Threat to science due to lack of funding within schools

News Desk
Authored by News Desk
Posted Thursday, February 18, 2016 - 8:16am

Recent budget cuts have proposed a threat to science in schools and the science industry as a whole. This will have a knock on effect to the accessibility of Science focused careers.

The slow decline of science lessons in schools has been apparent over the past few years and a recent report from Ofsted* found that the quality of practical science in schools needed revising.

Ofsted visited 180 schools and reported that standards of science were not good enough in more than a quarter them. They also found that while the intention to perform practical experiments was there, in practice it was not possible due to timetabling constraints. Some secondary schools were allocated less than one-fifth of the weekly timetable to teach the triple science GCSE syllabus, so as a consequence only the "necessary minimum" practical work was carried out.

Despite the decline in quality and funding there still seems to be an appetite for the sciences and Tim Peake’s expedition to the International Space Station has been an example of how imaginations can be sparked.

The Science Museum Group attracted a total of 5,337,000 visits during the past year, among which 595,000 people visited in booked education groups. Included in this is The Science Museum who enjoyed 3,348,000 visits, and welcomed 452,000 visitors in education groups, of which a record-breaking 388,000 were children and young people.

Along with this, technology is gradually becoming a regular aid within classrooms and 70% of primary and secondary schools in the UK now use tablet devices. Online games are also becoming an introduction into the worlds of physics and engineering. The gamification of education is a growing trend that allows youngsters to engage with subjects like physics first-hand, something they may be missing out on in the classroom.

Ted Everett, a Technical Producer at Kerbal Space Program added: “There is an area of children’s minds that won’t be developed with these budget cuts- they won’t be seeing the everyday occurrence of science and or find an appreciation for everything around them.

Games likes Kerbal Space Program can teach people about science through a sort of passive learning, as you are playing a game that is not initially brought to teach yourself about physics, but brought to have fun. As the game is quite a real world simulation of rocket science, you end up learning a lot about these niche areas of science that ordinarily would be very out of access to you.”

The recent rise in popularity of space games, such as Kerbal Space Program, indicates a growing interest in space and science. According to the Joint Council for Qualifications there was a 3.2% rise in ‘A’ Levels taken in Physics between 2012 and 2014. Along with a 3.3% rise in Chemistry uptake and 0.2% in Biology.
                        
A study carried out in 2015 by Scientists from Brown University in Rhode Island set out to discover if gamers could overcome interference within a texture discrimination task. They found that gamers managed to improve their performance on given tasks, whereas none gamers simply did what was expected.

Mark Turpin, the CEO of the popular YouTube Gaming Network Yogscast LTD said: “Games, education and learning are converging. We are seeing more and more people try to capture the excitement and attention of young people by placing their learning within a game. Kids love playing games, as do grown-ups as games are inherently fun, but they need to be seen as a tool and a way to educate.”

Figures from the Higher Education Statistics Agency’s (HESA) student records, over the 10 year span between 2004 and 2014, show that the number of students studying biological sciences at universities in the UK rose by 62,000. Physical sciences rose by 18,000. Although the appetite for science is apparent among young people, the support and funding could hold them back from entering jobs in science or taking their science education further.

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