The NANO SHOW part of 2010 RDS Science Live Series

RDS_Science_LiveThe Nano Show has been accepted as one of the science shows at this years RDS Science Live Demonstration Lecture series. This support will allow Science Ireland to create this amazing new show.

The RDS Science Live Demonstration Lecture series involves funding science communicators to develop high quality workshops that are aimed at those in primary and secondary school. All of Science Ireland shows have been developed with support from the RDS Science Live Demonstration Lecture series.

The Nano Show will now move from planning stage to development and testing. The first show will be given in September 2010.

Good Luck to All in Exams.

We would like to wish all the students sitting the Leaving and Junior Cert exams best of luck. Stay calm and try to take some time to relax between exams.

Remembering the Maths Man – Martin Gardner

Martin_GardnerMartin Gardner (October 21, 1914 – May 22, 2010) was an American mathematics and science writer specializing in recreational mathematics, died yesterday at the age of 95. He wrote the Mathematical Games column in Scientific American from 1956 to 1981, and published over 70 books.

He wrote dozens of books about science, math and pseudoscience, including books aimed at children and teens. Among his most famous titles is “The Annotated Alice,” in which he lifted the lid of Lewis Carroll’s classic fantasies “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” and “Through the Looking Glass” to reveal a hidden tapestry of word games and literary references.

Mr. Gardner was largely self-taught: he did not take a single math class after high school. “There is no better way to learn anything than to write about it!” he once said. His lack of expertise may have been partly responsible for his success — he relied on jokes and cultural references instead of academic jargon.

The Nature of Things / Martin Gardner from Wagner Brenner on Vimeo.

From an article the Washington Post
Image from Wikipedia

Our redeveloped Leaving Cert Heat Section.

galileo_thermometer_smallWe have re-developed our Leaving Cert Physics section on Heat & Temperature. This section forms part of Anthony Caldwell’s research into students attitudes to online physics education based in Queens University Belfast. We have tried to use everyday  objects to explore the concepts of heat and temperature.

We are adding more interactive activities to this section over the next few months, we hope to include Leaving Cert questions and experiments as well as videos.

Visit our new heat section

How Dev was nearly lost to science

The course of Irish history might have looked very different had a job fallen right for an aspiring young mathematician. Éamon de Valera very nearly won a post as professor of mathematics in 1913, something that would have diverted him from his eventual life in politics.

Dev got close to securing the professorship of mathematical physics at University College Cork three years before the Rising. Had he won the post, the course of Irish history would have changed dramatically, says researcher Cáit Ní Shúilleabháin of UCC.

“If he had gotten that job in 1913 he would definitely have continued at the maths,” she believes.

Ní Shúilleabháin has recently completed an intriguing PhD thesis on the mathematical life of de Valera. It shows he was accomplished in the field and had a particular fascination for quaternions, a mathematical discovery made by Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton.

De Valera’s interest in mathematics has largely been overlooked in conventional historical treatments, according to Des MacHale, of UCC’s school of mathematical sciences, who co-supervised Ní Shúilleabháin’s research along with UCC historian Gabriel Doherty. “It’s been neglected because people couldn’t cope with the technical details,” he says.

Article taken from The Irish Times Thursday, May 13, 2010

Cutbacks and low uptake lead to a drop in physics and chemistry.

An artiicle from the Irish Independent on Wednesday April 21 2010. Science subjects are being abandoned at Leaving Cert in many Irish schools as cutbacks take effect and students show little interest in studying Physics and Chemistry. A recent survey by the ASTI shows how the government faces an uphill battle as it tries to boost the “knowledge economy”.

Its recent pronouncements about improving the scientific literacy of second-level pupils may prove to be as hollow as a Liebig condenser. In an ideal world the education authorities would love to see school students gazing lovingly into test tubes and then going on to become high-powered researchers making pioneering discoveries in white coats.

The reality on the ground is very different. One in every three secondary schools is in the process of dropping a science subject at Leaving Cert level.

The aspiring nuclear physicist might find it extremely difficult to make progress through the Irish education system.

Already, 14pc of schools have dropped a science subject in the current academic year.

A further 20pc say they will be forced to do the same before next September.

Physics is the biggest casualty, followed by chemistry, according to the survey carried out Millward Brown Lansdowne for the ASTI.

