At COP 21, I learned how important it is in today’s society
to attend a liberal arts college and receive an interdisciplinary
education. I am a senior chemistry major
and environmental science minor and have had to take courses outside of my
discipline in order to fulfill graduation requirements. I enjoyed the history, English, and other
classes I had to take, but did not really understand why I would need
them. Today proved why it is important
to take classes outside of your comfort zone.
I attended the last part of a presentation sponsored by the
United States Delegation at the USA pavilion about climate change
technologies. There were three speakers
(I saw the last one) talking about new inventions or technologies that are
needed to measure greenhouse gas concentrations and collect “better” data
(increase signal to noise ratio). The
key point the final speaker was trying to make is that we need to gather more
data and improve the accuracy and precision of the instruments. He was all about increasing monitoring so we
know exactly what is happening to the Earth’s atmosphere at any given moment.
During the question and answer session, an individual from
Kenya asked a very important question.
He wanted to know how the scientists knew which data sets were important
and how this would help the negotiation process; essentially, how the
researchers would explain their data to the delegates so they could use that
information to create climate policy.
The researchers did not understand the question! The individual had to repeat it three times
before they almost understood what he was asking, and started to explain how
the data is important in weather forecasting and creating better models (more
science). It astounded me that these
three brilliant and important scientists, who have been doing research in their
field for a long time, did not know how to respond to a question asking how
they assisted the negotiation process.
The scientists just wanted to gather more data, and thought the numbers
spoke for themselves. A very important
aspect of climate change research is being able to explain what the data means,
and how it can be used to create climate policy. Just stating that the amount of carbon
dioxide is increasing or the oceans are warming would not provide much direction
in how to create legislation, because the policy makers might not see a problem
until the impacts are explained to them.
What I learned at Moravian College in multiple classes, especially a
climate change course taught by a biologist and a musician, is how important it
is to be able to explain science to an audience that does not have as much
background as me in a way that they would understand. If I cannot do this, then I cannot engage
people outside of my discipline in conversation or assist them in making
important decisions. This is vital in
climate change research, because the policy makers are relying on scientific
findings to tell them that increased amounts of carbon dioxide will lead to
warming, which can cause glaciers to melt and sea levels to rise, flooding
cities which can cause casualties and lead to mass migration. This is what the delegates need to know, and
these scientists did not understand how they play a part in the process. While the data might seem obvious to the
researchers, it might not be to people in the delegation because they do not
have the background to interpret it.
Having this experience made me glad that I went to Moravian,
because I had the familiarity of understanding different disciplines’ ways of
thinking and explaining research. It is
important to have a liberal arts education, because it provides an
interdisciplinary background for success in a globally connected world. So, thank you Moravian for this opportunity,
and providing me with the knowledge that if one day I am doing climate change
research and am asked a question on how to explain my research, I will be able
to in a way that someone who was not a scientist could understand.
Great defense of the liberal arts!
ReplyDeleteA good opening line [At COP 21, I learned how important it is in today’s society to attend a liberal arts college and receive an interdisciplinary education]!
ReplyDeleteThis is a point I've raised with President Grigsby (& President Byerly of Lafayette) — not in relation to scientists explaining their findings, but the many ways a liberal arts education is so critical for society.