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#31
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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STEM is important when trying to promote future careers. STEAM is important to cover everything that goes into a STEM career. I also think that Engineering already has Art in it. As an engineering student I was and am taught to think of how a product looks. The aesthetic is always taught to us, which is technically art, which is part of Engineering. I like STEM because it is a nice little acronym that rounds up a group of very similar fields and puts them under one umbrella. Adding art is adding a curve ball that is not like the others. |
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#32
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
Lots of people are making statements to the effect that "STEM already incorporates a lot of art, STEM is itself an art, therefore we don't need to change the acronym". Isn't this an argument against keeping the acronym, not for it? If art is so important to STEM, it should be recognized as a part of it.
Calling it like I see it here; lots of people in STEM fields don't have respect for the arts, and that's where a lot of the pushback on this change is. Lots of STEM majors in college look down on art majors as being unemployable or unrealistic, and feel their majors are superior to theirs. This extends into the professional world as well. I think fighting this stigma that devalues art is important. |
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#33
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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When we speak of STEM education, we are speaking of a group of things that are similar enough that they share a large number of common features and problems, and thus it is fruitful to discuss them as a single unit. Value judgments aside, "art" simply does not conceptually fit with the rest. If you want to have a discussion about the devaluation of art in STEM fields, then have that discussion - but don't try to insert that discussion into every discussion of STEM, which is the only real end I see of using the "STEAM" acronym. Edit: This may be a bit more contentious, but some of the advocacy for using "STEAM" instead of "STEM" also strikes me as carrying vague connotations of postmodernism, which I do not like one bit. Last edited by Oblarg : 09-21-2016 at 12:30 PM. |
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#34
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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Good points as always. I would place the entire teaser and downloadable content from FIRST in the "art" category. So far, so good? David |
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#35
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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Lots of people here seem to agree that STEM subjects involve art, and art subjects involve STEM. If that's really the case, yet there is a lack of respect for something this important to the rest of STEM, adding art to the acronym is a good response, which helps further imply this relationship. |
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#36
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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As to the second part, I can't really agree, because I don't think the purpose of the acronym is to "build appreciation" - it's to provide a useful label for a collection of intimately-related subjects. "STEAM" loses that utility. |
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#37
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
So Art isn't intimately-related in Engineering, Architecture, Design? I have to disagree.
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#38
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
Not in the Bob Ross sense, in my opinion. Art is a very broad category...
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#39
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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Music has tons of engineering in it - the production, design, and operation of audio systems, speakers, monitors, musical instruments, synthesizers, recording devices, playback devices all require heavy doses of engineering and science in the quest for artistic self-expression. There's absolutely a lot of mathematics in musical composition and physics in the entire concept of audio. This is probably the field that the connection is the most obvious in - music could not exist without STEM, and the music industry is a valid and relevant field for someone in STEM with an art interest to go into. I'm less familiar with other forms of art, which there are obviously many, but anything from theater to cinematography to painting to sculpture, to varying degrees, involves STEM subjects, and all sorts of STEM fields incorporate the artistic lessons taught in arts fields. This is less tangible for me to explain because art is so subjective but I believe artistic design, aesthetics, culture, and society shape the kind of engineer and mechanical designer that I am, and that I'm a better engineer for my appreciation and interest in the arts (even if I'm not as good at them). I also believe that when I've worked on or completed an engineering design, I have created art. Quote:
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#41
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
Albert Einstein played the violin, Johnny Cash was a code breaker in the Air force, Brian May (guitarist from Queen for you youngsters) is an astrophysicist, I can site example after example of artist who have math/science brains. It is very common for musicians to have mathematical/technical talent.
To me keep the tent big and open and not quibble about A's. |
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#42
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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For example, I can point out that some birds are aquatic - after all, look at penguins! This does not mean that I should adopt a term for "Birds and Aquatic Animals" when I mean to speak about birds. Even if it were the case that ornithologists systemically devalued marine biology, it still would not be a good idea. I'm sorry, I'm simply not buying the argument that the "A" in "STEAM" does not stand out. Quote:
I am not saying that we should never discuss "STEAM." I am saying that adopting a policy of replacing the "STEM" label with "STEAM" is a bad idea, especially if it's only out of some feeling that "we don't care enough about art." Here's another way to think of this: how many academic subjects can you think of that clearly do not fit under the "STEAM" label? In an information-theoretic sense, a label that specifies everything is no more useful than a label that specifies nothing. Last edited by Oblarg : 09-21-2016 at 02:06 PM. |
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#43
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
I don't really care either way but one thing I do notice is that art is generally looked down upon at least by young people. All the unemployment or useless art degree jokes/memes are very common on social media and at least in my area, engineering students generally look down on art. To claim that STEM people and students already know art is important isn't quite accurate. That said the same could be said for almost every other discipline such as communication skills, English, and business.
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#44
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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It's very artistic set of media indeed! In my mind, FIRST supporting the "A" in STEAM would look more like 5-8 million in scholarships for Art Students at Art-focused colleges? Or maybe rewarding teams that graduate many college Art students from their FRC team, even if they lack promotion of Engineering or Science? If STEAM is the new way forward, I would expect Art to receive the same level of emphasis and respect program-wide as the rest of STEAM. I haven't seen that level of support yet, but will be interested to see how this develops. -Mike |
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#45
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Re: STEM vs. STEAM
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