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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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It really just depends where you are, if you enjoy the material in class in the first place, and who your teachers are. I thin its also really important that kids from FRC have some idea of real world applications of what they are learning in class. In my case, I absolutely love statics and dynamics because I know where I can apply it to a robot. Lots of things come into play. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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The success rate for students in a particular class is not determined solely by the difficulty of the content. I have seen a lot of students do poorly in classes where the concepts and technical content were trivial compared to most engineering courses. I once had to take a class in cost accounting that seemed incredibly simple on the surface, but was so boring that I just could not focus. And it did not help that I could not see how I would ever want to apply any of what I was learning. I really struggled with that class. On the other hand I breezed through some classes that by comparison were much more technically challenging simply because I saw the value in understanding and applying what was being taught, and was highly motivated. When students are motivated, difficult topics seem less challenging and doing the work required to do well is much less tedious. For some students, the challenge of taking a difficult class is motivation enough, and anyone would do well to learn a bit from these highly self motivated individuals. But for many of us there needs to be more. Perhaps they need a clear link to the real world, or a bit of fun. That is why I think FIRST is so great. It offers the kind of real world hands-on experience that often is exactly the thing many students need to encourage them over some of the difficult hurtles that exist in any STEMS program. Today’s technology teachers have a difficult task before them. How do you motivate students who cannot see how what they are learning applies to the real world. And how do you even make those connections when the world itself is so much more complex and abstract today. When I went to engineering school building and repairing things was already in my blood. I took things apart and repaired them or built them into new devices. I saw engineering skills as just another way to expand my skills. Being able to see the value of what I was learning is what I think helped me through some of the very challenging classes, and perhaps is why I never gave up. But many students today do not have as much of those hands on skills. Building and repairing almost anything seems a bit like a lost art. In our throw away world there are fewer opportunities to learn those skills on your own. And with the complexity of many consumer devices today there are fewer role models for that type of behavior. Not too long ago, almost everyone I knew did some amount of appliance repair, electrical wiring, auto repair, or at least kit building at home. But, today most people do not bother to try, and many homes do not even have adequate tools and equipment to do so. That is why I think FIRST has such resonance with many students and teachers today. Science can be fun. Difficult classes can be made more appealing. And boring topics can be made interesting by finding the right vehicle to bring the concepts to life. And, it would be hard to find a better vehicle than FIRST to do that for most STEMS courses. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
A big part of the problem is the lack of really good engineering professors.
It is hard to produce an engineer. It is exceptionally difficult to produce an engineer, that has experience doing engineering AND is a good TEACHER. IMHO Georgia Tech is great research university and great for going to grad school. I'm not so sure that it is so hot in undergraduate teaching. Many universities have this problem. I spent nearly a week this summer at MIT. Before I went I had the impression that they were only for "theorists". I left impressed at the breadth and depth of undergraduate lab and research opportunities. These opportunities are fantastic ways to help students learn and to keep them motivated. Rose Hulman is noted to be an undergraduate teaching university. They don't do research. Just great teaching. Ditto for the Air Force Academy. A second part of the problem is career guidance. Some people should not choose an ABET engineering career, they possibly should be choosing an ABET engineering technologist career. FYI, Professor Woodie Flowers is a recovering member of BTA bad teachers anonymous. A lack of great teachers, and a dearth of good guidance counseling, formal or informal, is a big part of the problem. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
I think the problem is a cultural one, in two senses. First, not enough value is placed on the STEM fields in our society, though people are slowly becoming aware of that and working to change it. It's difficult for people to initially become motivated to go into the STEM fields, and when they then experience how difficult it is, it often doesn't seem worth it to stick with it. Second, internally to STEM departments at universities, there seems to be a culture of valuing insane workloads and little sleep. This occurs to different extents at different schools, but it seems to exist everywhere in some form or another. Professors have insane expectations (I once had a class that assigned four, 20-page minimum lab reports to be due on the same day, several times throughout the semester), and students seem to add to it by frequently comparing how much work they have, how little sleep they've gotten and how many hours they've been awake - those who are most overworked and sleep-deprived are worshiped. This is obviously not healthy. If you're in a field you're excited about, working on things you love, then there isn't so much of a problem with staying motivated to continue. Overall, I love my school and my major, and I have some great memories from all-hours problem set sessions with my friends, but it's easy to see how a lot of people can get discouraged by four plus years of that type of lifestyle.
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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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Another thing to consider is co-op. It will take 5 or 6 years but they do better also..... And you will make money and not have as much debt when graduating. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
I was going to try and get a masters, 3 specializations (only need 2) and a minor in 4 years, I decided to extend it to 4.5, drop my credits from 18+ to about 16 a semester and add study abroad. Worth it to me.
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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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Mentoring is a huge deal in industry, and I think many college students miss out on this. Fraternities and Sororities are pretty good at this, I think there may be some good things to be gleaned from that model. I definitely benefited from having my DBF friends, in terms of schoolwork help and general life advice. That general life advice bit can be really important in college too. Quote:
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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
One more thing to consider is the language barrier that seems to be a popular issue in math and science classes with foreign professors. In high school, I had people telling me "yes, you will have foreign professors, you won't be able to understand them, and you will still be expected to pass the class." My engineering fundamentals professor speaks English very well, but he still has an accent and there is still a slight barrier to overcome in understanding him. My classes with American-born professors and TAs are significantly easier to pay attention in because I can understand them clearly. I was fortunate to only get one professor with an accent, but some of my friends absolutely cannot understand their lab assistants or calc professors and are incredibly frustrated by the classes. Many first-year engineering students take the same sets of classes, and they are almost all weeder classes. While other people have posted about how bad those are, not being able to understand the professor makes a class that much harder.
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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Ian to further elaborate, I realize the classroom has its limitations on what you can cram in and often theory takes precedent over application. I guess where I think it may be lacking in some areas is the department and college's push for students to get opportunities to apply their theories in the real world.
The honors program at ISU tries to get freshman into research opportunities their second semester. And I can say for the Mat E department I get at least 1 email a day that was forwarded from a faculty member because someone sent them an email looking for students to employ. I have a folder of at least 100 potential employers because there is such a push in my department and the university to apply your knowledge and do research or internships or co-ops. Also I wasn't implying engineers are masochists (it is sorta my way of joking it, one of the ways to stay sane when you spend 10 hours on a lab report every weekend), he is a mechanical engineer taking a materials course because it is required, it is similar to Akash liking statics and hating materials. There is that gradient of difficulty in similar courses when you compare the gen-ed vs the required one (eg Mat E for Engineers and Mat E for Mat Es) My friend is taking a materials engineering for non materials engineers or more of a "gen-ed" style course and finds it awful, difficult and thinks I am a masochist for wanting to go into it. Comparatively my Materials Engineering professor in my intro course is one of the greatest instructors I have ever had. So again it comes down to that gen-ed's seem to be harder than the actual courses in my experience. As for the accent part that has huge variation, I am used to first or second generation immigrants as they made up a lot of my friends so accents don't phase me. But I know people who went to 100% white high schools in 100% white towns. As far as they knew, minorities could have been a myth/propaganda and here they are in a university where many professors received their degrees in other countries and possibly other languages. It doesn't hinder me at all but I can understand why some may have trouble. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
I am just curious. Does anyone have the statistic for FIRST alumni that successfully graduate from college with a degree in STEM compared to student who have not gone through FIRST. Or the drop/transfer out rate also?
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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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They are hard because your teacher is not always ideal (did you ever think that professors aren't really trained to teach?). They are hard because they were meant to be hard. Not everyone was meant to be an engineer. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
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