Czarzy
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2005
- Messages
- 293
This concerns a list-serve of high school advanced placement biology teachers.
In one thread, on the topic of Bush's latest evolution statement, there was a reply which contained the statement that the replier is a scientist. (Although s/he teaches AP biology in a high school). Another teacher wrote in and said not only that was she a scientist but her students are, too, and that anyone who has a curiosity about the natural world and tries to find out about it is, too. And there were more replies from other science educators who call themselves scientists.
There is nothing less prestigious about being a science educator than being a scientist. They are both important jobs. But there is a difference: scientists provide NEW scientific information through their work and discoveries, their work is subject to rigorous peer review, etc; science educators then disseminate that information to the public, as well as educate them about the processes of science. There is a significant difference between being a scientist, a science technologist, and a science educator.
If one were to put somewhere on one's job application that you were a scientist, it would imply something other than that you were a science teacher. I think that the general public has those same expectations.
Why is this misrepresentation significant? Public perception of the opinions of scientists on science: eg, when you look on the discovery institute's list of scientists who deny evolution, how many of them are scientists vs. how many are science educators and science technologists (such as family physicians, pathologists, and engineers)?
In one thread, on the topic of Bush's latest evolution statement, there was a reply which contained the statement that the replier is a scientist. (Although s/he teaches AP biology in a high school). Another teacher wrote in and said not only that was she a scientist but her students are, too, and that anyone who has a curiosity about the natural world and tries to find out about it is, too. And there were more replies from other science educators who call themselves scientists.
There is nothing less prestigious about being a science educator than being a scientist. They are both important jobs. But there is a difference: scientists provide NEW scientific information through their work and discoveries, their work is subject to rigorous peer review, etc; science educators then disseminate that information to the public, as well as educate them about the processes of science. There is a significant difference between being a scientist, a science technologist, and a science educator.
If one were to put somewhere on one's job application that you were a scientist, it would imply something other than that you were a science teacher. I think that the general public has those same expectations.
Why is this misrepresentation significant? Public perception of the opinions of scientists on science: eg, when you look on the discovery institute's list of scientists who deny evolution, how many of them are scientists vs. how many are science educators and science technologists (such as family physicians, pathologists, and engineers)?