One hundred high school students have enrolled in UCSB’s new “School for Scientific Thought” to learn about “Mutants, Spirals and Riots,” “Industrial Espionage,” “Biology and Ecology of Infectious Diseases” and other “hot topics” in science and engineering in the first of a series of free Saturday mini-courses offered by the California NanoSystems Institute and supported by the National Science Foundation.
The innovative educational program exposes students in grades 10 through 12 to concepts in science beyond the typical high school science curriculum, ranging from cosmology to infectious diseases and from nanotechnology to reverse engineering. Instructors are UCSB scientists and engineers doing doctoral research who want to share their enthusiasm for science and their expertise in research.
“The School for Scientific Thought (SST) will give high school students a sense of just how exciting science and technology can be, and also show them that scientists are ordinary people with wide-ranging interests,” said UCSB physics professor Elisabeth Gwinn, faculty sponsor for the program. “Our Ph.D. candidates are gaining a wonderful opportunity to develop their own courses, with much more freedom than is typical in a teaching assistantship at a university. They’re also developing the skills to create friendly learning environments for nonexperts through their collaboration with SST program coordinator Wendy Ibsen, a senior member of the California NanoSystems Institute’s education staff and one of the major architects of the SST program.”
The first course will begin Sept. 19. Classes are scheduled from 10 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Lunch will be served. In the afternoon, students are invited to remain on campus until 3 p.m. to take part in tours and other campus programs. There will be no homework or examinations.
Another session is scheduled for the winter quarter. Early registration is recommended. Click here to apply online.
Winter courses will focus on nanotechnology, RNA, field biology, quantum mechanics and human-ecological systems. Click here for program information, or call 805.893.8527 or e-mail sst@cnsi.ucsb.edu.



