Author(s): Erika Dyson Darryl Yong

California wildfires force students to think about the connections between STEM and society

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A fire ecologist records post-fire information on tree mortality, fuel consumption, and vegetation communities to better understand and predict fire impacts.
Rachel A Loehman/USGS

Title of course:

""

What prompted the idea for the course?

is to educate STEM students - short for science, technology, engineering and math - so they have a "clear understanding of the impact of their work on society." But the "impact" part of our mission has been the most challenging to realize.

When our college revised its "" in 2020, our faculty decided we should create a new required impact course for all students.

What does the course explore?

The course is taught by a team of eight instructors who share their own disciplinary perspectives and help students critically analyze proposed interventions for increasing wildfire risks.

Our instructors teach , , and .

The class also includes scholars focused on , and .

The course focuses on so students can think critically about the ways STEM and social values shape each other.

For example, , U.S. Forest Service deputy applied the idea of "survival of the fittest" to forest management. Reflecting the prevailing views of his era, he believed that competition was the driving force behind biology, economics and human progress - where the strong thrive and the weak fail.

Olmsted said it was good forestry and good economics to let the forests grow unchecked. This policy would yield straight and tall "merchantable timber" suitable for sale and the needs of industry.

He also rejected "," which had used for centuries to manage forest ecosystems and reduce the flammable undergrowth.

We live with the consequences of such reasoning 100 years later. Fires speed through overgrown land at alarming rates and release into the atmosphere.

Why is this course relevant now?

Climate change is arguably the most pressing concern of our time. And wildfires are particularly relevant to those of us in fire-prone areas like Southern California.

. Consequently, society needs skilled STEM practitioners who can understand and communicate how scientific interventions will have different consequences and appeal to different stakeholders.

For example, Los Angeles first responders have been using and to gather real-time information about fire lines .

But the public is not always comfortable with .

The Los Angeles Fire Department has fielded enough citizen concerns about "" and that it developed in consultation with regulators and the American Civil Liberties Union.

The course's focus on writing, critical thinking and climate change science prepares students to participate in public discussions about such interventions.

By making students consider the impact of their future work, we also hope they will be proactive about the careers they want to pursue, whether it involves climate change or not.

What's a critical lesson from the course?

Not everyone benefits in the same way from a single innovation.

For example, are less likely to benefit from the lower operating costs and lower pollution of electric vehicles. That's because inadequate investment in public charging infrastructure makes owning them less practical.

The course's interdisciplinary approach helps to expose these kinds of structural inequities. We want students to get in the habit of asking questions about any technological solution.

They include questions like: Who is likely to benefit, and how? Who has historically wielded power in this situation? Whose voices are being included? What assumptions have been made? Which values are being prioritized?

What materials does the course feature?

We combine popular and scholarly sources.

Students about the in Paradise, California, which killed 85 people.

They analyze wildfire data using the , an open-source data manipulation library for the Python computer programming language.

They also read a examining fossil fuel companies' culpability for increased risk of wildfires. And they analyze the environmental historian William Cronon's of the environmentalist movement for romanticizing an idea of a pristine "wilderness" while absolving themselves of the responsibility to protect the rest of nature - humans, cities, farms, industries.

We also examine , and .

What will the course prepare students to do?

The final assignment for the course asks students to critically analyze a proposed intervention dealing with growing California wildfire risk using the disciplinary tools they have learned.

For example, they could choose the increased deployment of .

For this intervention, we expect that students would address topics like of prescribed burning, and scientific research on .

The Conversation

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