Earlier this month the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) and l’Association canadienne-française pour l’avancement des sciences (ACFAS) convened a national conversation to discuss the results of a survey of young people’s attitudes toward science. The on-line event examined the general findings, then broke the discussion into three distinct streams, which considered science literacy and scientific culture, scientific communication and public trust, and science and technology skills.
“We thought that we would look, not just back at what we’ve done, but ahead, at what the next generation will do and will need to do, and the challenges they face,” said CFI President and CEO Roseann O’Reilly Runte.
She introduced the survey, which was conducted in October 2021, when the polling firm Ipsos Canada contacted 1,500 individuals across the country between the ages of 18 and 24. Ipsos Senior Vice-President Sebastien Dallaire outlined the findings, which organized respondents into five distinct segments, based on their attitudes toward science. These attitudes ranged from an enthusiastic promotion of science, along with defending its principles at every opportunity, to ignoring or even mistrusting science, with little attendant interest in what science can mean to our lives. Each of these categories was matched with a recommendation for science-oriented organizations such as CFI or ACFAS, which would indicate the best way to reach out to members of each segment to build a positive outlook on their work.
A ”messy environment”
Dallaire underscored the significance of social media, whose influence on young people’s outlooks overshadowed any other form of communication. Almost three-quarters of the group used social media daily and more than half of those spent at least four hours interacting with these platforms, especially Instagram and YouTube. The profound influence of social media would echo throughout the proceedings, which considered how individuals less familiar with these communication platforms could nevertheless use them to reach younger audiences.
Eric Meslin, President and CEO of the Council of Canadian Academies, dwelt on this “huge and obvious point”, which defines Canadian youth as a different community than older parts of the population. They were, he argued, “raised on the Internet” and “born with a tablet in their hand”. And the extraordinarily varied information landscape of social media should be a constant reminder of how this generation regards facts and knowledge. “It’s quite a messy environment,” he concluded.
Breakout sessions grappled with that messiness. Anna Blakeney, Assistant Professor, Michael Smith Laboratories and School of Biomedical Engineering, University of British Columbia, described her own use of social media to engage young people in discussions of the scientific topics that make up her work. Few of her colleagues do likewise, she pointed out, since it can be daunting to think of how amateurish and foolish one’s efforts might appear on-line. At the same time, she insisted, taking that risk conveys as sense of vulnerability and authenticity that can win over social media users.
Overcoming misinformation and mistrust
Others regarded such an on-line presence as essential to building the trust necessary to educate students about the value of science or convey its impact on our society, politics, or economy. Timothy Caulfield, Professor, Health Law Institute, University of Alberta, noted that the lack of such trust has seriously destabilized the public life of entire countries, most notably the United States.
“Misinformation is killing people,” he said, speaking literally about how the resulting mistrust of American health authorities is actually eroding life expectancy in that country. “It is having an incredibly adverse impact on public discourse and our democracy.”
Social media is not entirely responsible for this problem, he added, where individuals find themselves gravitating to “echo chambers” that cater to a narrow range of information and opinions. He suggested that critical thinking skills could counter this tendency and recommended that these be taught to students as part of a dedicated educational initiative.
“There are some jurisdictions, Scandinavian countries, that do this very early, as early as kindergarten,” he said. “This is not, as I’m sure critics will say, ideologically motivated. This is teaching neutral thinking skills that can be deployed throughout a lifetime, and that is becoming so essential in our current information environment.”
As the deliberations of the break-out sessions were being presented at a final plenary, Runte returned to the original challenge, which she maintained had less to do with technology than with the way people interact with technology. By way of example, she pointed to the ever-changing suite of technical skills that young people are asked to acquire for various jobs.
“No matter what those skills end up being, we are moving increasingly, in order to be successful, to a model where educators and employers and governments need to work collaboratively,” she said. “And collaboration is hard work.”
Nor should those skills remain in academic settings, such as university laboratories. John Munro, President of the BC Association of Science Teachers, maintained that young people should appreciate the potential of science and technology to improve the lives of all Canadians.
“We want them to think about what really matters,” he concluded. “Science can be a pathway to fixing real things. I don’t want it to stop at plants and caterpillars.”
Calls to Action
The National Conversation on Youth and Science arrived at the following series of calls to action, based on the exchanges in the event’s break-out sessions.
On science literacy and education:
On science communication:
On science and technology skills:
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