Stress tests of character are real in every field, and they can yield both inspiration and valuable lessons in character. According to a recent study, teens who read about the personal and intellectual struggles of scientists feel more motivated to learn science. In her article
“How Teens Benefit From Reading About the Struggles of Scientists,” LCI Associate Director Deborah Farmer Kris wrote:
It’s understandable that students might find imagining themselves as scientists a stretch -- great achievements in science get far more attention than the failed experiments, so it’s easy to see a scientist’s work as stemming from an innate talent. Additionally, several science fields have a long way to go to be more inclusive of women and underrepresented minorities.
But for high school students, learning more about some of the personal and intellectual struggles of scientists can help students feel more motivated to learn science . . . As the researchers wrote: “When students struggle in science classes, they may misperceive their struggle as an indication that they are not good at science and will never succeed.” By identifying a scientist’s struggles and introducing the growth mindset he or she applied to accomplish great works, the students were able to empathize with the scientists during their own struggles. The researchers identified stories as a learning tool because of stories' ability to influence readers' beliefs.
Here are 15 science resources that can help connect students with the stress tests of character faced by successful scientists
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Ada Byron Lovelace and The Thinking Machine, by Laurie Wallmark and April Chu
Ada Byron Lovelace was the world’s first computer programmer, creating a coding algorithm years before the modern computer was invented. This picture book biography describes how measles left her temporarily blind and paralyzed and how she overcame society’s negative attitudes towards women in the sciences.
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On a Beam of Light, by Jennifer Berne and Vladimir Radunsky
Through simple text and stunning illustrations, this book explores Albert Einstein’s early struggles with learning and school – and how they propelled his later accomplishments. The New York Times described this book as "something of an It Gets Better Project for mathematically precocious children."
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Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin and Mary Azarian
Wilson Bentley was a nature photographer who showed the world that “no two snowflakes are alike.” This picture book describes his unstoppable grit in pursuit of his dream and includes sidebars with more information about the methods and science behind his work.
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Summer Birds: The Butterflies of Maria Merian by Margarita Engle and Julie Paschkis.
In seventeenth-century Europe -- when many thought butterflies were evil creatures that generated spontaneously from mud --entomologist Maria Merian made her mission to study them. After years of study, she wrote and illustrated a groundbreaking book about the life-cycle of a butterfly. This picture book describes how she conducted much of her work in secret because of the negative perceptions around this insect.
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Life in the Ocean: The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle by Claire A. Nivola
As her biography at National Geographic notes, “called ‘Her Deepness’ by the New Yorker and the New York Times, ‘Living Legend’ by the Library of Congress, and first ‘Hero for the Planet’ by Time magazine, [Sylvia Earle] is an oceanographer, explorer, author, and lecturer.” This beautifully illustrated picture book describes how a difficult move to a new state during her childhood awakened a life-long passion. The author’s note would also make a good read-aloud for teens, describing her scientific work in more depth and how she “defied conventional expectations at every stage of her life.”
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My Brief History, by Stephen Hawking
At 144 pages, this brief memoir is broken into several small chapters in which theoretical physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking writes about his childhood, his research and – of course – his life with ALS, which gradually paralyzed him over the course of decades and required him to develop compensatory methods for engaging in his research. Teachers could use or read aloud excerpts of this compelling autobiography.
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Feynman, by Jim Ottaviani and Leland Myrick
Written for teens, this graphic novel vividly portrays the life of the vivacious physicist Richard Feynman. It captures his tenacity in the face of trying circumstances -- from working on the Manhattan project to uncovering the cause of the Challenger explosion to caring for his ailing wife.
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Headstrong: 52 Women Who Changed Science - and the World, by Rachel Swaby
These short biographical sketches average four pages in length – an easy read aloud – and highlight female scientists in the following fields: medicine, biology and the environment, genetics and development, physics, earth and stars, math and technology, and invention. Several stories note obstacles they faced, including gender bias, illness, and family disapproval.
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The PBS/NOVA web-series,
The Secret Life of Scientists and Engineers“ provides a humanizing snapshot of scientists who are shaping our world.” Each episode profiles a contemporary scientist in three or four discrete, one-to-three minute video clips. The site is searchable by topic and includes blog posts and a teacher's guide.
Note: Deborah Farmer Kris, LCI Associate Director, first published a version a version of this resource on KQED’s MindShift.