workforce from 2
percent to 10 percent. Over the
last several years, however,
NACME has risen to meet the very
ambitious goals outlined in the
previous strategic plan, Connectiv-
ity 2015. NACME has focused on
reaching a younger set of students
with its pre-engineering efforts and
the distribution of the NACME
Pre-Engineering Scholarship,
exponentially increasing the
number of students receiving
scholarship support. We are also
proud to announce that NACME
has supported more than 10,000
NACME Scholars who have
earned their undergraduate
degrees in engineering. NACME’s
outstanding body of work in
research has been recognized
by a growing number of sources,
including major news outlets, but
more importantly, our research has
helped secure a place for NACME
as an infl uencer on Capitol Hill.
Building on this legacy of
progress, the Central Idea for
Connectivity 2020 is for NACME
to be the catalyst for building
talent in the representation of
African American, American
Indian, and Latino young women
and men in engineering education
and careers. The virtuous cycle
resulting from our strategic
analysis in support of the Central
Idea assumes that stronger
performance in the three most
critical programmatic thrusts for
NACME — Scholarships and
University Relations, Pre-Engineer-
ing Programs, and Research and
Program Evaluation; will lead to
enhanced reputation via our
strategies in Strategic Communi-
cations and Engineering Public
Policy; which will, in turn, lead to
a strong fi nancial platform through
more effective and robust Revenue
Generation and greater Organiza-
tional Sustainability. We have
determined the aggressive results
that must be achieved in the next
fi ve-year planning horizon
(2016-2020) for this to happen.
In addition to NACME’s wonderful
40-year milestone, we welcomed
Raytheon’s Mark E. Russell as the
new chairman of the NACME Board
of Directors. Like his predecessors,
Mr. Russell brings a unique
perspective on the work NACME
does and has been infl uential in
helping the organization plan for the
future. I would also like to extend
my gratitude to David C. Nagel, the
former board director from BP plc,
who served as our coach and
facilitator for Connectivity 2020.
As always, the full execution of the
NACME Strategy will require the
dedication, commitment, and hard
work of our board, staff, and
partners. We know that African
American, American Indian, and
Latino communities trail the
national average in terms of
participation in STEM careers.
This comes at a time when
minorities are the most rapidly
growing segment of the popula-
tion. Ubiquitous technology has
removed many of America’s
competitive advantages. To win
in a “fl at” world, we must depend
on innovation and invention from
a highly skilled, highly educated,
and highly motivated workforce,
especially in the STEM profes-
sions. We refer to this state of
affairs as the “New” American
Dilemma. Unless we address this
dilemma systematically—and
soon—we will be unable to retain
our leadership position in scientifi c
and technological innovation and
our competitive edge in the global
marketplace of ideas.
Irving Pressley McPhail, Ed.D.President and Chief Executive Offi cer
NACME, Inc.
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
1994
The Engineering
Vanguard Program
is launched.
1995
NACME launches
Math is Power, a
multimillion-dollar, PSA
campaign featuring
celebrity spokesperson
Sinbad.
1996
Receives the
Presidential Award
for Excellence in
Science, Mathematics
& Engineering
Mentoring.
1997
The NACME Web site
(www.nacme.org) is
launched.
Achieves national
recognition with front
page lead article
in the Wall Street
Journal.
1998
Introduces NACME
Leadership Circle
Awards. The fi rst
recipients were
Exxon Corporation,
General Electric
Company, and IBM
Corporation.
4 NACME 2014 Annual Report
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
Max earned his bachelor’s degree
in computer science at Florida
International University in 1995
and his master’s and doctorate in
computer science at North Carolina
State University. He is currently the
Chief Architect for Cloud Innovations
at IBM Labs.
Eugene Michael Maximilien, Ph.D. IBM Corporation
NACME is selected
to manage Sloan
Foundation’s Minority
Ph.D. Scholarship
Program.
NACME Block Grant
Program succeeds the
Engineering Vanguard
Program as primary
scholarship tool.
2000
The fi rst NACME
Alumni Directory
is published.
Receives the
Exemplary Public
Interest Contribution
(EPIC) Award from
the U.S. Department
of Labor.
NACME-sponsored
research, Access
Denied: Race,
Ethnicity and the
Scientifi c Enterprise,
is published by Oxford
University Press.
1999
NACME celebrates
25th Anniversary
at Forum ’99.
2001
Establishes partnerships
with SECME and
MESA USA.
“ After completing my under-
graduate degree, I went on to
work for IBM and eventually to
graduate school, completing
my Ph.D. in computer science.
I have no doubt that winning a
NACME Scholarship in my fi rst
year as an undergraduate set me
on the path that I am on today.
The experience via internship,
support, and relationships it
helped to create, has been life
altering in my case.”
NACME Alumni:Proven Excellence in the Workplace
nacme.org 5
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
“ It has been an honor to serve
as NACME’s legal counsel and
corporate secretary since 1988.
I greatly enjoyed working with
their dedicated directors, of�cers
and staff, and participating in
the organization’s evolution
over the years. NACME’s
mission is important to many
constituencies, and I wish
them all the best in the years
to come.”
NACME Board of Directors: Long-Term Commitment
2005
The �rst NACME National Symposium is held in Vienna, Va.
2002
NACME is featured in PBS Voices of Vision series.
2004
NACME celebrates 30th Anniversary at the Waldorf Astoria in NYC.
2003
NACME-GEM Conference features “The Future of Affirmative Action in Higher Education.”
NACME launches the Online Resume Directory.
2006
NACME partners with NAF and PLTW to create “Academies of Engineering” (AOEs) and the �rst cohort of schools is established.
James Vardell served as the NACME Corporate Secretary for 26 years. Mr. Vardell joined Cravath, Swain & Moore LLP in 1980 after graduating from Yale Law School. He joined the NACME Board in 1988 and retired in 2014.
James C. Vardell, III Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP
6 NACME 2014 Annual Report
“ My relationship with NACME
continues to nurture my
engineering career. By being
a part of the NACME family,
I have established professional
connections and gained
invaluable experiences which
have helped me grow as an
engineer. For this I am grateful
for NACME’s investment in my
education and career.”
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
NACME Alumni:Proven Excellence in the Workplace
2010
NACME releases the 2010 Community College Transfer Study on Capitol Hill.
2008
NACME releases Confronting the “New” American Dilemma; Underrepresented Minorities in Engineering at the 2008 National Symposium.
2009
35th Anniversary Awards Dinner and Celebration raises $7.4 million in total scholarship support over a three-year period.
32nd Anniversary NACME’s Awards Dinner and Celebration raises more than $4 million for scholarships over a three-year period.
2007
The NACME Guide to Engineering Colleges is published with The Princeton Review.
2011
The 2011 NACME National Symposium is held in St. Paul, Minn.
Research & Policy Forum held on Capitol Hill.
Photo: Bechtel Corporation
DeeAnn TurpinBechtel OG&C
DeeAnn earned her bachelor’s degree in biological systems engineering at Kansas State University in 2013 and started working for Bechtel OG&C after graduating.
nacme.org 7
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
Riley P. Bechtel is Chairman of the Board of the Bechtel Corporation which was founded by his great-grandfather Warren A. Bechtel. His father, Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr. is among NACME’s original founders.
