Education for a Future in Crisis: Developing a Humanities-Informed STEM Curriculum
Ethan Lee, Ariel Nicole Hart, Thomas A. Searles, Marc, Levis-Fitzgerald, Ram\'on S. Barthelemy, Shanna Shaked, Victoria Marks, and, Sergio Carbajo

TL;DR
This paper presents a humanities-informed STEM curriculum aimed at fostering critical thinking, social awareness, and ethical understanding among STEM students to address societal and environmental challenges.
Contribution
It introduces a novel interdisciplinary curriculum integrating social sciences and humanities to enhance critical analysis in STEM education.
Findings
Curriculum promotes critical reflection and social awareness among STEM students.
Students develop nuanced understanding of science's social and political impacts.
Potential to create more inclusive and socially responsible STEM professionals.
Abstract
In the popular imagination, science and technology are often seen as fields of knowledge production critical to social progress and a cooperative future. This optimistic portrayal of technological advancement also features prominently in internal discourses amongst scientists, industry leaders, and STEM students alike. Yet, an overwhelming body of research, investigation, and first-person accounts highlight the varying ways modern science, technology, and engineering industries contribute to the degradation of our changing environments and exploit and harm global low-income and marginalized populations. By and large, siloed higher-education STEM curricula provide inadequate opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students to critically analyze the historical and epistemological foundations of scientific knowledge production and even fewer tools to engage with and respond to modern…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetics, Bioinformatics, and Biomedical Research · Biomedical and Engineering Education
