Guest Column: DeadWeight an example of
innovative education by Jim Whaley, President,
Siemens Foundation · Op-Ed · November 04, 2009
During the same week the 2009
Nobel Prizes in science were announced, three Iowa
13-year-olds met with the Obama administration’s top education
and science officials to receive recognition for their own
extraordinary scientific achievement. The meeting indicated
the direction science education needs to take to keep America
the world’s engine of innovation.
A passion for
hands-on scientific inquiry was the path that brought Jathan
Kron, Brennan Nelson and Justin Roth, eighth-graders from West
Branch, to meetings in Washington with Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson, Secretary of
Education Arne Duncan and John P. Holdren, White House Office
of Science and Technology Policy director.
As it
happens, the trip started with a competition. The trio won the
grand prize of a new national science contest called the “We
Can Change the World Challenge.” The idea behind the
competition, sponsored by Siemens Foundation in collaboration
with Discovery Education and the National Science Teachers
Association, is to use hands-on scientific principles to help
solve critical environmental challenges facing one’s
community.
Their project focused on removing the
dangerous pollutant lead from the environment, specifically
lead used as wheel weights to balance tires. Lead wheel
weights can fall off cars, be picked up and deposited into
landfills, leading to toxic lead compounds in groundwater.
Working with their science teacher, Hector Ibarra, the boys —
calling themselves “Team Dead Weight” for the competition —
proved lead can form water soluble lead compounds under
certain environmental conditions and potentially harm the
environment.
The students presented their findings to
the West Branch City Council and their school district, with
the city and district subsequently agreeing to phase out lead
wheel weights in their vehicles. The students also teamed up
with several state legislators to develop three bills
proposing to phase out the harmful metal.
The efforts
of the budding young scientists from Iowa also caught the
attention of two powerful environmental groups, the Ecology
Center and Sierra Club. These two organizations recently
petitioned the EPA to overturn a decision not to ban lead
wheel weights, which are prohibited in Europe. In response,
the EPA agreed to “pursue a ban on the manufacture and
distribution of lead tire weights.”
By entering a
national science competition, the boys influenced federal
policy to improve the environment. This shows where science
education has to go in America, starting now.
First,
we need to generally invest more in early education. The Obama
administration is going in the right direction. The American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act outlines wide-ranging
improvements from K-12 through higher education.
Second, we must introduce more hands-on
experimentation and laboratory science in the early grades.
Third, we must increase awareness of the pivotal role that
science and technology will play in securing America’s future
as the world’s crucible of innovation. We remain the world’s
leader in science and technology for the time being. But
others are catching up.
Our goal is to get youngsters
interested in science early on, when their sense of wonder and
curiosity is boundless. More hands-on, laboratory programs
will help spur this vital interest in science. Amazing things
can happen when a passion for scientific inquiry reaches into
sharp young minds. Just ask Team Dead Weight.
Jim
Whaley may be reached at
Foundation.us@siemens.com |