“ My father helped to found
NACME in 1974. Since then,
we have been proud to partner
with NACME in creating STEM
outreach programs, offering
college scholarships, and
connecting with diverse,
top-notch talent. Every day
we witness the power of diversity
in the challenging projects
Bechtel people deliver for
our customers.”
Riley BechtelBechtel Corporation
NACME Board of Directors: Founding Board Company
2012
38th Anniversary Awards Dinner and Celebration raises $7.7 million in total scholarship support over three-year period.
Research & Policy Forum with Hon. Eddie Bernice Johnson: “Increasing American Competitiveness.”
NACME publishes the 2011 NACME Data Book.
NACME introduces a series of Research and Policy Briefs.
2013
NACME unveils new brand and website.
Research and Policy Forum is held in Washington, D.C., focused on “College Affordability Challenges.”
National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc.
CD Presentation DecksThis CD contains a series of PowerPoint presentation decks, which will allow you to choose slides and include them in your presentations. Each deck is organized around a different theme with each reviewed in this book. Supplemental decks and updates will be made available periodically, as new data becomes available.
DECK 1
Increasing Diversity of the U.S. Population
DECK 2
Pre-College Educational Challenges
DECK 3
Enrollment and Persistence in Engineering
DECK 4
Engineering Degrees> Trends in Engineering Degrees Across Race/Ethnic Groups
> Distribution of Engineering Degrees by Discipline, 2009
> Engineering Degrees Within Race/Ethnic Groups
– Engineering Degrees Awarded to African Americans
– Engineering Degrees Awarded to American Indians
– Engineering Degrees Awarded to Latinos
DECK 5
The U.S. Engineering Workforce
Our MissionTo ensure American competitiveness in a �at world by leading and supporting the national effort to expand U.S. capability through increasing the number of successful African American, American Indian, and Latino women and men in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education and careers.
Our VisionAn engineering workforce that looks like America.
Our GoalWorking with our partners to produce an engineering graduating class that looks like America.
Our PurposeOur aim is to increase the proportion of African American, American Indian, and Latino graduates in STEM education and careers, our metric is parity in the workforce, and our methodology is connecting the network of like-minded individuals and organizations that share a commitment to these aims.
Our BeliefsWe believe in the concept of the “learning organization,” a community in which each member is encouraged and assisted to grow and develop. We support a NACME culture that is informed by our mission. We focus on the results—increasing the proportion of African American, American Indian and Latino graduates in STEM education and careers. We are active, optimistic and engaged. We are creative, innovative and disciplined in our approach. We strive to be effective team members who are committed to doing our best work and to delivering the best results for our partners along the continuum from middle school to workforce entry.
2009 2010 47,131
53,608 14,102 11,897
National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc.440 Hamilton Avenue, Suite 302White Plains, New York, 10601(914) 539-4010/(914) 539-4032 Faxnacme.org
2009200920092009200920092011 NACME Data Book
A Comprehensive Analysis of the “New” American Dilemma
RESEARCH & EVALUATION
20102010RESEARCH & EVALUATION
35.617.541.0 19.5
National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc.
CD Presentation Decks
DECK 1
Increasing Diversity of the U.S. Population
DECK 2
Pre-College Educational Challenges
DECK 3
Enrollment and Persistence in Engineering
DECK 4
Engineering Degrees> Trends in Engineering Degrees Across Race/Ethnic Groups
> Distribution of Engineering Degrees by Discipline, 2009
> Engineering Degrees Within Race/Ethnic Groups
– Engineering Degrees Awarded to African Americans
– Engineering Degrees Awarded to American Indians
– Engineering Degrees Awarded to Latinos
DECK 5
The U.S. Engineering Workforce
Acknowledgements:
The 2011 NACME Data Book was completed by Dr. Lisa M. Frehill, NACME Director of Research, Evaluation and Policy. The author is grateful for comments provided by the NACME Research and Policy Advisory Council: Linda S. Hagedorn, Iowa State University; Shaun Harper, University of Pennsylvania; Etta Hollins University of Missouri– Kansas City; Gary S. May, Georgia Institute of Technology; Jose Moreno, California State University, Long Beach; Watson Scott Swail, Educational Policy Institute; and Bevlee A. Watford, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
© 2011 NACME, Inc.
Dear Colleague,
In 2008, NACME released the widely cited 2008 NACME Data Book. That document contained the most up-to-date information available on
the state of underrepresented minority group [African American, American Indian, and Latino] participation in engineering education and the engineering workplace. Today we are pleased to release the 2011 NACME Data Book.
Throughout its nearly four decades of operation, NACME has been committed to fostering research-based changes in policies and practices to raise awareness and promote discussion on the critical national imperative to increase diversity with equity in engineering education and careers. Data is the coin of the realm in energizing this discussion. We are proud that our data and analysis have been cited
by colleagues in K-12 education, higher education, government, and business, and have appeared in prestigious academic journals, books, technical reports and websites.
In order to make this data more directly accessible and, therefore, useful to researchers, policy makers, and others, we have created a new format for the 2011 NACME Data Book. The document you are holding in your hands consists of an overview section and a CD containing �ve data decks complete with PowerPoint slides. This more �exible format will permit users to customize the data for their own presentations and reports.
Please let me thank you for your active engagement in the effort to ensure “an engineering workforce that looks like America.” We urge you to use the data in the 2011 NACME Data Book to make the case that the solution to America’s competitiveness problem is to activate the hidden workforce of young men and women who have traditionally been underrepresented in STEM careers—African Americans, American Indians, and Latinos. Diversity drives innovation and its absence imperils our designs, our products, and, most of all, our creativity—all components of competitiveness. This is the dilemma facing our nation today, and unless we address it systematically—and soon—we will be unable to retain our leadership position in scienti�c and technological innovation and our competitive edge in the global marketplace of ideas.
Cordially,
Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail, EdD Exective Vice President and Chief Executive Of�cer NACME, Inc.
The 2013 NACME National Symposium and Third Annual NACME Continuum Meeting were held in Washington, D.C.
Congressional Visits Day with ASTRA.
2013 NACME NATIONAL SYMPOSIUM
TAKE ACTION: CHANGING STEM EDUCATION F O R U R M S T H R O U G H RESEARCH AND POLICY
The 2013 NACME Symposium Research and Policy Journal is published.
Photo: Bruce Weir
8 NACME 2014 Annual Report
Janice C. Morell NACME Scholar New Jersey Institute of Technology
Raina earned her bachelor’s degree in systems engineering at the University of Pennsylvania and her master’s in organizational development at The Pennsylvania State University. She is currently the Vice President of Culture, Diversity and Equal Opportunity Programs at Lockheed Martin.
“ Advancing STEM education
and creating a diverse STEM
talent pipeline are critical focus
areas for Lockheed Martin.
We’re proud to partner with
NACME to increase the number
of successful African American,
American Indian, and Latino
engineering graduates who
will pursue careers in STEM.”
Rainia WashingtonLockheed Martin Corporation
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
NACME Alumni:Proven Excellence in the Workplace
STEM Leadership Forum is sponsored by Hewlett-Packard in Palo Alto, Calif.
NACME receives a $300K grant from the National Science Foundation entitled, Success Factors for Minorities in Engineering: A Study of NACME Programs.
