Tomorrow two middle-aged men will stand on stage goading the
audience to vote for the other to stand in a coffin-shaped
casket and be blasted by a 1m volt bolt of lightning.
Psychology professor Richard Wiseman and science writer and
physicist Simon Singh are the intrepid duo prepared to risk
their lives in a London theatre in the name of science.
“If it hits me or Richard that is pretty much goodbye,”
explains Singh breezily. “The household supply is 240 volts;
this is potentially lethal.”
The electricity will crackle between two copper coils in a
spectacular display — the theory is that the metal piping on
the casket will prevent the volunteer being fried alive.
“It’s a bit like the circus,” says Wiseman. “If it goes wrong
there’s the potential for tremendous risk.” He adds drily:
“Hopefully there will be a second show on Tuesday.”
So why take the chance? Singh and Wiseman are part of a band
of enthusiasts taking radical steps in a desperate bid to
switch people on to science, an unpopular subject with many
schoolchildren, who complain that it is “boring”. The
enthusiasts’ tactics include presenting science as theatre,
magic tricks and fantasy.
Wiseman, for instance, a former magician who has investigated
the paranormal, is also being funded to create a “wow box” for
schools, full of magic tricks for teachers to perform, with a
DVD explaining the science behind each illusion.
But such moves are not welcomed by all scientists. The fear
has been raised that the subject is being dumbed down. Are
magic, fantasy, theatre and investigations into the paranormal
really science? “There are quite a number of stick in the muds
in the universities who think this is a bit undignified,” says
Russell Stannard, a retired physics professor and author —
although he stresses that he is not one of them.
Wiseman, however, disagrees. “We are very anti the idea we are
dumbing down,” he says. “These initiatives are needed because
the situation is desperate.”
“As a magician, I watch children’s faces and they are full of
wonder and fun. I watch them learning science and it all slips
away.”
The pair are working against the background of widespread
uncertainty about how to reverse the plummeting numbers of
children studying science at A-level or as a degree. Last week
a government inquiry into threatened closures of university
chemistry and physics departments declined to bail them out
with extra cash.
A survey this month of 1,000 school children found that half
those questioned said science lessons were boring, confusing
or difficult. Even bestselling US- born author Bill Bryson has
admitted that one reason he wrote his layman’s guide to
science, A Short History of Nearly Everything, was because he
found the subject such a mind-numbing turn off at school.
“We want people to realise science is not boring. It’s about a
lot more than equations and text-books,” says Singh. “These
are our entrepreneurs and unless something is done we will not
have any in 10 years time.”
Henry Gee, a palaeontologist and a science writer at Nature
magazine, agrees that the way science is taught in many
schools — with an emphasis on facts and formulae and very few
whizzy experiments — leaves kids cold.
Gee, too, wants to put fantasy and the imagination at the
heart of how we teach science. “Fantasy is something we should
have more of in science education,” he says.
When he tours schools with his book about the science of
Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, Gee tells enthralled children
that fire- breathing dragons are like the Bombardier beetle —
which turns its back on its enemies before squirting them with
a lethal chemical concoction.
Like Singh and Wiseman — whose show sold out within days of
tickets going on sale — he’s getting an enthusiastic response.
He explains how far elves can see and how orcs might reproduce
— though he admits that he hasn’t come up with a plausible
answer to “How does the Ring make its wearer invisible?” Gee
blames ministers as well as established scientists for
defining science so strictly that popular phenomena such as
magic, astrology and the paranormal are ruled out of its
domain.
“Science in Britain is going the way of the dinosaurs — a
one-way road to extinction,” he says. “Prominent scientists .
. . just turn people off.”
But after all the talk about spectacle and magic, there is
general agreement that a pragmatic solution to the country’s
science crisis is needed. Singh believes the exodus of kids
from science is down to the chronic shortage of properly
qualified teachers. In 2003 one in 10 physics and chemistry
lessons were taught by a teacher with not even an A-level in
the subject.
He calls on ministers to stop burying their heads in the sand,
holding the occasional science year or sending the odd popular
science book to libraries.
Instead, he says, they should set targets for the number of
science graduates teaching in schools and if the targets are
not met within, say, two years, the minister responsible
should resign.
Now that is fantasy.