Do school science classes actually prepare you for real scientific work?
It’s an obvious fact that School and University sciences have massive differences between each other, but do they really? Isn’t all science related to each other? For the purpose of this essay, the term ‘School Science’ will mean the sciences one learns in both primary and secondary school, and ‘Real Scientific Work’ will mean the sciences one learns while at and after University.
In the first few years of learning Science in High School, you cover most areas of science, but you only learn the basics, and once you get further in your education you can choose which areas you would like to focus your learning on. on Wednesday we met Leia, who worked at Melbourne University, who worked in Immunology and Microbiology said that her favorite subject in school was Biology, and that by following biology as a core subject, she was able to find subjects like microbiology and immunology, which she hadn’t even heard of before. If an individual can find an area of science she’s interested in that she had never even heard of just be following her favorite school subject, that’s a strong indication that school science does prepare you for science in later years.
When we went to see Chris’s identical older brother at his workplace, we asked him and his colleagues whether they thought school science prepared them for their jobs, and they all answered yes. One of them replied with an amazing metaphor, ‘Your later science and education is like a house, and you can build your house as sturdy and as tall as you want, but if it doesn’t have a good base (School Science), it’s going to fall’. To pout that into literal terms, you can’t solve the math problem: x + x = 2x if you didn’t learn how to use addition in primary school, and you can’t do much at all if you never learnt to read and write in Prep and Grade 1. If someone who has been through both high school and university science, and now has a job researching how diseases will spread using a computer simulation think that school science prepares you for real scientific work, there’s some strong evidence that it’s true.
When an individual thinks of science, they might think of a lab with people researching elements and cutting up animals. While this is a factor in science, there are many more fields in which science is interrelated. Maths and science are very tightly nit, because while E=MC2 is a purely scientific statement, the 2 occurs in mathematics much more than in science. When one is learning about gravity, the fact that 1G is the gravity we feel on Earth might be as clear as day, but without any mathematical skills, the fact that Mercury’s gravity is 38% of Earths will leave you absolutely clueless. The point is that throughout primary school and high school, you are learning about subjects which might be completely different to science, but when you get to university, they all become interrelated and without all of your past education, you would have nothing to go on, and nowhere to start.
In conclusion, while school science doesn’t warn you of what’s coming in and beyond university, it does set you up with the best opportunities of understanding everything and having the skills necessary to be able to learn in whichever classes you take.