40th Anniversary Awards Dinner and Celebration raises $5 million in total scholarship support over a three-year period.
Applied Sciences NYC Project panel discussion is held to promote city-wide STEM education and careers. Panelists represented were from Carnegie Mellon University, Columbia University, Cornell University, and New York University.
The 2013 NACME Data Book is published.
2014
Engineer Something Amazing! materials for pre-engineering students are published.
STEM Leadership Forum is sponsored by Johnson Controls, Inc. in Milwaukee, Wis.
Photo: Eric Schulzinger
nacme.org 9
Education Programs NACME celebrates the accomplishments of Scotlandville Magnet High School Academy of Engineering (AOE), located in Baton Rouge, La., under the leadership of Mr. Howard Davis, Principal and Ms. Beatrice Arvie, AOE Director.
The AOE model was born out of collaboration with the National Academy Foundation (NAF), a network of career-themed academies, Project Lead the Way (PLTW), and NACME as founding partners. To date there are 97 AOEs estab-lished across the country.
In 2014 the Scotlandville Magnet Academy AOE, achieved “Distinguished” Academy status by NAF along with two other AOEs. This designation is given to academies that have exhibited exceptional �delity to an educational model that prepares students for success in colleges and careers.
Pre-Engineering Scholarships NACME awarded nearly $212,500 in pre-engi-neering scholarships to graduating high school seniors in 2014. With the launch of the online pre-engineering scholarship application, NACME was able to attract academically talented underrepresented minority high school students from across the country. These scholarships were sponsored by AT&T, the BP Foundation, Chevron, ExxonMobil Foundation, and New York Community Trust. Students from Scotlandville Magnet High School Academy of Engineering were awarded the most pre-engi-neering scholarships from an Academy of Engineering in 2014. NACME congratulates:
Keltrin Burrell, II, Southern University and A&M College
Tyneeka Dyson, University of Virginia
Tyler Henderson, Southern University and A&M College
Nicholas Jones, Louisiana State University
Rayneisha Maiden, University of Houston
Mia McKee, Southern University and A&M College
Cha’Quoncia Ruf�n, University of Louisiana at Lafayette
Jaylen Scott, Southern University and A&M College
Kaylen Scott, Southern University and A&M College
Another achievement of Scotlandville Magnet High School Academy of Engineering was the testimony given by Ms. Beatrice Arvie at the 2013 NACME National Symposium in Washing-ton, D.C., for the Capitol Hill special STEM session. She was joined by others from Achieving the Dream, ASME, Association for Women in Science (AWIS), Florida International University, Jobs for the Future, Marathon Oil Company, SIE LLC, Society of Women Engineers (SWE), and Tuskegee University, all of whom wrote white papers on STEM education which were published in the 2013 NACME Symposium Research and Policy Journal. To read these testimonies, visit nacme.org/research-publications#research-reports.
Scotlandville Magnet High School Academy of Engineering has mastered the ability to attract corporate partners to serve on their advisory council, a component of the NAF academy model. A total of four NACME Board Company representatives serve on Scotlandville’s High School Engineering Professions Advisory Council: The Dow Chemical Company, Entergy, ExxonMobil, and Shell Chemicals. This a remarkable achievement, the most of any AOE since the inception of the collaborative effort. Internship placements are another component of the NAF academy model and NACME thanks board company AT&T for their efforts to secure internships for summer 2014.
Many other NACME Board Companies like Entergy and ExxonMobil have participated in providing internships for Scotlandville’s students as well.
Scotlandville Magnet High School is one of 10 AOEs that had the opportunity to receive up to $5,000 for PLTW curriculum and materials that increase students’ awareness of the exciting �eld of engineering in a way that brings STEM concepts to life, thanks to the AT&T Founda-tion. The AT&T Foundation has been supporting this effort since 2008.
Scotlandville Magnet High School Academy of Engineering demonstrates NACME’s ability to connect various partners to impact the pathway from middle school to workforce entry.
Pictured (L-R): NACME’s Senior Vice President for Operations, Saundra Johnson Austin; Scotlandville Magnet High School Assistant Principal, Harry Wright; student Rayneisha Maiden; student Tyler Henderson; President of NAF, JD Hoye; and Beatrice Arvie, Director of the Academy of Engineering at Scotlandville.
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
NACME STEM Integration ModelScotlandville Magnet High School is one of several AOEs in regions that bene�ted tremendously from the NACME STEM Integration Model (NSIM), which is designed to integrate existing program elements into a uni�ed continuum that leverages existing partnerships for students to move along the NACME Continuum from:
Academies of Engineering to NACME Partner Institutions and their linkage to Community Colleges
NACME Scholars to the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Minority Ph.D. and Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership Program faculty
NACME Scholars to board companies for the purpose of gaining hands-on engineering experience in a summer internship/co-op assignment or to seek a full-time position
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Minority Ph.D. and Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership Program Scholars to NACME Board Companies
A
B
C
D
Pre-Engineering
Community College
University
Graduate School
STEMWorkforce
A
A B D
C
A
10 NACME 2014 Annual Report
Scholarships and University RelationsAs NACME celebrates its 40th Anniversary, it has amassed more than 10,000 NACME Scholars who have earned their undergraduate degree in engineering. Accordingly, it seems �tting to re�ect on who the graduates are and what they have accomplished. The University Programs report focuses on the following four program initiatives that were launched by NACME over the past 40 years. They are listed in chronological order and each highlights one of the graduates who exempli�es that program’s extraordinary achievements.
Incentive Grants Program (IGP) 1975 - 1996The Incentive Grants Program was awarded to engineering schools that demonstrated a commitment to enrolling and graduating increasing numbers of quali�ed students who were African American, Chicano/Mexican American, American Indian, or Puerto Rican. In addition, the Summer Engineering Employ-ment Project (SEEP) was designed to expose the scholars to career opportunities in business and industry at corporations that contributed to their education.
Through university partnerships, 6,797 scholars graduated with a bachelor’s degree in engineering.
“ Being a NACME Scholar meant getting an engineering degree and providing a ray of hope for my town and family.”
— Renaldo M. Trevino, P.E.
Renaldo, attended Texas A&M University and earned his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering in 1978.
Corporate Scholars Program (CSP) 1990 - 2003The Corporate Scholars Program promoted exceptional academic performance, leadership skills, and commitment to excellence among more than 700 engineering students who were selected as scholars. Of those, 565 scholars graduated with a bachelor’s degree in engineering.
“ I am from Haiti, one of the poorest nations in the western hemisphere. I was admitted to Florida International University to pursue my undergraduate degree. Through NACME, I was given a scholarship toward my cost of education and the opportunity for a paid summer internship with IBM. ”
— Eugene Michael Maximilien, Ph.D.
Max earned his bachelor’s degree in computer science at Florida International University in
1995, and his masters and doctorate in computer science at North Carolina State University. He is currently the Chief Architect for Cloud Innovations at IBM Labs.
The Engineering Vanguard Program 1995 - 2003The Engineering Vanguard Program was a pilot project that provided intense academic and leadership training to culturally diverse teams of high school students from economically disadvantaged communities. Each group attended one of 12 participating institutions that worked with NACME to build enhanced academic infrastructure and to offer full �nancial support to cover the cost of tuition and room and board. The NACME Scholars Vanguard Program graduated 212 scholars with a bachelor’s degree in engineering.
