Ellis Rubinstein,
                  President, NY Academy of Sciences:
                  Catalyst for Excitement About
                  Science in Schools
                By Joan Baum, Ph.D.
                
                Though on the job for only two and a half years, Ellis Rubinstein,
                  the dynamic president of the 188-year old New York Academy
                  of Science (NYAS), has been on the go constantly, enhancing,
                  innovating, prompting, prodding, his energy and enthusiasm
                  nowhere more apparent than in what he and his science and education
                  partners have been instituting in the way of initiatives to
                  generate excitement over physics, chemistry and biology in
                  New York City high school students, including encouraging participation
                  in The Laureates of Tomorrow Nobel Essay Contest, which the
                  NYAS administers in conjunction with the Swedish Consulate
                  in New York and The New York City Department of Education (DOE)
                Calling the Academy’s 2005 Presidential Reception in
                  honor of the winners of the First Annual Nobel Essay competition
                  a new campaign to “Catalyze Science In Our Schools,” Ellis
                  Rubinstein expressed delight at having more involvement with
                  the DOE in its efforts to advance and extend science education,
                  particularly in underserved communities. Although he had just
                  returned from a related awards ceremony earlier in the day
                  and was getting ready for more celebratory activities in the
                  evening, he spoke at length and with great enthusiasm about
                  programs centered at the Academy, new and continuing, designed
                  to inspire science teachers and their students. Of course,
                  the NYAS continues its mission to “advance the understanding
                  of science, technology, and medicine, and to stimulate new
                  ways to think about how their research is applied in society
                  and the world,” but the words hardly approximate how
                  the director -- whose own career suggests he’s a hard
                  act to follow - has been moving to implement these goals among
                  professionals, prospective scientists and interested members
                  of the general public, or the degree of passion he feels for
                  New York City which he continually exclaims is the talent science
                  center of the world –“Eighteen Nobelists!”
                A former editor of
                    Science and English major at UCLA Berkeley, Ellis Rubinstein
                    loves the term “turn-around,” his
                  specialty he feels, and is looking to exercise his skills in
                  New York, a city that can boast having an extraordinary number
                  of elite scientific professionals but that also must acknowledge
                  it does not adequately serve many communities, K-12, in science
                  and technology. He just hired a head of Educational Initiatives
                  to coordinate and publicize a wide variety of new NYAS-based
                  programs for teachers and for undergraduates, particularly
                  in conjunction with CUNY, who will meet at the Academy and
                  determine events and calendars, and he has also brought on
                  board someone to head up the Academy’s Minority Investigative
                  Network (a Women’s Investigative Network already addresses
                  scientific and pipeline issues.
                Known for hosting “hot field” conferences for
                  top scientists and post-docs, symposia on timely, scientific
                  issues, including human rights for professionals abroad, and,
                  increasingly for its popular “e briefings” for
                  journalists, the Academy also continues to act as convener
                  of special discipline sections, including career mentoring
                  and interviewing -- a focus that has resulted in a surge of
                  membership (23,000 members in 150 countries) and a growing
                  success on the part of area universities to recruit graduate
                  and post doc students. The Academy also maintains its long-standing
                  commitment to offer summer internships to top-level metropolitan
                  area high school students in the sciences and engineering to
                  work in the laboratories of leading scientists, and to host
                  the well regarded NYC Science and Engineering Fair. But what
                  of those students in their junior year of high school who might
                  be persuaded to think about a career in science or in science
                  education? Ellis Rubinstein hopes that The Nobel Prize Essay
                  Contest will prove inspirational.
                Seeing out his visitors,
                    the busy president cannot resist a turning into a reception
                    area where he has set up The Nobel Prize Education Games,
                    an interactive science literacy series NYAS administers on
                    its website at Nobelprize.org. One senses that if this cool,
                    smart master of many disciplines had a free moment, he’d
                    sit down to play. His own unusual career path, he notes,
                    was sparked by reaching for knowledge that he thought was
                    out of his range but that challenged him to learn.