UL’s Prof Geraldine Mooney Simmie discusses her analysis into STEM education and the work of the Epi-STEM analysis centre.
In Ireland, STEM disciplines are extremely popular in third-level education. Figures from the Central Statistics Office confirmed that in 2022, the variety of STEM graduates in Ireland was 40.1 per 1,000 individuals aged 20 to 29 – the very best price within the EU.
“STEM education in Ireland is for the most part very positively received across all sectors of the education system, with a new emphasis placed on STEM education in the new primary school curriculum,” says Prof Geraldine Mooney Simmie, professor of STEM education at University of Limerick’s (UL) School of Education.
“There is an growing emphasis on engineering education and on laptop science, along with the previous emphasis on science and arithmetic education.
“There is at the same time an urgent need for new thinking and new pedagogical approaches to STEM education, especially their connectivity to ethics, equity and ecology, keeping in mind the new scientific discoveries aligned to the multiple purposes of education.”
Mooney Simmie’s analysis is concentrated on the world of the cultural politics of STEM education, pedagogy and society in relation to STEM academics’ work practices, similar to educating, academics’ skilled studying and mentoring.
“The importance of my research lies in the role of STEM and STEAM education today, and in a future Ireland, Europe and internationally as it rises to multiple challenges in an increasingly complex and highly scientific and technological world,” she says.
As an professional researcher with the European Commission, Mooney Simmie lately accomplished a research study of education and abilities for fairness and sustainability in relation to Europe’s inexperienced and digital transitions.
Epi-STEM
As nicely as her position as professor and researcher, Mooney Simmie can be director of Epi-STEM, the National Centre for STEM Education.
Epi-STEM is a analysis centre based mostly in UL that explores methods to enhance STEM education by STEM instructor upskilling and persevering with skilled growth.
“Our aim is to progress research and innovation in UL for wisdom and action in relation to all aspects of mathematics, science, engineering and technology, and computer science education, including STEM education,” explains Mooney Simmie.
Epi-STEM has a core group of 4 individuals. As nicely as Mooney Simmie, the centre consists of co-director Dr Niamh O’Meara, senior government administrator Helen Fitzgerald and analysis liaison officer Dr Michelle Starr.
The centre has greater than 40 associates, drawn from STEM education researchers in UL’s School of Education, scientists, mathematicians and engineers within the Faculty of Science and Engineering, and from the Bernal Institute.
Epi-STEM hosts a lot of tasks and programmes, such because the skilled diploma in arithmetic for educating –a completely funded authorities programme for upskilling “out-of-field mathematics teachers”. The centre additionally established a repository of post-primary STEM educating sources.
Improvements and boundaries
While STEM has important uptake in Ireland, a lot of boundaries stay. For instance, a recent report from Engineers Ireland discovered that girls are far much less seemingly than males to be inspired to pursue a STEM profession.
According to Mooney Simmie, STEM topics have historically been the purview of the elite and the rich, being most related to “the wealthy white man of science”.
“To date our national policies and practices in STEM education are steeped in the disciplines and wrapped in an even tighter regulatory frame than heretofore,” she says. “This retains in play a hierarchical switch of attitudes, information and abilities at play that may be dehumanising and unrealistic.
“We can clearly improve this and breathe new life into the STEM curriculum, making the STEM subjects come to life for all young people, especially for women, and girls and minorities, by connecting the topics to a critical reflexive appreciation of the power and limits of science and to the necessity for affective equality in relation to STEM as a sociological project.”
Luckily, it appears that evidently issues could be altering for the higher. Mooney Simmie says that internationally there’s a rising recognition that the main target of STEM education wants widening and deepening to “better support the fast-changing world”.
“There is a growing interest in STEAM education as a transdisciplinary field of study and practice, where the natural sciences and the applied sciences are positioned on an equal footing with the arts and the deliberative traditions.”
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