“ NACME has provided me with invaluable support throughout my college years at Drexel University. I was truly honored and blessed to have been given the financial support to attend the university of my choice. The NACME staff was my home away from home, my extended family, giving me the added strength and courage to believe in myself and push harder to achieve my life goals, which I will never forget.”
— Aaron Henry
Aaron earned his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering at Drexel University in 2002 and his master’s in systems engineering/technical management at The John Hopkins University in 2014. He is currently a systems engineer at Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems.
NACME Scholars Program 2003 - PresentThe NACME Scholars Program goals are accomplished through our partnerships with the objectives to: • Establishanddeepenengagementthrough
partnerships;• Buildinstitutionalcapability; • Learnfromourprograms;and • Transferandadaptknowledge.
In addition, our institutional partners are expected to increase the bachelor’s degree completion rates in engineering for the NACME Scholars and demonstrate progress toward narrowing or closing the gap in degree comple-tion rates between their African American, American Indian, and Latino engineering students and their non-minority peers. As of 2013, 1,622 scholars have graduated with a bachelor’s degree in engineering.
“ I was very fortunate to have several scholarships and fellowships during my academic tenure. NACME was the only fellowship that required me to participate in a mentoring program. The mentor/mentee relationships that were developed because of NACME have overwhelmingly exceeded the face value of the stipends, and have afforded me countless opportu-nities during my career journey—these blessings are truly priceless. Being a NACME Scholar not only provided me added financial peace of mind, but more importantly, it enabled me to grow strong and lasting professional relationships that continue to give to this day.”
— Gregory Von White, II, Ph.D.
Gregory earned his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in 2006, and his doctorate in chemical engineering at Clemson University in 2010. He currently works at Sandia National Laboratories as a systems engineer.
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
Minority Ph.D. Programs
NACME also administers the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Minority Ph.D. (MPHD) and the Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership (SIGP) programs. These programs are designed to assist efforts to diversify the U.S. Ph.D. degree-holding workforce by increasing the recruitment, retention, and graduation of underrepre-sented doctoral students in STEM, especially in �elds where national trends document persistent underrepresentation. Since 1995, the MPHD program has granted scholarships to 1,765 scholars, and produced 714 Ph.D.-funded gradu-ates. The SIGP program has funded 142 M.S. and 66 Ph.D. scholars, and produced 74 M.S. and 19 Ph.D. graduates.
In 2013, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation partnered with three University Centers of Exemplary Mentoring (UCEMs): Cornell University, Georgia Institute of Technology, and The Pennsylvania State University. In 2014, the Foundation announced two new UCEM partnerships, awarding the University of South Florida and the University of Iowa grants of $630,000 and $1,000,000, respectively. The grants to UCEMs total more than $5 million, the majority of which supports stipends and professional development activities for scholars.
nacme.org 11
Institutional Partners40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
By Gender2013-2014
n Men
n Women
32% 68%
By Ethnicity2013-2014
Note: 254 Latino scholars, or 32 percent of the total NACME Scholar Latino population, are enrolled at Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico.
n African American
n American Indian/ Alaska Native
n Latino
n Other
1%
5%
34%60%
By Academic Discipline2013-2014
Mechanical Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Other Engineering
Civil/Environmental Engineering
Computer Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Industrial Engineering and Operations Research
Biomedical/Bioengineering
Computer Science/Information/Systems/Technology
Other
20%
18%
12%
12%
11%
8%
8%
5%
3%
3%
WestCalifornia State University, Los AngelesCalifornia State University, SacramentoSan José State UniversityUniversity of Alaska AnchorageUniversity of California, San DiegoUniversity of Colorado BoulderUniversity of IdahoUniversity of Washington
SouthwestNorthern Arizona UniversityPrairie View A&M UniversityTexas A&M UniversityUniversity of HoustonUniversity of Texas at DallasUniversity of Texas at El PasoUniversity of Texas at San Antonio
MidwestKansas State UniversityKettering UniversityMilwaukee School of EngineeringMissouri University of Science and TechnologyPurdue UniversityRose-Hulman Institute of TechnologyUniversity of AkronUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor
SoutheastFlorida A&M UniversityFlorida International UniversityGeorgia Institute of TechnologyJackson State UniversityLouisiana State UniversityNorth Carolina A&T State UniversityPolytechnic University of Puerto RicoTennessee Technological UniversityTuskegee UniversityUniversity of ArkansasUniversity of Central FloridaUniversity of KentuckyVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State UniversityWest Virginia University
NortheastBucknell UniversityThe City College of New YorkCornell UniversityMorgan State UniversityNew Jersey Institute of TechnologyNew York University Polytechnic School of EngineeringRochester Institute of TechnologyRutgers, The State University of New JerseyState University of New York at OswegoStevens Institute of TechnologySyracuse UniversityUniversity of BridgeportUniversity of Maryland, Baltimore County
In addition to its Board of Directors, NACME is guided and supported by 51 of the nation’s top educational institutions, as of August, 2014.
Southeast
West
Northeast
Midwest
Southwest
NACME Scholars(N=1,314)
30.5%In 2013, 30.5 percent of
underrepresented minority
engineering graduates
came from NACME
Institutional Partners.
12 NACME 2014 Annual Report
Research and Program Evaluation
NACME’s ‘Big Study’In 2014, NACME completed the �rst phases of the National Science Foundation (NSF) funded research project entitled Success Factors for Minorities in Engineering: A Study of NACME Programs. The objective of this project is to take an empirical look at how NACME Partner Institutions recruit, enroll, educate, retain, and graduate increasing numbers of underrepre-sented minority engineering students, and discern the factors that distinguish the programs that are most successful in this mission. Thus far, a statistical analysis of each partner institution was performed to explore retention to graduation rates, test scores, and GPA data. In addition, 11 institutions were visited by the principal investigator of this project, Dr. Jacqueline Fleming, for focus groups and interviews with faculty and students. This project is scheduled to be completed in 2016.
2013 NACME Symposium Research and Policy JournalThis year, NACME published the 2013 NACME Symposium Research and Policy Journal, which contains transcripts, white papers, and testimonies from the impressive roster of participants in the 2013 NACME National Symposium and Third Annual Continuum Meet-ing, held September 30 through October 3, 2013, in Washington, D.C. The journal serves as a call to action for policymakers to embrace the proven, effective approaches targeted to the hidden workforce of young women and men who have traditionally been underrepre-
sented in STEM education and careers. This document challenges existing paradigms and reframes the research-policy nexus for change and action in pre-engineering, scholarships and �nancial aid, mathematics education, peda-gogy and learning, engineering public policy, and engineering workforce development.
NACME Research BriefsThis past year, NACME started publication of Volume 4 of its Research Brief series. Each brief provides an overview of data on underrepre-sented minorities in engineering education and careers. The following are the �ve topics:
No 1. African Americans in Engineering No 2. American Indian/Alaska Natives in Engineering No 3. Latinos in Engineering No 4. Science Standards in the United States No 5. NACME Scholars
Program EvaluationNACME programs are routinely evaluated to measure their impact and effectiveness. In 2014, Metis Associates, a national consulting �rm with expertise in education research and evaluation, completed an evaluation of the NACME STEM Integration Model to document the successes of the initiative to date and help shape the future direction of the model.
