Abstract

In recent decades, Science & Technology Studies (STS) have revealed the dynamic interaction between science and technology and society. Technology development is not an autonomous process and its artifacts are not socially inert. Society and technology shape each other. Technologies often have ‘soft impacts’ in terms of unpredicted side effects on individuals and society. Nevertheless, current societal discourse on technological innovations is still dominated by ‘hard impacts’ such as quantifiable risks for health, safety and the environment. Furthermore, participants in socio-scientific discourses often underestimate their agency in influencing technological innovations, and at the same time overestimate their freedom of choice to use a technology. Past debates on technological innovations have shown how these debates were framed and often caught in fruitless discourse patterns or arguments. Interventionist STS research experiments with solutions to this problem. Assuming that an STS perspective is helpful in reframing and articulating socio-scientific classroom discourses, the case of genetic testing is used to explore this. An important positive ‘hard impact’ of genetic testing is disease prevention. However, this is put into perspective by addressing ‘soft impacts’ such as limited access to certain careers based on genetic risk and changes in the conception of health and the perception of responsibility for one’s health. Discussion stoppers such as ‘playing God’ or ‘We can’t stop technological advancement’ can be challenged through uncovering underlying assumptions. The use of narratives and future scenarios in classrooms seems fruitful in provoking imagination and engaging students in public debates on technological innovations.

Highlights

  • In the 1990s, the top-down implementation of biotechnology encountered intense public scrutiny and vehement social resistance (e.g. Gaskell and Bauer 2001)

  • Participants in socio-scientific discourses often underestimate their agency in influencing technological innovations, and at the same time overestimate their freedom of choice to use a technology

  • An important positive ‘hard impact’ of genetic testing is disease prevention. This is put into perspective by addressing ‘soft impacts’ such as limited access to certain careers based on genetic risk and changes in the conception of health and the perception of responsibility for one’s health

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Summary

Introduction

In the 1990s, the top-down implementation of biotechnology encountered intense public scrutiny and vehement social resistance (e.g. Gaskell and Bauer 2001). The Dutch DNA Labs on the Road are a joint activity of genomics centers and universities targeted at upper secondary education (Van Mil et al 2010) This outreach activity includes opinion-forming on socio-scientific issues going with genomics applications. We will discuss new insights from STS, including Science Communication, and explore how this might inform science and technology education for citizenship in a democratic society. The following research question will be addressed in this article: How can STS research on the dynamic interaction between science, technology and society contribute to reframing and articulation of socio-scientific classroom discourses on genetic testing? We draw widely on English literature and believe that our work has wider applicability beyond our own context

Co-evolution of Science and Technology and Society
Persistent Images of Technology Limit Public Discourse and Participation
Discourse on Technology is Limited to Risk and Neglects Soft Impacts
Technology Can Evoke Moral Change
STS View on Genetic Testing
Uses of Genetic Information
Hard and Soft Impacts of Genetic Testing
Societal Influence on Genetic Testing
Revisiting Classroom Discourses on Genetic Testing
Narratives on Hard and Soft Impacts in the Classroom
Prediction Reliability and False Test Results
Preparing for Agency
Imagining the Future Using Techno-Moral Vignettes
Revisiting STS Education
Conclusions and Outlook
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