Michael Rosenthal
(2/2019) My experiences visiting
Mother Seton School to view their STEM (Science,
Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) Fair, has led me
to review my experience with science education. My
personal experience in science education included 8 years
of undergraduate and graduate study with a major in
Chemistry, followed by a career of some fifty years of
teaching chemistry and service in academic administration
in colleges. There are a variety of pathways one can take
to become a scientist, and we will discuss them here.
Mother Seton provides a wonderful introduction to science
for its students in grades three through eight, and I have
written about that experience in past issues. Science is
easy for some people and very difficult for others. A good
teacher of science recognizes this fact, and works hard to
give individual students the attention and support
required to grow toward the possibility of becoming a
scientist.
I was always a "good" science
student, but never imagined I would become a scientist
during my elementary school or junior high school
experiences. If I was asked in this period what I planned
to do for a career, I most often said "probably become a
lawyer". My parents, neither of whom attended college,
were always supportive of me, but they were little help in
developing my career interest. In high school, the
institution viewed as the best at the time in Youngstown,
Ohio, I started to study science more intensely, but it
was not until my senior year, when I enrolled in Mr.
Gillespie’s chemistry class, that the magic occurred. I
just loved chemistry, and Mr. Gillespie was a truly
fantastic teacher, always giving me encouragement, never
being overly judgmental, and having a great sense of
humor.
There are a number of paths one
can take to study science in college. One can choose a
liberal arts and sciences college or a research university
(and there are some institutions at the interface between
the two) and major in a science field: biology, chemistry,
and physics being the most historically conventional, but
also in crossover fields such as biochemistry and
environmental studies. One can choose engineering, which
is generally science in a more applied manner with more
specific goals, such as nuclear engineering, chemical
engineering, mechanical engineering, electrical
engineering, environmental engineering, and architectural
engineering. Students planning to enter medical, dental,
or veterinary school often major in a science field, since
these programs require a strong and successful education
in the sciences for acceptance to these professional
schools. The same laws of nature apply in all these
fields. There are colleges that are labeled as
"engineering schools." Some universities offer majors in
both science and engineering. One graduate program
specialty is theoretical chemistry, where all the research
can be done by computer calculation, and one never enters
the conventional chemistry laboratory. A bridge program is
the 3-2 engineering program, where one studies basic
science in a liberal arts and sciences program for three
years, then transfers to another institution for two years
of more specialized engineering education, graduating in
five years with two degrees. In my opinion this is an
excellent way to become an engineer and also obtain a
broad background in the liberal arts. I began my career in
an engineering school but I transferred into a liberal
arts college, majoring in chemistry. One has to choose
which program fits your needs and ambitions.
The other important choice for
undergraduate education is whether to choose a large
university or a small college of liberal arts and
sciences. Does one give a better science education than
the other?
The best of the liberal arts
colleges have intense small enrollment science courses,
with extensive laboratory experiences, and teachers who
are committed to teaching undergraduates as their primary
concern, combined with scientific research that they often
share with upper division students. My own experience was
at a liberal arts and sciences program in a moderately
sized university that purposely kept its undergraduate
classes small, with all classes taught by regular
full-time faculty members, and which gave strong personal
attention to the students. Questions were always welcomed
in class, and professors’ offices were often open for
assistance and conversation. The best of these colleges
offer research opportunities in the senior year that helps
the student cross the bridge to becoming an active
scientist, and even may result in journal publication as a
junior partner with the professor. Though my college did
not at the time have senior research opportunities, I was
fortunate in having dedicated teachers in small classes
that prepared me well for graduate school.
I applied to five first-rate
graduate schools in chemistry, and I was accepted with
offers of teaching assistantships (TA) in all five
schools.
The undergraduate world of my
graduate school in a major university was very different
indeed. First year chemistry students were "lectured" in
large groups, often of 100 students or more, by a senior
professor. There were virtually no opportunities for
asking questions in class! A lot of sleeping occurred!
After the lecture, students were taught by the TAs in
smaller groups. I was a typical TA – 22 years old with
only a bachelor’s degree in chemistry, and no training
whatsoever as a teacher. My research director, a wonderful
mentor in many ways to us, his graduate students, told us
to never let a beginning chemistry student get to his
office. After the lecture ended, he said, they belonged to
us, the TAs. He said his career success depended on his
doing research, writing grants and bringing in research
funds, publishing research results, and adding to the
department’s laboratory resources, and that he did not
have the time to meet individually with undergraduate
students from his lecture. This is the way the university
system usually works.
There is an excellent alternative
at some large universities. It is The Honors Program. An
Honors Program is "a college within the university."
Classes are small, and special dedicated professors who
are attentive to undergraduates, teach them. Competition
is high to be accepted into these programs, and they do
vary somewhat in format from university to university. The
Honors Program gives the student the attention given in a
small liberal arts and science college with the resources
of the major university.
So the student who aspires to be a
scientist must choose the path that fits her or him best.
Some students prosper in a larger, less personal
environment; others need smaller class situations like the
liberal arts college.
Our twin granddaughters entered
college this fall. They chose two different small colleges
of liberal arts and sciences not far from their home that
seemed to fit their desires and needs. Happily, both had a
good first semester and are happy. It is their experience
that made me think again about the choices one has to make
in college selection, and of my own experience in
beginning my career to become a scientist. P.S. As a
career I chose to become a chemistry professor and later
in my career, an academic administrator, in small liberal
arts and sciences colleges. After my official retirement
from full-time work, I spent six and one-half years as a
part-time chemistry instructor at Mt. St. Mary’s
University here in Emmitsburg.
Read other articles by Michael Rosenthal