Data is collected from NACME partners on student and institutional outcomes to help inform programmatic decision making. Partner institutions provide NACME with appropriate data
to track student academic progress, speci�cally retention and graduation data about the NACME Scholars and their peers in the College of Engineering. NACME drafts reports that summarize this data for each partner, and uses the information for strategic decision-making.
NACME is proud to report that 30.5 percent of the engineering bachelor’s degrees awarded to URMs in 2013 were conferred at NACME Partner Institutions. We will continue to assess these institutions to learn about best practices that can be shared through our publications.
The NACME Research and Policy Advisory CouncilThe NACME Research and Policy Advisory Council consists of distinguished scholars with expertise in STEM education, pedagogy, research, and policy. NACME would like to thank the following individuals who have helped to advance our research and evaluation agenda:
Linda Serra Hagedorn, Ph.D.ProfessorAssociate Dean of Undergraduate ProgramsIowa State University
Shaun Harper, Ph.D.Associate ProfessorExecutive Director, Center for the Study of Race & Equity in Education
University of Pennsylvania
Etta Ruth Hollins, Ph.D.Professor, Teacher EducationEwing Marion Kauffman Endowed Chair for Urban Teacher Education
University of Missouri–Kansas City
Gary S. May, Ph.D.Dean, College of EngineeringProfessor, School of Electrical & Computer Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology
José Moreno, Ed.D.Associate Professor of Latino Education & Policy Studies
Chicano & Latino Studies DepartmentCalifornia State University, Long Beach
Andria Costello-Staniec, Ph.D.Associate ProfessorAssociate Provost for Academic ProgramsSyracuse University
Watson Scott Swail, Ed.D.President & Chief Executive Of�cer Educational Policy Institute
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
2013 NACME Symposium
Research and Policy Journal
J O I N T C O N G R E S S I O N A L
STEM SESSION
OCTOBER 2
THIRD ANNUAL NACME CONTINUUM
MEETING
SEPTEMBER 30— OCTOBER 1
2013 NACME NATIONAL SYMPOSIUM
TAKE ACTION: CHANGING STEM EDUCATION F O R U R M S T H R O U G H RESEARCH AND POLICY
OCTOBER 1–3
6317 NACME Symp Report Final2 to Printer 03_14.indd 1 3/14/14 6:15 PM
2013 NACME Symposium Research and Policy Journal available online at nacme.org/publications
nacme.org 13
Institutional Advancement
During its 40th Anniversary year, NACME continued to receive support from its closest corporate and foundation friends, while welcoming new non-board corporate donor companies, including: CSC, Seagate, HAKS, Pitney-Bowes, Entergy, Celgene, Celestica, and Emulex. Most encouraging are the ways in which NACME’s closest and strongest supporters have found additional ways to contribute to the NACME mission and vision. Whether by hosting NACME staff for profes-sional development opportunities, or providing new servers for the new of�ce location, the NACME Board continues to respond in ways that strengthen the organization.
Much of the year was spent in preparation for the 40th Anniversary Awards Dinner & Celebra-tion on October 15, 2014 at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City. More than 500 people �lled the Grand Ballroom to honor an array of leaders, all of whom have made signi�cant contributions to diversity with equity in engineering.
NACME AlumniNACME also continues to expand the network of NACME Alumni. Alumni are encouraged to connect to the NACME LinkedIn group and let NACME help build their professional network throughout their careers. NACME encourages alumni to consider giving back in order to help the next generation of NACME Scholars to
achieve their dreams of joining the engineering profession and contributing in meaningful ways to �nding solutions to the world’s most critical challenges.
NACME has come a long way in 40 years as an organization, as has the nation. More than 24,000 underrepresented minority students have been the direct bene�ciaries — their lives having been opened up to new scienti�c and technological career possibilities— exactly what the nation and American competiveness require. NACME thanks all of our donors, large and small. Your support is changing the world for the better.
NACME thanks Marilyn Berry Thompson, Ellen Smith, and Alanna Suda of MWW Group for their efforts to position NACME in front of members of the White House Executive Branch, federal agencies, and key members of Congress, who support STEM education—both bipartisan and bicameral. NACME has had the good fortune these past four years to have bene�tted from their hard work to get NACME cited in STEM bills, as well as elevating NACME’s presence among policymakers in Washington, D.C. Most notable was the endorsement of NACME’s contributions to supporting underrepresented minorities in engineering by the Honorable Secretary Ernest Moniz, U.S. Department of Energy, via a video broadcast at the October, 2013, NACME National Symposium in Washington, D.C.
In July, 2013, Secretary Moniz tasked the Honorable LaDoris “Dot” Harris, Director of the Of�ce of Economic Impact and Diversity, to assemble a broad group of stakeholders from across academia, nonpro�t organizations, policy groups, and businesses to begin a dialogue on the position of minority communi-ties as it relates to the Department of Energy and the energy sector overall. The stakeholders met over several weeks and identi�ed three areas that were vital in the development of strategies to engage minority communities in the energy sector. These three focus areas are: STEM education/workforce development,
energy economic development, and climate change. This effort was the beginning of the Minorities in Energy Initiative (MIE). MIE is designed to link together representatives from diverse community organizations, academia, industry, government, and nonpro�ts to provide perspectives and to address shared challenges in the areas of energy economic development, STEM education/workforce development, and climate change. NACME’s Senior Vice President for Operations, Saundra Johnson Austin, participates in the STEM Education/Workforce Development group. She presented about NACME during the STEM Education/Workforce Development breakout at MIE’s kick-off and Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration on September 24, 2013. Subsequent events followed, keeping the dialogue open between several federal agencies and private partners.
On November 13, 2013, stakeholders were welcomed to attend the White House Forum on Minorities in Energy, co-hosted by the Department of Energy, the Council on Environ-mental Quality, the White House Of�ce of Science and Technology Policy, and the White House Of�ce of Public Engagement, to expand the conversation on the role of minorities in the energy sector. It was at this event that the Department of Energy announced its Ambas-sadors for the Minorities in Energy Initiative. The Ambassadors are key leaders in industry, government, academia, and nonpro�ts, who
are committed to lending their voices and vision to inform and inspire Americans about the critical need for greater diversity in STEM professions, energy entrepreneurship, and climate adaptation and mitigation. Dr. McPhail is among the 18 individuals who accepted this invitation from Secretary Moniz to serve as one of the MIE ambassadors.
On November 19, 2013, the Congressional Forum on Minorities in Energy was jointly hosted by the Department of Energy and the Honorable Bobby Rush, Ranking Member for the Subcommittee on Energy and Power. This event drew NACME Alumni Ray C. Dempsey, Jr., Vice President, External Affairs, BP America, and Sandra Begay Campbell, Principal Member, Technical Staff, Sandia National Laboratory as speakers for the STEM Education/Workforce panelists. They were joined by Greg Gershuny, Chief of Staff, Of�ce of Energy Policy and Systems Analysis for the Department of Energy, Dimitri Kusnezov, Ph.D., Senior Advisor to the Secretary for the Department of Energy, and Ray Mellado, Founder and CEO of Great Minds in STEM.
