In
New Berlin, Wis., a giant fireball singes a teacher and eight
students during a science experiment. In Tulsa, Okla., a mixture
of potassium chlorate and sulfur rips away a counter and injures
five. And in a classroom in Hyrum, Utah, glass flies when a jug of
methanol explodes.
As these recent incidents bear out, teenagers and chemicals can
be a volatile mix. That hasn't stopped educators from advocating
more hands-on experiments to make science more attractive to
students. But in the midst of state budget cuts, overcrowded
classrooms, and the threat of parental lawsuits, keeping science
both interesting and safe is no easy feat.
Utah, North Carolina, and a number of other states have decided
to update their classroom codes and hire safety experts to
instruct teachers. But experts say that hundreds of American
public schools still have lax enforcement of safety rules and many
even lack basic protections such as safety goggles and working
chemical exhaust hoods.
A recent safety study conducted in 10 states by researchers at
Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, shows that labs have become
overcrowded. Thirty-two percent of science classrooms did not have
eye-wash stations, and 18 percent did not have enough protective
goggles for all students. About 46 percent of teachers said
they've never received science safety training.
Studies and anecdotal evidence point to a rise in lab accidents
in recent years. This can't be blamed on the new direction of
science teaching, says Michigan State University professor James
Gallagher, who helped write national science-teaching standards in
1996. But, he adds, "we clearly need to provide some
instruction on how to design and implement activities that are
safe for kids."
Some labs would need to be completely overhauled to be fit for
21st-century science. Before the recent renovation of their
science wing, chemistry and biology teachers at Raleigh's
Broughton High School had to make do with lab technology dating
back to 1927. At rural schools, science budgets are sometimes
hardly big enough to cover the cost of preserved perch for the
midterm dissection exam.
"I've been to schools way out in the country where the
science budget is $500 a year," says Fred Byers, a retired
teacher who now sells safety equipment for Fisher Scientific.
"Is that enough to make sure there's enough safety goggles in
the room? Not in my book."
What some students fear most is not the lab setup but their
fellow students, according to a recent study by the Clinton
Scientific Trust. "One of the main dangers in the lab is
silly people," one student said in the survey.
In Madison, Wis., one such student took the antics outside the
lab. He stole a flask of mercury from a teacher's desk and poured
it into the finger holes of bowling balls at the local alley,
creating a mess that cost nearly $250,000 to clean up. A judge
ordered the boy and his parents to reimburse that money.
Many science teachers hold back on experiments because of
pressure from school officials who fear lawsuits. In Iowa,
according to Drake researchers, accidents doubled and lawsuits
tripled between 1993 and '96.
At one Michigan school, administrators - in a move that some
say amounted to "scientific illiteracy" - drew the
blinds during a total eclipse of the sun, not allowing students to
see it because of the "bad light" that could damage
their eyes. While damage can indeed stem from improper viewing of
an eclipse, Mr. Gallagher says eclipses can be viewed safely, and
they provide magnificent teaching moments.
Mike Williams, a middle school teacher from Lee County, N.C.,
says he recently stayed away from a heredity experiment after a
colleague warned him about taking blood from students.
"Principals tell us to make sure we don't get sued, yet
the state wants us to do more hands-on science," Mr. Williams
says. He's considering doing the experiment with "synthetic
blood."
Jack Gerlovich, a chemistry professor at Drake, has been on a
safety crusade for nearly two decades. While science teachers are
generally the most safety-conscious people in a school, he says,
"when accidents do happen [in labs], they tend to be
catastrophic." But his crusade is not aimed at limiting
hands-on chemistry, which, he agrees, "is the kind of
learning that students remember the rest of their lives."
At an old Durham elementary school where the district now holds
seminars and job fairs, Gerlovich recently led a group of science
teachers through a variety of scenarios: He showed a picture of a
chemistry exhaust vent that should be moved away from the
air-conditioning intake; he gave instructions on keeping eyewash
stations uncluttered. When he asked questions about state safety
codes, many teachers either didn't know the answers or were too
shy to speak up.
The teachers also saw a demo of a new "ventless"
exhaust hood that uses filters to neutralize smoke and pollutants.
Former science teacher Linda Stroud, wearing proper goggles and an
apron, dropped a Gummi Bear into a tube of boiling potassium
chlorate. Everyone knew what would happen next: The sugar in the
bear reacted with the chemical to create a fireworks show in the
test tube. The $3,500 hood neatly sucked up all the smoke.
Gerlovich's eyes miss nothing when it comes to safety details.
Poking around for unsafe science has made him a kind of "Bill
Nye the Science Guy" in reverse. His sideline career as a
safety consultant began with a deal he struck with another
chemistry teacher in Iowa in the early 1980s. He was a
"safety hazard," Gerlovich says, prone to keeping
chemicals too long and having a messy classroom. He agreed to
abide by specific improvements Gerlovich suggested, and only then
did Gerlovich let his teenage daughter attend his class.
In lieu of having a stickler for safety as a neighbor, the
least teachers can do, Gerlovich says, is restrict the most
dangerous experiments to classroom presentations.
And "document, document, document." Many judges are
willing to make students responsible for their own scientific
misdeeds - as long as teachers can prove that reasonable safety
measures were taken.