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Computing and Competitiveness:

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Title: Computing and Competitiveness:


1
We are very happy with the students that we get
from this university. . . . We just wish we
could hire two to three times as many of them.

Bill Gates at Stanford, February 19, 2008
Computing and Competitiveness
Implications of the Programmer Shortage
Eric Roberts Professor of Computer
Science Stanford University
CISAC February 4, 2009
2
Overview
  • Computing and information technology underlie
    much of the world economy and offer some of the
    best employment opportunities for college
    graduates in the United States today.
  • At the same time, student interest in these
    disciplines has plummeted throughout the
    developed world. The Computing Research
    Association estimates that computing enrollments
    in the United States have fallen by 50 percent
    since their peak in 2000. In many European
    countries, the decline has been even more severe.
    The decrease in student interest has, moreover,
    been particularly pronounced among women and
    minority students, reducing diversity as the pool
    shrinks.
  • Declining student interest in technical fields
    represents a serious threat to economic
    competitiveness at a critical time. The actions
    that developed countries take in response to this
    challenge will have a profound effect on the
    health of the world economy.

3
The Changing World Order
4
The Challenge of Global Change
5
The Pipeline Paradox in Computing
  • The computing industry offers some of the best
    employment opportunities for college graduates in
    the United States today
  • The number of jobs in the domestic software
    industry are at an all-time high and are
    projected to grow dramatically over the next
    decade.

6
Degree Production vs. Job Openings
160,000
Ph.D.
140,000
Masters
120,000
Bachelors
100,000
Projected job openings
80,000
60,000
40,000
20,000
Engineering
Physical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Adapted from a presentation by John Sargent,
Senior Policy Analyst, Department of Commerce, at
the CRA Computing Research Summit, February 23,
2004. Original sources listed as National
Science Foundation/Division of Science Resources
Statistics degree data from Department of
Education/National Center for Education
Statistics Integrated Postsecondary Education
Data System Completions Survey and NSF/SRS
Survey of Earned Doctorates and Projected Annual
Average Job Openings derived from Department of
Commerce (Office of Technology Policy) analysis
of Bureau of Labor Statistics 2002-2012
projections. See http//www.cra.org/govaffairs/co
ntent.php?cid22.
Sources
7
The Pipeline Paradox in Computing
  • The computing industry offers some of the best
    employment opportunities for college graduates in
    the United States today
  • The number of jobs in the domestic software
    industry are at an all-time high and are
    projected to grow dramatically over the next
    decade.
  • Salaries for newly minted B.S. graduates in
    Computer Science are high, sometimes exceeding
    the 100,000 mark.
  • In 2005, Money magazine rated software engineer
    as the number one job in America.
  • Employment in this area is vital for national
    competitiveness.
  • At the same time, student interest in these
    disciplines has plummeted. The Computing
    Research Association (CRA) estimates that
    computing enrollments have fallen by almost 50
    percent since their peak in 2000.
  • Why this disconnect?

8
The Need for Greater Understanding
  • The failure of universities to produce a
    sufficient number of graduates with the necessary
    computing skills is now widely recognized as a
    crisis in both academia and industry.
  • Unfortunately, the underlying causes for the
    decline in student interest are not well
    understood. Although several theories seek to
    explain the decline in student interest, they do
    not provide a comprehensive explanation of
    student behavior.
  • These slides represent an early attempt toward
    developing a compelling narrative of the sort
    Bill Gates described during his visit to Stanford
    last year. That narrative is as yet a work in
    progress, and I welcome any comments and
    criticism.

9
Why this Paradox?
10
Why this Paradox?
11
The Problem Starts Early
The UCLA HERI study shows that students have
already made their decisions before they reach
university.
Source Higher Education Research Institute at
UCLA, 2005
12
Computing Faces Huge Challenges in Schools
  • People who have software development skills
    command high salaries and tend not to teach in
    schools.
  • In many schools, computing courses are seen as
    vocational rather than academic. The NCAA has
    eliminated academic credit for all computing
    courses on this basis.
  • Students who are heading toward top universities
    are advised to take non-CS courses to bolster
    their admissions chances.
  • Because schools are evaluated on how well their
    students perform in math and science, many
    schools are shifting teachers away from computer
    science toward these disciplines. Those
    disciplines, moreover, actively oppose expanding
    high-school computer science.

J
  • Administrators find tools like PowerPoint more

sexy
and
exciting.
  • Computing skills in generaland programming in
    particularhave become much harder to teach.
  • Teachers have few resources to keep abreast of
    changes in the field.

13
CS is Losing Ground
  • The Computer Science exam is the only Advanced
    Placement exam that has shown declining student
    numbers in recent years.