November, 2014, marks the one year anniver-sary of the Minorities in Energy Initiative. Dr. McPhail was among the notable speakers participating in the Annual Recognition Program on November 18, 2014, at Lockheed Martin’s Global Vision Center in Arlington, Va.
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
Engineering Public Policy40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
14 NACME 2014 Annual Report
NACME 40th Anniversary Awards Dinner & Celebration40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
Celebrating Successful Partnerships: Applied Sciences NYC Project Panel Discussion
Prior to its Awards Dinner, NACME held a unique panel discussion entitled, “Celebrating Successful Partnerships: Applied Sciences NYC Project” with all of the key partners in the groundbreaking initiative that will help make New York City the “Silicon Valley” of the east. The in-depth panel discussion opened with remarks from former New York City Deputy Mayor for Economic Development, Robert K. Steel, who is now the Chief Executive Of�cer at Perella Weinberg Partners.
40th Anniversary Awards Dinner and Celebration
The NACME 40th Anniversary Awards Dinner and Celebration took place on Wednesday, October 15, 2014, at the legendary Waldorf Astoria, New York City. The event was attended by more than 500 individuals representing NACME’s corporate supporters, academic partners, NACME Scholars and Alumni, and other special guests. As always, NACME took the time during its anniversary celebration to honor those outstanding individuals and corporations that have been instrumental in helping NACME continue to pursue its mission and vision.
(L-R): Dr. Lance Collins, Cornell University; Dr. Philip LeDuc, Carnegie Mellon University; Dr. Steven Koonin, New York University; Dr. Kathy McKeown, Columbia University; and Mr. Steel.
The Waldorf Astoria Grand Ballroom at the height of NACME’s celebration.
(L-R): Dr. McPhail and Sandra Begay-Campbell, NACME Alumni Circle Award Recipient, and Principal Member of the Technical Staff, Sandia National Laboratories.
High School for Construction Trades, Engineering and Architecture Academy of Engineering students with Steven Wynn, Assistant Principal (standing, second from left); Obed Louissaint, Vice President of People and Culture at IBM (seated, far right); engineering teacher, Keith Williams (standing, second from right); and Dr. Maximilien (standing, far right).
Students from Manhattan Bridges High School Academy of Engineering with Assistant Principal Kathy Fine (top right); and Dr. Collins (top left).
14 NACME 2014 Annual Report
Pho
to: B
rend
a K
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nacme.org 15
Through the generosity of individuals, corpora-tions, and educational institutions, NACME raised more than $1 million prior to the anniversary celebration. These funds will be used to support NACME’s scholarships and programs. Sue Barsamian, Senior Vice President at HP, and Vice Chairman of NACME Board of Directors, and John Hinshaw, Executive Vice President at HP, surprised everyone by announcing that NACME would be receiving an additional gift from HP of $50,000 that will be used to help attract more URMs to computer science. HP then challenged NACME’s other supporters in attendance to match its generous gift.
(L-R): Khadidiatou (Khady) Guiro, �rst recipient of The Pressley and Mauise Vinson McPhail/NACME Scholarship in Biomedical Engineering, Dr. McPhail, and Dr. Christine McPhail.
(L-R) Dr. Yannis Yortsos, Dean of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering; Michael J. Barber, Vice President, General Electric and NACME Board Member; Dr. Timothy M. Pinkston, Professor and Vice Dean of Faculty Affairs at USC. Dr. Yortos and Dr. Pinkston accepted the Reginald H. Jones Distin-guished Service Award on behalf of Dr. John Brooks Slaughter, former NACME President and CEO.
Contributing Sponsors from DuPont, a founding NACME Board company, and 2012 recipient of NACME’s Corporate Citizenship Award.
(L-R) Dr. McPhail; Dr. Diana Natalicio, President of the University of Texas at El Paso and winner of the Diversity Vision Award, and Mark E. Russell.
(L-R) Dr. Irving Pressley McPhail with HP’s John Hinshaw and Sue Barsamian. Hewlett-Packard Company received the Corporate Citizenship Award.
(L-R): Dr. McPhail and Dr. Gregory Von White, II, of Sandia National Laboratories, a NACME Alumnus who was recognized for winning the DiscoverE Foundation, 2014 New Faces of Engineering Award.
16 NACME 2014 Annual Report
Statement of Financial PositionAs of August 31, 2014 (with comparative totals for 2013) NACME, Inc. (a not-for-pro�t corporation)
2014 2013ASSETS:
Cash and cash equivalents $ 8,498,136 $ 9,168,183
Short-term investments 9,605,697 8,114,263
Promises to give 443,350 203,800
Long-term investments 970,421 895,517
Leasehold improvements, of�ce furniture and equipment 323,685 109,831
TOTAL ASSETS $ 19,841,289 $ 18,491,594
LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS:
LIABILITIES:
Sloan Foundation – program fund advance $ 5,642,253 $ 6,049,194
Accounts payable and accrued expenses 27,032 14,208
Deferrals 1,267,768 503,128
Total Liabilities $ 6,937,053 $ 6,566,530
NET ASSETS:
Unrestricted $ 11,260,030 $ 9,315,488
Temporarily restricted 1,182,777 2,152,749
Permanently restricted 461,429 456,827
Total Net Assets $ 12,904,236 $ 11,925,064
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS $ 19,841,289 $ 18,491,594
Management’s Statement of Financial Responsibility
The management takes full responsibility for the integrity and accuracy of the NACME �nancial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
Our corporate governance policies and practices include the following:
• A majority of our Board is comprised of independent directors.
• Only independent directors are members of the Executive, Governance, Policy, Development, and Finance Committees.
• The Executive, Governance, Policy, Development, and Finance Commit-tees make appropriate use of charters that clearly detail each Committee’s responsibilities.
• The Finance Committee retains the independent auditor and regularly reviews the �nancial condition of the company. The independent auditor has free access to the Finance Committee.
We are committed to providing �nancial information that is transparent, timely, complete, relevant, and accurate.
Irving Pressley McPhail, Ed.D.President and Chief Executive Of�cer
Michael T. PanVice President, Finance/Administration, and Chief Financial Of�cer
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
nacme.org 17
Statement of ActivitiesFor the year ended August 31, 2014 (with comparative totals for 2013) NACME, Inc. (a not-for-pro�t corporation)
These �nancial statements are a condensed version of the audited statements of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc., for the year ended August 31, 2014. For comparative purposes, certain report classi�cations have been changed to conform to the reporting convention used in 2014.
NACME will be pleased to provide complete copies, along with all footnotes and the unquali�ed report of our independent auditor, upon request.
You may obtain a copy of the latest annual report �led with the New York State Board of Social Welfare by writing to the Secretary, State of New York, 162 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12231, Attention: Charitable Registration Division.
