Preparing Students for STEM at University

It seems to me that good times are on the way for future STEM undergraduates. Since I became explicitly involved in STEM matters in 2009 I have noticed a growing awareness that a holisitic approach to a school STEM education can benefit, motivate and inspire school students who plan to move on to a university STEM course. Schools, universities, government and industry appear to be giving a united message: The UK needs a skilled STEM workforce; a workforce of creative, innovative problem solvers; a workforce from which world leaders in STEM will emerge. We ought not let this evolve by chance and, fortunately, there has been lots of work done recently which give us insights which allow us to grow a decent STEM workforce: Research on STEM education has been done; STEM resources have been invented, dusted off, and refined; important STEM collaborations between diverse groups have formed. As a result, students are now being given a fighting chance of seeing the bigger picture prior to embarking on their university course. As a teacher, you are the guardian of this bigger picture.

The STEM material on NRICH is part of a wider offering in which teachers can help students to see connections between their school science, technology and mathematics. As a mathematics site we hope through stemNRICH problems to provide a real understanding of how mathematics is the life-blood (or at least a component, such as the platelets) of rich engagement with advanced STEM. What is our focus? In a nutshell I want our students to receive an education in STEM, rather than learn to answer exam questions on topics in subject silos.

For the remainder of this article, I'll look at three matters: some Golden Rules concerning good STEM practice; some of the mathematical issues facing STEM students; and some tips and suggestions for teachers in schools who wish to help students in their overall STEM education.


Part 1: Key Elements of Good STEM Practice

Golden rule 1: Respect
Have respect for different departments and no sense of any subject being better or more important or more fundamental than any other: the differences are real and significant, but there are also commonalities. Talk to people in other departments so you know what the differences and commonalities are. 

Golden rule 2: Use positive language when talking about mathematics
It is still unfortunately seen as OK to dismiss maths as un-cool, pointless, geeky or to confess to being pretty bad at it. This has a very negative impact on students who either wish to study mathematics or might encounter a lot of mathematics in their university course.

Golden rule 3: Build on learning from other subjects
Don't try to teach things from scratch that students might have encountered elsewhere.


Golden rule 4: Be aware of the difficulties in applying mathematics
Don't assume that an 'easy' piece of maths is easy for students when it is located in a context where they wouldn't expect to find it. Don't assume that the maths is easy for students just because you think it is obvious.

Golden rule 5: Be open-minded about STEM
Be aware that your particular interests are not necessarily the particular interests of all of your students. Try to find the hidden gems in any topic area, even if it is not your personal favourite. Good enthusiastic teaching is a wonderful device. No topic is really intrinsically dull or boring, even if you think it is. Who knows, you might find thinking about STEM re-energises your teaching on a jaded area of the curriculum.

Golden rule 6: Celebrate the subtle and complex skill of good teaching
Be aware that the role of the teacher is as a learning facilitator in many cross-curricular activities, rather than the transmitter of all of the knowledge. It is OK not to know 'all' the answers. In fact, it is desirable to provide contexts in which you do not know all the answers to all possible questions! How else are students to learn how to solve real problems?

Golden rule 7: Don't try to force links where none meaningfully exist
I feel that a poorly conceived STEM task can cause more harm than good. The universe is wonderfully constructed. There are many brilliant STEM contexts around -  don't try to make STEM links for the sake of it.

Golden rule 8: Make technology a fundamental part of learning
Whatever your students end up doing, they will end up doing a great deal of it using a very wide range of technologies (many of which won't yet exist). Pencil and paper tasks are still very desirable, but so is good level of techno-literacy.

Golden rule 9: Don't forget the STEM history of the educators
Many teachers, lab assistants, TAs and others involved in education will have had experience of STEM matters in various contexts. Celebrate these! Don't feel that as a maths teacher you have hide the fact that you did engineering or biochemistry - celebrate your quantitative past history and bring it into the education of your charges where appropriate


Part 2: Quantitative matters

Why would clever students struggle with the mathematical aspects of their university course in science, technology or engineering? There are several possible reasons which I have encountered many times.


Part 3: Some quick tips for the classroom

There are various ways in which you can bring STEM into the classroom, from the light-touch reference here and there to the full off-curriculum week. Here I list some of my favourite quick ways to get STEM moving in your schools



General references

Prepare for university http://nrich.maths.org/university

Mathematical Preparation for the Cambridge Natural Sciences Tripos  http://nrich.maths.org/6884

Interactive Workout - Mathmo    http://nrich.maths.org/7088

Maths in the Undergraduate Physical Sciences   http://nrich.maths.org/6864

Algebraic Fluency of Advanced Students  http://nrich.maths.org/8628

The NRICH - Transkills Project    http://nrich.maths.org/6326

stemNRICH http://nrich.maths.org/stemnrich

stemNRICH - advanced  http://nrich.maths.org/stemadvanced

http://sfh10.wordpress.com/2012/11/29/superficial-contexts-in-stem-problems/