14
CS Is Tiny Compared with Other Sciences
15
Why this Paradox?
16
Myths of a Jobs Crisis Persist
There is no shortage of evidence that people
believe the myths about the lack of jobs and the
danger of outsourcing.
Why would any smart American undergrad go into IT
when companies like IBM and HP are talking of
stepping up their off-shoring efforts in the
coming years? They want cheap labor, no matter
the real cost.
I have been very successful in IT, but I
certainly wouldnt recommend it today to anyone
except people who are geeks. . . .
I think the latest figures from the U.S.
Department of Labor are not correct.
17
Myths about Offshoring
Thus, at least in computing, globalization has
functioned exactly as the theory of comparative
advantage suggests.  
18
A Thought Experiment about Offshoring
  • Suppose that you are Microsoft and that you can
    hire a software developer from Stanford whose
    loaded costs will be 200,000 per year. Over in
    Bangalore, however, you can hire a software
    developer for 75,000 per year. Both are equally
    talented and will create 1,000,000 annually in
    value. What do you do?
  • Although the developer in Bangalore has a higher
    return, the optimal strategy is to hire them
    both. After all, why throw away 800,000 a year?
  • Any elementary economics textbook will explain
    that one hires as long as the marginal value of
    the new employee is greater than the marginal
    cost. The essential point is that companies seek
    to maximize return, and not simply to minimize
    cost.

19
Industry Reports a Labor Shortage
April 28, 2005
Gates Cites Hiring Woes, Criticizes Visa
Restrictions
By David A. Vise
Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates said
yesterday the software giant is having enormous
difficulty filling computer jobs in the United
States as a result of tight visa restrictions on
foreign workers and a declining interest among
U._S. students in computer science. lttabgtSpeaking
on a technology panel at the Library of Congress,
Gates said a decline in the number of U._S.
students pursuing careers in science and
technology is hurting Microsoft in the short run,
and could have serious long-term consequences for
the U._S. economy if the problem is not
addressed. lttabgtWe are very concerned that the
U._S. will lose its competitive position. For
Microsoft, it means we are having a tougher time
hiring, Gates said. The jobs are there, and
they are good-paying jobs, but we dont have the
same pipeline.
http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic
le/2005/04/27/AR2005042702241.html
20
And Various Data Seem to Agree
Working in the life sciences typically requires a
degree in biology or some closely related field,
but relatively few biology majors actually end up
working in the field.
  • 80 of workers in the life sciences have degrees
    in the life sciences.

21
But There Are Contrary Arguments
January 26, 1998
Now Hiring! If Youre Young
By Norman Matloff
DAVIS, CalifReaders of recent reports about a
shortage of computer programmers would be baffled
if they also knew that Microsoft hires only 2
percent of its applicants for software positions.
Even among those applicants whom Microsoft
invites to its headquarters for interviews,
according to David Pritchard, the director of
recruiting, the company makes offers to only one
in four.
lttabgtYou dont have to be a techie to see that
such a low ratio, typical for the industry,
contradicts the claims of a software labor
shortage. If companies were that desperate, they
simply could not be so picky.
http//query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res9E0
CE6DF123BF935A15752C0A96E958260
Matloff argues that there is no programmer
shortage. The only clear conclusion one can draw
from the data is that companies perceive a
shortage in applicants who pass their quality
threshold.
22
Variations in Programmer Productivity
  • In 1968, a study by Sackman, Erikson, and Grant1
    revealed that programmers with the same level of
    experience exhibit variations of more than 20 to
    1 in the time required to solve particular
    programming problems.
  • More recent studies2, 3, 4 confirm this high
    variability.
  • Most industry insiders believe that the
    productivity variance is even higher today. In
    2005, Googles VP for Engineering, Alan Eustace,
    told The Wall Street Journal that one top-notch
    engineer is worth 300 times or more than the
    average.5

23
The Microsoft Programming Personae
Microsofts cultural lore defines three types of
programmers
Mort is your most common developer, who doesnt
have a CS background, may even be a recent
newcomer, and doesnt quite understand what the
computer is doing under the covers, but who
writes the dinky IT programs that make businesses
run. Elvis, more knowledgeable, cares about code
quality, but has a life too. Einstein writes
some serious-ass piece of code like device
drivers, wants to get things done, needs to be
able to go low level and high level, needs a
language without restrictions to get his job done.

Wesner Moise, Who are you? Mort, Elvis or
Einstein, September 25, 2003
http//wesnerm.blogs.com/net_undocumented/2003/09/
who_are_you_mor.html
For the most part, Microsoft (along with Google
and other first-rank companies) are seeking to
hire the Einsteins, which explains the low hiring
ratio.
24
Productivity Variations Are Common
  • The idea that individuals might differ in
    productivity by two or more orders of magnitude
    initially seems hard to believe.
  • In fact, such differences in efficacy and
    productivity occur across a range of occupational
    categories
  • Mathematicians
  • Creative artists (writers, composers, poets,
    painters)
  • Performers (musicians, actors)
  • Motion picture directors
  • Financial wizards, CEOs
  • Professional athletes
  • No one achieves mastery in any of these fields on
    the basis of raw talent alone. Training and
    practice are essential.