2014 2013PUBLIC SUPPORT AND REVENUE:
Contributions and Grants $ 3,699,841 $ 4,034,734
Contributions in kind 3,582,401 3,868,422
Interest and dividends 242,634 200,046
Other income/events 603,104 1,380,420
TOTAL PUBLIC SUPPORT AND REVENUE $ 8,127,980 $ 9,483,622
EXPENSES:
PROGRAM SERVICES:
Scholarship programs $ 5,610,948 $ 5,825,708
Pre-engineering education programs 441,291 448,167
Information dissemination 484,863 462,484
Research and policy 422,942 377,326
Total Program Services $ 6,960,044 $ 7,113,685
Development 649,642 609,644
Management and general 992,124 926,506
TOTAL EXPENSES $ 8,601,810 $ 8,649,835
Excess public support and revenue over expenses $ (473,830) $ 833,787
OTHER INCOME:
Net gains on investments $ 1,453,002 $ 1,019,557
Change in net assets $ 979,172 $ 1,853,344
Net assets at beginning of year $ 11,925,064 $ 10,071,720
NET ASSETS AT END OF YEAR $ 12,904,236 $ 11,925,064
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
18 NACME 2014 Annual Report
Donors and Partners
$500,000 to $1,000,000ExxonMobil Foundation
$200,000 to $499,999 AT&T Inc. & AT&T FoundationBP America, Inc. & BP Foundation
$100,000 to $199,999 3MBechtel CorporationChevron CorporationThe Dow Chemical CompanyThe General Electric CompanyHewlett-Packard CompanyJohnson Controls, Inc.Marathon OilLockheed Martin CorporationNorthrop Grumman Corporation & Northrop Grumman Foundation
Procter & Gamble Company
$50,000 to $99,999 AnonymousARCADISThe Barkley Fund LLCS.D. Bechtel, Jr. FoundationThe Boeing CompanyBristol-Myers Squibb CompanyBroadcom CorporationCisco Systems, Inc.Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc.
Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLPDeloitte & Touche LLPEMC CorporationFord Motor CompanyIntel CorporationMerck & Co., Inc.The New York Community TrustPentagon Federal Credit UnionRolls-RoyceShell Oil CompanyRaytheon CompanyUnited Parcel Service, Inc.U.S. Department of EnergyXerox Corporation
$25,000 to $49,999 Crowell & Moring LLPDuPontEntergy CorporationIBM Corporation
$10,000 to $24,999 Celestica Computer Sciences CorporationGannett FoundationGeorgia-Paci�c Corporation
Hess CorporationKelley Drye & Warren LLPThe Norris FoundationPitney Bowes FoundationPPG Industries FoundationPraxair, Inc.SeagateSkanska USA Civil Northeast, Inc.SME Education FoundationUL
$5,000 to $9,999 Americas StyrenicsEmerson Electric CompanyFujitsu Network Communications, Inc.PTC, Inc.Rockwell Collins, Inc.
$1,000 to $4,999 Celgene Corporation CFC National Capital Area - Global ImpactEmulex CorporationHAKS Engineers, Architects and Land Surveyors, P.C.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.
up to $999 CFC Brevard County, Inc. United WayCFC Central Florida AreaCFC Central OhioCFC Chesapeake Bay Area CFC Chicago AreaCFC Eastern Pennsylvania and Southern New Jersey
CFC Greater Kansas CityCFC Gulf CoastCFC Hawaii Paci�c AreaCFC HuntingtonCFC New York CityCFC Northeast Florida, JacksonvilleCFC Northern California CFC of Greater North Carolina Area CFC of North Central Texas CFC of South Hampton RoadsCFC Onslow County/Camp LejueneCFC Peninsula CFC Pikes Peak Region CFC RichmondCFC San Antonio AreaCFC Tennessee Valley Huntsville CFC United Way of Greater Atlanta, Inc.CFC UnknownCFC/United Way of the CSRAConsumers Union
Corporate, Foundation, and Combined Federal Campaign (CFC) Donors University Partners
$500,000 and overPolytechnic University of Puerto Rico
$200,000 - $499,999 Georgia Institute of TechnologyNew York University Polytechnic School of Engineering
$100,000 - $199,999Louisiana State UniversityNew Jersey Institute of TechnologyRose-Hulman Institute of TechnologyUniversity of ArkansasUniversity of Colorado at BoulderUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignUniversity of Michigan
$50,000 - $99,999The City College of New YorkUniversity of Akron
$25,000 - $49,999 Kansas State UniversityMilwaukee School of EngineeringMissouri University of Science and Technology
University of Alaska AnchorageUniversity of Maryland, Baltimore CountyUniversity of Texas at El Paso
$10,000 - $24,999Bucknell UniversityKettering UniversityMichigan Technological UniversityRutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Stevens Institute of TechnologyTennessee Technological UniversityUniversity of Kentucky
$5,000 - $9,999 Cornell UniversityFlorida International UniversityUniversity of HoustonUniversity of Texas at DallasWest Virginia University
$1,000 - $4,999 State University of New York at Oswego
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
nacme.org 19
Donors and Partners
Individual Donors
Founder’s Circle($10,000 and up)Susan P. BarsamianNicholas M. DonofrioHoward D. Elias
Chairman’s Circle($5,000 - $9,999)Eileen M. CampbellJohn A. MacDonaldJoseph A. Patti
Benefactor($2,500 to $4,999)Mark W. AlbersIBM Employees Charitable Contribution Campaign
Christopher T. JonesPatricia A. StricklandGrace TsengPeter B. Wiley
Patron($1,000 to $2,499)Rodney C. AdkinsKimberly S. AdmirePrenthis AguilarRichard D. BailyMichael J. BarberRaymond C. DempseyJoseph C. Geagea
William P. GipsonRhoman HardySaundra Johnson AustinJohn T. LucasMichele MacaudaGary S. MayIrving Pressley McPhailDouglas M. OwenMichael T. PanPercy PierreLarry RobinsonMark B. RosenbergMark E. RussellRandy StashickMichael J. StoverJohn J. TracyJames C. VardellEugene & Claudith Washington
Sponsor($500 to $999)Anonymous (2)Andrew AbeytaOlester BensonArthur P. Burson, Jr.Matthew CarrilloGerald T. Charles, Jr.Felicia J. FieldsRonald Glover Shelton A. Howard
Gina L. HutchinsAnthony “TJ” JacksonWayne A. KauchakSusan M. LewisCheryl A. MarceauC. D. Mote, Jr.David C. NagelMagda K. NassarLinda S. SanfordMorris TanenbaumTerri L. TimbermanDonald P. Timlin, II
Friend (up to $499)Anonymous (4)Jason ArmsteadRashod AustinJustin BarrasJames R. BlackwellSharon L. BrogdonTrinard F. BroussardNorman K. BucknorJames Brit ByrnesAnthony E. ClayvonSuzanne CohenDorien E. CorbinEugene CovingtonLisa DormanDenise EllisMarjorie H. Everitt
Donovan D. FaircloughSandra FloresEverett G. ForemanWilliam K. FrederickJose A. GallardoBrenezza D. GarciaGustavo D. GonzalezCoray A. HarperAaron L. HenryDavid J. HernandezRosalie Hersh�eldSimone P. HrudaJerry M. HultinFrank IngramI�ok ItuenKevin J. JacobGilbert D. JaramilloAlex JohnsonJennifer Jones DobbinsDuane C. JubertElizabeth KautzmannJacqueline T. KellySarah S. KokBrenda KrulikPamela Leigh-MackAndrea C. Lewis-EcholsMarcie L. LoveDonald McKinnonHattie Ruth McPhailElkin MejiaLuis J. Mendez
Tiffany E. MonroeA. Claire MorseArturo ParksEysha S. PowersAlfred L. RandallRonald F. RobertsThomas M. SalasMarcy L. SandlesRobert D. ScottWilliam J. ShelmonMary D. SimmonsMelonia A. SimpsonChristopher SmithEllen S. SmithJohn J. StevensWilliam R. StultzAlrick ThomasGena TownsendLamont TruttlingDeeAnn TurpinWendy VincentAileen WalterEric WilliamsNatasha L. WilsonRonald WinderCalvin E. WoodlandPhilip T. WoodrowWilliam A. WulfSandra WyattJanice M. ZdankusLaura Zeno
NACME 40th Anniversary Awards Dinner & Celebration
Leadership LevelBechtel CorporationProcter & Gamble Company
Benefactor LevelGeneral Electric Company
Patron LevelChevron CorporationEMC CorporationHewlett-Packard CompanyLockheed Martin Corporation
Sponsor LevelAT&T, Inc.The Boeing CompanyBP America, Inc.Brocade Communications Systems, Inc
Exxon Mobil CorporationIBM CorporationMarathon Oil CorporationMerck & Co., Inc.Northrop Grumman CorporationRaytheon Company
SeagateShell Oil CompanyUnited Parcel Service, Inc.