In cases where the subjects are not dropped, a significant number of schools (9pc) are merging their fifth- and sixth- year science classes.

The immediate cause of the scrapping of science subjects in a significant minority of schools is the increase in the pupil-teacher ratios as a result of government cutbacks. There has also been a loss of government grants for Physics and Chemistry.

Peter Keaney, a science teacher at Wilson’s Hospital School in Westmeath, says: “A lot of schools have to make a difficult choice, with falling numbers of teachers. If they have 20 or 30 students who want to do Business at Leaving Cert, and five who want to do Physics, Business will win out and they might not offer Physics at all.”

The cutbacks may be discouraging schools from offering the subject, but science teachers face a more fundamental problem: the vast majority of pupils do not want to study the subjects at Leaving Cert.

According to the survey, the primary barrier to the study of Physics and Chemistry at Leaving Cert is the perception that they are hard.

A secondary cause for low take-up, according to teachers, is the view that science is too theoretical and removed from everyday life.

Teachers blame the distortions of the points system for the lack of enthusiasm for the subjects.

“Students believe they are harder and that it will be harder to get points in the Leaving Cert,” says Peter Keaney.

“You can’t blame them for that. They are taking the attitude that they can pick up more points by studying something like Business.”

Students are simply playing the points system to their advantage by avoiding the most difficult subjects.

“There is no incentive to study Chemistry and Physics,” says Moira Leydon, ASTI Education Officer.

“Students realise that they can maximise their points by studying Home Economics, which is a doddle.”

Moira Leydon says the choice of subjects, merely as a way of maximising points, throws into question our entire Leaving Cert system.

However, she points out that waning interest in physical sciences among second-level students is not just an Irish problem. Students are dropping the subjects across the Western world.

The ROSE study of science education in Ireland published in 2007 found that the reasons why students are turning away from science are complicated — and are not all linked to the school syllabus and teaching methods.

The study suggested that the benefits of modern science are taken for granted in the West, while in less industrialised countries technological developments are seen as more immediate and novel.

Click here to read the full article.

Survey finds Physics dropped in 10% of schools

Research suggests that almost 10% of second level schools have been forced to drop Physics as a subject offered to students.

The findings indicate that the decision is as a direct result of education cutbacks. The information – gathered from more than 300 schools – was carried out by Millward Browne Lansdowne on behalf of the Association of Secondary Teachers of Ireland.
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The research also found that Higher and Ordinary Science classes have been combined in 70% of the schools surveyed. ASTI General Secretary John White expressed his concern at the outcome of the survey.

‘Physics is the subject which schools are most likely to drop as a result of the cutbacks,’ Mr White said.
This is happening at a time when the Government, in its Framework for Sustainable Economic Renewal, has stated that improving the mathematical and scientific literacy of second-level pupils is a key objective,’ he added.

The survey also found that time lost due to lab preparation and clean up duties is a key concern for Junior Certificate teachers. 95% of teachers said the availability of a lab technician would help them improve the standard of science teaching.

Article for RTE News website.

Bonus Points For Maths

ALMOST 200 hi-tech jobs were announced as the Government signalled a major new incentive for students to pursue careers in the IT sector.

New Education and Skills Minister Mary Coughlan has backed a bonus-point system for higher Leaving Certificate maths in a significant U-turn in government policy.

Her announcement came as five leading multinational companies confirmed 175 job vacancies in the technology sector.

And a nanoscience research institute, CRANN, which is based at Trinity College Dublin and University College Cork, separately announced that it is to create 17 new research and development jobs after it was awarded €15.5m in non-Exchequer funding.

The poor uptake in higher-level maths is regarded as a major obstacle to producing enough qualified graduates to develop the ’smart economy’.

Article in Irish Independent (Thursday April 08 2010) By Katherine Donnelly and John Walshe
Read the full article here.

Science Ireland at ISTA AGM

ista_show

The 2010 Irish Science Teachers Association AGM was held in the IT Sligo from the 19th-21st March. Science Ireland had a stand at the AGM in Sligo and we also performed the science show on Friday 19th at 3:00 to interested teachers.

New links section

Science Ireland’s True Phyiscs Project has created a new links section for this website. The current categories are general physics, science in Ireland, junior cert science, leaving cert physics, irish science centres and space and astronomy.

If you have an comments or recommendations, please contact us.