HSS 2011

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History of Science Society Joint conference with SHOT and SSSS.

November, 2011

Sessions

Linking the past and the present:

Piers Hale
Reflecting on the context in which we teach the history of science. Most students are science and engineering majors. They provide diff challenges than students from other fields. Respect from science and engineering faculty. NSF funding for betterment of STEM education may be served by history integration. E.g., see NSF 10-544 Program Solicitation.
Study abroad is an opportunity to address student expectations and foster collaboration between instructors. Experience in the field, at least in this case in Ecuador, led instructor to steer away from the pre-planned syllabus. There were social issues like the relationship between locals and a site of oil extraction at Tiputini. Unpredicted local issues in science and society arose, for example the story of Lonesome George, the Galapagos sea turtle who supposedly has no mate, whose true story may be hidden by those who don't want to lose the sense that local fauna are so endangered that they need intense financial support.
Zoology at Oklahoma U requires history of science course. Faculty debating whether the longstanding requirement should stand. Pre-med and recently engineering have added a requirement.
Benefits of history of science:Questions that vex polity are not completely new, conditions can be identified, mistakes can be identified, there are multiple ways to frame inquiries.
Used pre and post evaluations.
Shawn
Respect from faculty expressed in curriculum integration? History of science abroad—Primary or secondary?
Mark Borrello, U Minnesota, ex Michigan State
Taught history of science in Tropical Biodiversity and Conservation in Panama. Learned about genealogy of scientists in situ. Modified ecology's pedagogical method of generating inquiries based on individual field experience—e.g. what do students think scientists from earlier times were thinking at this site?
The historian helps provide the conceptual framework and story to a scientific inquiry in class. E.g., what is an individual, what is speciation, these are concepts for labs in biology courses that are historically relevant and significant.
James Elwick, York U, CA
Elwick makes a case for lab work in the class, even the 80-student lecture hall. Students should be exposed to novel work with tools, not just redundant, reenacting work. Taught this course three times. Made a lab, students design/make/test timekeeping devices in teams and judged each other. Imitations were encouraged, as long as citations were kept. A second trial occurred more than a month after the first. "High source, Stillman Drake's work figuring out how Galileo kept time; low source, TV show." "The class looked like a science fair, timekeeping devices spread out around the lecture hall." "Students discovered how common good ideas were, but how hard they were to implement." Elwick learned how hard it was to negotiate his rules with wily students. Some students just wanted lectures, essays, exams, no lab work. Elwick stopped teaching about creativity and innovation, and too-large classes, so stopped doing device lab work in class. He also thought he was teaching more about engineering than science.