JCE Online Journal of Chemical EducationDivision of Chemical Education, American Chemical SocietyAmerican Chemical Society
 | Subscriptions  | Software Orders  | Support  | Contributors  | Advertisers  | 

JCE Print

JCE Digital Library

JCE Software

Only@JCE Online

About JCE


  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1998  > February  >
Chemical Education Today
Editorial
Education versus Training
John W. Moore
University of Wisconsin at Madison, Madison, WI 53706-1396

Cover
February 1998
Vol. 75 No. 2
p. 135

Full Text

A statement by Dick Zare in his commentary "Changing the Federal-University Partnership" (J. Chem. Educ. 1998, 75, 16-17) started me thinking about our current approaches to both graduate and undergraduate programs. He said,

Doctoral students should not be trained primarily to be the future members of the professoriate.... Real progress would be made if there were a more explicit recognition that Ph.D.'s would be better trained as creative problem solvers who can pursue a large number of options for useful, satisfying careers.

For now I would like to leave aside the question of how students can be trained primarily for the professoriate if there is little or no pedagogical component to their training. Rather, I will concentrate on the issue of education versus training. I assign different meanings to these two words, and I think the difference is an important one.

Training to me means a narrowly focused program that leads to high proficiency in a specific skill. It prepares a student for one particular job or activity but provides neither broad perspective nor flexibility of approach. On the other hand, education enables students to see the forest and the trees. It encourages general approaches to problem solving and inculcates ways of thinking that are productive, effective, and rewarding. An education prepares a student to deal with and solve a broad range of problems, and to choose which problems are important and which are not. Even though his definitions of the words may differ from mine, Zare clearly implies that Ph.D.'s are being trained, not educated. If true, this is a major problem for our discipline.

My own Ph.D. program encouraged and enhanced my ability to learn on my own. My mentor, Ralph Pearson, provided an environment within which I could develop habits of the mind that have served well ever since. For example, most of what I know about helping students to learn was discovered experimentally, with no teacher directly involved. The approach was similar to what one would do in any kind of research, though the problem was a good deal harder than most. As in most research, each experiment raised many more questions than it answered, but real progress was made as well.

Twenty five years ago Tom Lippincott wrote in an editorial in this Journal, "...perhaps we can admit that our spectacular successes in improved training of science majors have not been matched by corresponding successes in their education." He argued that a change in how we teach, not what we teach, was in order. I recommend that you read that editorial, because its suggestions are as applicable today as they were 25 years ago. Most of us have yet to change how we teach, even at the graduate level. (We have put the editorial into JCE Online as supplementary material.)

I think we ought to be educating - not training - both undergraduate and graduate students. In a world in which change is the norm, only an educated student has been properly equipped to prosper. This means that students need to be able to identify and define problems, to solve them imaginatively, and to apply the chemistry they learn in a variety of contexts in other disciplines. Students will not learn to do this unless we encourage and require it. We need to provide practice in approaching real problems, rewards for persistence in attempting a variety of potential solutions, and reassurance that a scientific approach is the best means discovered to date to deal with difficult problems.

But what if students are not up to the task? Failure and discouragement could negate all the advantages of true education. A supportive environment and judicious choice of level and difficulty of problems are essential. Group rather than individual problem solving also can help. And, given a chance to demonstrate it, students may be more capable than we, or they, expect. In the words of Emily Dickinson,

We never know how high we are
Till we are called to rise
And then if we are true to plan
Our statures touch the skies.

True education involves drawing out the innate qualities of students, helping them to develop their own understanding, and nourishing their minds to achieve the greatest possible stature. It is a difficult goal to achieve, but one that is well worth our best efforts.

More Information
*  Citation
Moore, John W. J. Chem. Educ. 1998 75 135.
*  Keywords
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
June 28, 1999
November 22, 2005
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1998  > February



Chemistry Teacher Connection

The "Chemistry Teacher Connection" (CTC) is especially for high school chemistry teachers. For only $40/year, it offers an online-only subscription to CLIC along with membership in the Division of Chemical Education, normally $65/year. CTC subscribers receive access to all articles and supplements from 1996 through the current issue.


C&EN CLICs

Through special arrangement with the ACS, JCE High School CLIC is now able to provide subscribers with online access to Chemical & Engineering News articles that have been selected specifically for secondary science instructors and their students. 


JCE Collections Available
Occasionally, collections of JCE back issues become available for donation to individual teachers, schools, or libraries. JCE matches collections with interested recipients. Recipients pay shipping costs or pick up the collection.

Contributions Welcome
JCE welcomes your submission

Subscriptions

Fishing for New Ideas
Always in the
process of
improving, CLIC
welcomes ideas and comments.

Email Us