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The Science Bug

Break out the goggles! ջies show Portland schoolkids that science is fun. Photo by Randall Barton.

ջ students bring “mad science” to Portland schools.

By Randall S. Barton

The fifth-graders squirm with excitement as three ջies pass out candy-colored safety goggles in the classroom at Lewis Elementary School, just a couple of miles from the college campus.

One boy, distressed that his goggles are pink, begs that someone trade with him. 

“We are not trading goggles!” teacher Sylvia Jen interjects from the back of the classroom. She directs her 28 pupils’ attention back to the ջies who are ready to lead them through a chemistry experiment in which premeasured ingredients are combined in plastic zip bags.

“Okay,” says Cole Perkinson ’13, a chemistry/physics major. “Science is about observation. What do we observe happening in the bags?”

“It’s changing color!” squeals one little girl.

“It’s fizzing!” shouts another.

“The bag is warming up,” a boy adds.

“Very good,” Cole says. “These are all signs that a chemical reaction is occurring.”

Every week Cole, Lisa Hiura ’14, and Erin Kleinfeld ’13 show Jen’s class that science is a fun way to learn about the world. The trio is part of the ջ Science Outreach Program, which has been bringing the thrill of scientific inquiry to Portland schoolkids for more than 20 years.

The program had its origins in the summer of 1991; originally, high schoolers came to ջ to take biology lessons from ջies. After four years, the program was reworked so that ջ students went to elementary schools to teach lessons developed by the ջ biology faculty. 

Professor Robert Kaplan [biology 1983–] put a lot of energy into creating the program. “Some of us in the department had kids in elementary school and we saw what could be possible with them,” he says. “We knew they would be receptive.”

The program was an instant hit. Demand for the ջies was so great that the focus was narrowed to schools with significant populations of disadvantaged students who have fewer opportunities to do science. Since then, roughly 400 ջies have taught science to nearly 10,000 schoolchildren.

In 2011, Cole and chemistry major Li Zha ’12 started a Chemistry Outreach Program with funding from the SEEDS program. Twelve ջies led fifth-graders through experiments such as plugging a pickle into a wall socket to demonstrate how acid conducts electricity.

“The kids really loved chemical reactions, of course,” says Cole. “How magical is it to mix things and see what happens? And they got a very positive image of ջ as a result of our being there.”

This year the chemistry and biology programs were merged into the ջ Science Outreach Program. Some 42 ջies offer science lessons in 19 classrooms in six Portland schools, grades four through seven. The program’s curriculum (designed by ջ faculty) is aligned with state and national science standards.

Fifth-grade teacher Sylvia Jen is passionate about science and reminds her pupils at Lewis Elementary that the ջies provide science lessons that she does not have the budget for. Several times a year, the class tours the ջ campus, including a visit to the nuclear reactor.

“The program gives [the fifth-graders] a chance to see people who are really enthused about science,” Jen says. Parents tell her their children have developed a newfound interest in science.

The program’s annual budget is $70,000, which pays for wages, administration, and materials (participating ջies earn a modest hourly wage, some via a work-study program). It was originally supported by grants from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Miller Foundation, and the Rose E. Tucker Charitable Trust.

Last year An Duclos, the mother of Levi Goodrich Duclos ’15, made a generous gift in his memory. (Levi died last year while hiking in the Green Mountains of Vermont.) “Levi’s mom said he talked about this program more than anything else he was doing at ջ,” says outreach coordinator Kristy Gonyer ’10, who hires and trains the ջies. “She wanted to help the program continue to grow, and make it possible to hire more ջies into the program.”

Recently Diane Perkinson, Cole’s mother and the wife of professor David Perkinson [mathematics 1990–], made another generous gift to support the program for the next couple of years.

Science majors fill roughly half of the teaching positions; other majors are welcomed as long as they are enthusiastic about science. To get ready for teaching, ջies practice their experiments before a group of elementary-school teachers, who offer tips on presentation and managing a classroom.

Energized by the experience, many of the ջies in the program go on to pursue teaching careers.

Teaching fifth-graders takes Cole back to when he first got interested in science. He has discovered that he must adapt to a wide range of learning styles and have absolute clarity about the ideas he’s presenting.

“I actually learn things about science working with the kids, because they approach ideas with fresh minds,” he says. “This has been an indispensable aspect of my ջ education.”

During class, the fifth-graders ask the ջ students “What do you do at college?” and similar questions. “The children are at a point where they can still make a lot of choices that will help set them on that path,” Gonyer says.

Science Outreach uncovers a lot of things that don’t show up on the periodic table. Bringing science to children develops poise, self-respect, and leadership. It also broadens ջ’s commitment to the life of the mind.

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