25
Alternative Models of Software Education
In many creative disciplines, students learn from
mentors who are masters of their craft. It may
make sense to create conservatories for the
teaching of software arts, similar to music
conservatories. One possibility might be some
sort of New England Conservatory of Coding. (Or
perhaps a Hogwarts School for Software Wizardry.
In many creative disciplines, students learn from
mentors who are masters of their craft. It may
make sense to create conservatories for the
teaching of software arts, similar to music
conservatories. One possibility might be some
sort of New England Conservatory of Coding. (Or
perhaps a Hogwarts School for Software Wizardry.)
In many creative disciplines, students learn from
mentors who are masters of their craft. It may
make sense to create conservatories for the
teaching of software arts, similar to music
conservatories. One possibility might be some
sort of New England Conservatory of Coding. (Or
perhaps a Hogwarts School for Software Wizardry.)
Another model might be to create intensive
programs that encourage students to focus on the
art of software development, in much the same way
that programs like the University of Virginias
Semester at Sea program offers a concentrated
immersion in oceanography, geography, and
cultural anthropology.
SEMESTER AT C
26
Paul Grahams Hackers and Painters
When I finished grad school in computer science I
went to art school to study painting. A lot of
people seemed surprised that someone interested
in computers would also be interested in
painting. They seemed to think that hacking and
painting were very different kinds of workthat
hacking was cold, precise, and methodical, and
that painting was the frenzied expression of some
primal urge. lttabgtBoth of these images are wrong.
Hacking and painting have a lot in common. In
fact, of all the different types of people Ive
known, hackers and painters are among the most
alike. lttabgtWhat hackers and painters have in
common is that theyre both makers. Along with
composers, architects, and writers, what hackers
and painters are trying to do is make good things.
Paul Graham
(photo by Niall Kennedy)
http//www.paulgraham.com/hp.html
27
Why this Paradox?
28
The Real Image Problem
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vCmYDgncMhXw
29
The Reality Is Also a Problem
Has anyone considered the possibility that its
just not fun anymore?
Don Knuth, October 11, 2006
  • Students at Stanford have expressed the following
    concerns
  • Long hours with little chance for a balanced life
  • A less pleasant social milieu than other
    occupations
  • A sense that success in programming is possible
    only for those who are much brighter than they
    see themselves to be
  • Work that is often repetitive and unchallenging,
    particularly when it involves maintaining legacy
    technology
  • Programming has become more difficult than it
    used to be
  • No chance for a lasting impact because of rapid
    obsolescence
  • Fears that employment with an individual company
    is dicey even though opportunities are good in
    the industry as a whole
  • Frustration at being managed by nontechnical
    people who make more money but are not as bright
  • A perception that programmers are definitely on
    the labor side of the labor/capital divide

30
Dilbert Offers an Instructive Lesson
Most students today would rather be Dilberts
boss than Dilbert.
31
Dangerous Trends
We have met the enemy and he is us.

Walt Kelly
  • As an illustration of this trend, consider the
    following post that appeared on SIGCSE-MEMBERS on
    August 14, 2006

I have an idea for a panel that Id like to
organize for SIGCSE07. Im asking for
volunteers (or nominations of others) to serve on
the panel. The panel Id like to organize would
have a title something like Alternative
Models for a Programming-lite Computer Science
Curriculum The theme of the panel would be to
share ideas and thoughts on how we might reduce
(or eliminate) the emphasis on programming within
a computer science curriculum. The basic idea is
to cause discussion centered on the knowledge and
skills students of tomorrow will need in the
global economic workspace and the implications
for the CS curriculum. As more and more aspects
of software development of offshored, what kind
of curriculum would allow a student to be
successful in the IT field?
32
Industry Is Not Amused
  • Every technical person in the industry with whom
    Ive spoken is horrified by the prospect of
    reducing the emphasis on programming in the
    undergraduate curriculum.
  • At an ACM Education Council meeting in September
    2007, a panel of technical people from companies
    like Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Boeing were
    united in their concern about the scarcity of
    competent software developers. I have summarized
    their position as the computing curriculum is
    not nearly as broken as it seems likely to
    become.
  • Employers in developed countries with high-tech
    sectors are desperate for more people with
    programming talent. In his keynote at ITiCSE
    2007 in Dundee, Scottish entrepreneur Chris van
    der Kuyl said that the lack of programming talent
    was the greatest limiting factor in the industry.

33
Programming Remains Central
  • Calls to reduce or eliminate programming from
    computing curricula arise from some undeniable
    assumptions
  • There are more jobs in IT that dont require
    programming.
  • Programming is not particularly popular with
    students today.
  • Offshoring of programming jobs has increased.
  • Unfortunately, this analysis ignores the
    following equally valid propositions
  • There are more jobs in IT that do require
    programming.
  • Programming has historically been what attracts
    students the most.
  • Globalization has created more IT jobs in
    India/China and the U.S.
  • Offshoring exists largely because of a shortfall
    of skilled employees.

34
What We Need To Do
  • Encourage the federal government to launch a
    sputnik-scale initiative to advance education in
    science and technology.
  • Press government and industry to improve
    computing education at the K-12 level, possibly
    through public-private partnerships.
  • Take creative steps to bolster both the image and
    the reality of work in the profession.
  • Make it clear to students (as well as faculty)
    that programming remains essential to much of the
    work in the field.
  • Emphasize the beauty of programming by focusing
    more attention on software as an art.

35
The End
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