January 24, 2007: President's Page
THE ALUMNI WEEKLY PROVIDES THESE PAGES TO THE PRESIDENT
Sandhya Sinha
’08, a graduate of the Integrated Science Curriculum, is now
conducting original research on a littlestudied yeast as part of
a junior-year laboratory course in quantitative and computational
biology sponsored by the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative
Genomics. (DENISE APPLEWHITE)
‘Rising
Above the Gathering Storm’ Through Science and Engineering Education
Although Americans dominated last year’s Nobel Prizes, taking home
awards in physics, chemistry, medicine, and economics, our scientific
and technological leadership—and the prosperity that flows from
it—should not be taken for granted. This point was brought home
in a powerful way this past year by Norman Augustine ’57 *59, the
former chairman and CEO of Lockheed Martin. He chaired a National Research
Council committee that issued a highly influential report called “Rising
Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter
Economic Future.” After studying international trends in science
and engineering, the authors concluded that “This nation must prepare
with great urgency to preserve its strategic and economic security. Because
other nations have, and probably will continue to have, the competitive
advantage of a low wage structure, the United States must compete by optimizing
its knowledge-based resources, particularly in science and technology.”
Among the most worrisome trends that the committee identified was the
state of U.S. science, mathematics, and engineering education. In a nationwide
science test administered by the U.S. Department of Education in 2005,
for example, only 54 percent of high school seniors performed at or above
a basic level. This lack of preparation does not compare well to student
performance in other industrialized countries. When the scientific and
mathematical knowledge of American twelfth-graders was recently compared
with that of students in 20 other countries, only two, Cyprus and South
Africa, had average scores significantly lower than the United States.
The problem begins in high school, where two-thirds of physics teachers
in the U.S. did not major in the subject, and 61 percent of chemistry
teachers and 45 percent of biology teachers were not prepared in those
fields. The critical lack of technically trained K-12 teachers creates
what in biochemistry we call a “futile cycle”—unprepared
teachers fail to inspire students, who pursue other studies but return
to public schools to teach science.
With such weak grounding in high school, it should come as no surprise
that the number of undergraduates—pre-med students aside—who
are choosing to major in the sciences and engineering is in decline at
precisely the moment when our world is being transformed by advances in
these fields. In 1970-1971, 2.5 percent of American bachelor’s degrees
were awarded in the physical sciences; 33 years later, this anemic figure
had fallen to 1.3 percent. At Princeton we are doing considerably better
than the national average, with 5 percent of the Class of 2006 having
concentrated in physics, astrophysics, chemistry, or geosciences. On the
other hand, we know that the majority of freshmen who arrive with the
intention of becoming scientists eventually leave the physical sciences,
primarily for the social sciences.
Improving our nation’s science and technology education infrastructure
will require strong corrective measures throughout the system and within
American society at large. At Princeton we have been experimenting with
how we teach the sciences and engineering, with a goal of retaining a
greater percentage of freshmen and sophomores in those fields. The first
of these initiatives, spearheaded by Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative
Genomics Director and Professor of Molecular Biology David Botstein and
Professor of Physics William Bialek, was introduced in the fall of 2004
after senior faculty from these departments, as well as chemistry and
computer science, met each week for a year to identify the fundamental
aspects of their own curricula, pinpoint commonalities, and forge “An
Integrated, Quantitative Introduction to the Natural Sciences.”
Spanning a student’s freshman and sophomore years, this program
is designed to overcome what Professors Botstein and Bialek have identified
as “a deep bifurcation in culture and quantitative competence among
the scientific disciplines.” On the one hand, physics students are
taught that their discipline centers on the search for a concise mathematical
description of the world, to be tested by detailed quantitative experiments,
but in practice, introductory courses focus on a limited set of examples
that hardly do justice to the range of phenomena studied in our Department
of Physics and certainly do not extend to the complexities of the living
world. On the other hand, modern biology students are immersed in this
complexity and in the startlingly rapid growth of our factual knowledge
about the molecular basis of life, but they are given none of the mathematical
tools they need to come to grips with the massive volumes of data emerging
in new experiments, nor are they exposed to successful examples of mathematical
theorizing about the natural world. This disjunction ensures that students
in the life and physical sciences develop different languages, limiting
the range of problems that each can undertake without assistance and impeding
joint endeavors. The undergraduate curriculum developed by the institute
uses the unifying medium of mathematics to demonstrate, theoretically
and experimentally, that ostensibly disparate phenomena are, in fact,
related, and that biology, chemistry, and physics, in partnership with
computer science, can help each other to unlock the scientific secrets
of our universe.
For its part, the Center for Innovation in Engineering Education, headed
by Professor Sharad Malik, has developed a pioneering freshman curriculum
informally known as EMP, which was launched in the fall of 2005 to provide
would-be engineers with an integrated introduction to engineering, mathematics,
and physics. Not only does this program demonstrate the relevance of mathematics
to physics by teaching these subjects concurrently, it also translates
abstract theory into practice through a semester-long rocket lab, in which
students construct and launch a water-propelled rocket whose instruments
generate real-time data that can be compared against predictions based
on the laws of mechanics. EMP’s engineering component uses lectures,
guest lectures, and hands-on projects to provide a broad introduction
to the School of Engineering and Applied Science’s six departments
and the kind of questions on which they focus. Modules on energy conversion
and its environmental impact, robotic remote sensing, and wireless image
and video transmission give freshmen a far stronger basis on which to
choose their field of concentration than they might otherwise have had,
as well as demonstrating just how big an impact engineering has on our
society.
By integrating the curricular path that leads to the sciences and engineering
we are, hopefully, creating a wider gateway to these disciplines, and
by ensuring that our students have ample opportunity to apply their knowledge
sooner rather than later, we are giving them a very important foretaste
of the rewards that lie before them if they are willing to persevere.
In the process, we are helping to ensure that our nation will always stand
in the forefront of scientific and technological progress.