FUTURE TALENTED Summer Term 2019 - Issue 3 | Page 42

Gatsby Benchmarks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Boost your students’ science capital Adopting the Science Capital Teaching Approach could boost students’ engagement and attainment in science and lead more people from diverse backgrounds into STEM careers, writes Ralph Jones. ecades of work and millions of pounds have been invested in making science more inclusive and engaging, with little success – as multinational energy company BP can attest. One of the 2012 Olympic sponsors, BP created and delivered a science roadshow that travelled to schools in every local authority in the UK. “It didn’t make a long term difference at all,” recalls Ian Duffy, BP’s head of UK communications and community development. “No matter what brilliant, inspiring, uplifting activities you put into schools, it doesn’t matter a jot unless it’s properly integrated in how educators are teaching and guiding kids.” However, the need to boost and diversify participation in STEM subjects and careers is urgent, both to combat contemporary crises such as climate change and to alter science’s demographics to better reflect society. In 2008, the Royal Society investigated the link between socioeconomic background and pursuit of a science-related field, finding a strong correlation. “The higher an individual’s socioeconomic background, measured in terms of parental social class or parental education, the more likely they are to work in science,” its report said. Change has been slow over the past decade. “It’s a social injustice that the profile of those who continue in the physical sciences and engineering is so socially narrow,” says Louise Archer, Karl Mannheim professor of sociology of education at the University College London Institute of Education. “I think it requires intervention to right that.” It was during Archer’s ASPIRES project at King’s College London, a 10-year study to explore how young people form ideas around STEM, that the term ‘science capital’ gained traction. While ‘cultural capital’ (coined by French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu) refers to the accumulation of knowledge, behaviours D 42 // STEM It's a social injustice that the profile of those who continue in the physical sciences and engineering is so socially narrow and skills that give us social mobility, science capital is a conceptual tool for measuring an individual’s exposure to and knowledge of science. It can be used to aid understanding of how social class affects people’s aspirations and involvement in science and encompasses eight dimensions from scientific literacy to science media consumption (see box, right). ASPIRES tracked how young people develop their science and career aspirations from the ages of 10-18, concluding that young people who had higher levels of science capital were more likely to aspire to science-related careers in the future. Conversely, low science capital limits their opportunities and outcomes in life and contributes to the shortfall in young people in the UK choosing STEM subjects. Meaning and relevance In 2013, Archer’s concept of science capital was put at the heart of the Enterprising Science initiative — a partnership between University College London, King’s College London and the Science Museum, led and funded by BP — developing the Science Capital Teaching Approach. T h e i d e a s u n d e r p i n n i n g i t we re co-developed and trialled over four years between researchers and 43 secondary science teachers in England, in a bid to support educators in helping students find more meaning and relevance in science and so engage more with the subject. The approach aims to ‘broaden what counts’ in the science classroom, encouraging all students to ‘have a go’ at answering open questions, highlighting the diversity of jobs within the STEM sector, and dispelling the myth that science is only for certain types of people. Teachers personalise and localise their lessons, linking questions to aspects of students’ lives. They elicit knowledge from