Contributor Level3MAmdocsARCADISCienaCravath, Swaine & MooreDellThe Dow Chemical CompanyDuPontEricsson, Inc.Flex-N-GateFlorida International UniversityFord Motor CompanyHGST, Inc.Intel CorporationJohnson Controls, Inc.Juniper NetworksNew Jersey Institute of Technology
Pentagon Federal Credit UnionTech Mahindra (Americas) Inc.Xerox Corporation
FriendsBank of America Merrill LynchVince Bertram - PTLWCelestica, Inc.The City College of New YorkDavid BettsRachel DecosteEmulex CorporationEquale & Cirone, LLPAlicia ErwinWayne FrostFujitsu Network Communications Inc.
Sonia GarciaGeorgia Institute of TechnologyKendall T. HarrisEdwin J. & Barbara HessHilton WorldwideHon. Jerry M. & Jill HultinJabil Circuit, Inc.Jeannine KunzL-3 CommunicationsDonald LeoManaged Business Solutions Systems, LLC
Merrill Lynch
Metaswitch NetworksModis, Inc. (An Adecco Group Company)
Jeanne P. MurabitoEric MyersWarren R. MyersTanya NavasNew York University Polytechnic School of Engineering
Harry ObamijeTimothy PinkstonRolls-RoyceRutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Derrick E. ScottRobert D. ScottSME Education FoundationSprint CorporationState University of New York at Oswego
Stevens Institute of TechnologyUnited AirlinesUniversity of Michigan, College of Engineering
Wendy VincentWest Virginia University
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
20 NACME 2014 Annual Report
NACME Board of Directors(as of October 2014)
NACME is grateful to the following individuals and companies for serving on our Board of Directors:
ChairMark E. RussellRaytheon Company
Vice ChairSue BarsamianHewlett-Packard Company
Past Chair Arthur P. Burson, Jr.Merck & Co., Inc.
President and CEOIrving Pressley McPhail, Ed.D.NACME, Inc.
Corporate Secretary Stephen M. KessingCravath, Swaine & Moore LLP
Rodney C. AdkinsIBM Corporation
Mark W. AlbersExxon Mobil Corporation
Michael J. BarberGeneral Electric
Jerry R. BautistaIntel Corporation
Phil BurkholderRolls-Royce plc
Brian W. CookeJohnson Controls, Inc.
Raymond C. Dempsey, Jr.BP America Inc.
Carlos DominguezCisco Systems, Inc.
Howard D. EliasEMC Corporation
Robert FittBroadcom Corporation
Karen A. FletcherDuPont
Joseph C. GeageaChevron Corporation
William P. Gipson Procter & Gamble Company
Donna S. Gulbinski Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
Rhoman HardyShell Oil Company
Margery M. HarrisApache Corporation
Christopher D. Holmes3M
Christopher T. Jones, Ph.D. Northrop Grumman Corporation
Susan M. Lewis The Dow Chemical Company
John T. Lucas Lockheed Martin Corporation
John A. MacDonaldBechtel Corporation
Elmira Mangum, Ph.D.Florida A&M University
Roderick B. MitchellPenFed
Elizabeth D. MooreConsolidated Edison Company of NY, Inc.
C. Dan Mote, Jr., Ph.D.National Academy of Engineering
Douglas M. Owen, PE, DEEARCADIS
Ramanath I. RamakrishnanEaton Corporation
Mark B. Rosenberg, Ph.D. Florida International University
Katepalli R. Sreenivasan, Ph.D.New York University Polytechnic School of Engineering
Randy StashickUnited Parcel Service, Inc.
Michael J. StoverMarathon Oil Company
Frederiek ToneyFord Motor Company
John J. Tracy, Ph.D.The Boeing Company
Gregory G. WeaverDeloitte & Touche LLP
TBDAT&T LabsXerox Corporation
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
NACME Offi cers and Staff(as of October, 2014)
Offi cers
Irving Pressley McPhail, Ed.D.
President and Chief Executive Offi cer
Saundra Johnson Austin, B.S.C.E., M.B.A.
Senior Vice President for Operations
Marjorie H. Everitt
Vice President for Institutional Advancement
Michael T. Pan
Vice President of Finance/Administration, and Chief Financial Offi cer
Aileen Walter
Vice President, Scholarships and University Relations
Staff
Brit Byrnes
Manager, Marketing and
Communications
Dorien E. Corbin
Development Manager,
Annual Gifts
Denise Ellis
Program Manager
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Graduate Scholarship Program
Alex J. Johnson
Mailroom Administrator
Brenda O. Krulik
Manager, Public and Media Relations
Carolina Sanchez
Director, Information Technology
Melonia A. Simpson
Program Manager, Undergraduate
Scholarship Programs
Christopher Smith
Director, Research and Program
Evaluation
Rosalie Hershfi eld
Executive Assistant to President
and CEO
Laura Zeno
Manager, Offi ce Operations
NACME Offi cers, left to right: Irving Pressley McPhail, Saundra Johnson Austin, Aileen Walter, Marjorie H. Everitt, and Michael T. Pan
Invest in NACME
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our work today.
NACME, a nonprofi t 501(c)(3) organization,
welcomes your tax-deductible
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Photo credits: Ed Eckstein, unless credited otherwise
40 Years: Inspiring Excellence
Our PromiseWe engineer opportunity for minorities in STEM.
Our MissionTo ensure American competitiveness in a �at world by leading and supporting the national effort to expand U.S. capability through increasing the number of successful African American, American Indian, and Latino young women and men in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education and careers.
Our VisionAn engineering workforce that looks like America.
Our BeliefDiversity drives innovation.
Our PurposeThrough partnerships with like-minded entities, we serve as a catalyst to increase the proportion of African American, American Indian, and Latino young women and men in STEM careers. We inspire and encourage excellence in engineering education and career development toward achieving a diverse and dynamic American workforce.
Shaping an American STEM workforce where diversity drives innovation and global competitiveness
National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc.
White Plains, New York, 10601(914) 539-4010 (914) 539-4032 Fax
Visit us online: nacme.org
Connect with us:
A PDF version of the NACME 2014 Annual Report can be found online at nacme.org/annual-reports.
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