Meet Six-time
National Champion Science Olympiad Coach, Drew Kirian
Interviewed by Lucy Kulbago
Science Olympiad is one of the
premier national science competitions, drawing 6,800 teams from 50 states. Science Olympiad competitions consist of 23
events which change each year and cover a wide variety of science disciplines
including life, personal, and social sciences, physical science and chemistry,
earth and space science, technology and engineering, and inquiry and nature of
science. Science Olympiad competitions
include local invitationals, regional competitions which qualify top teams to
compete at the state level, with state champions from all 50 states competing
at the national competition.
Lucy Kulbago is a middle school
Science Olympiad Coach and is also pursuing a doctoral degree in science
education at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio.
Drew Kirian is a recently retired
middle school science teacher from Solon Middle School in Solon, Ohio and has
retired from coaching the Solon Middle School Science Olympiad Team after
taking his team to the national tournament eleven times, and finishing in first
place from 2008 – 2013.
How does it feel to
have led your team to six consecutive national championships?
I am still in shock. Every year my assistant coach and
I say that we have had a good run and wonder if we should go out on top.
I am going out on top this year. The students showed how important it is
to be a team. Their consistency is what won it for Solon. 167
points at Nationals is amazing. It feels good.
What first got you
interested in Science Olympiad?
Well, the people at Ohio State sent me literature and I put
it aside for three years, and then I said I’m going to try it. The interesting thing is I went to my
principal and I said I was going to try this and he told me no, don’t do it,
it’s too much for you. Fortunately for
me I don’t listen too well and I ignored him.
It’s been very fun; it’s one of the best things I’ve ever been involved
with. Not only this and the kids and the
parents, but meeting coaches from other teams, meeting kids from other teams,
it’s just been fun. What I think is also
important are the friendships I get from the parents and community
volunteers. I made some deep friendships
with them through coaching, and working with the kids, and it’s a great thing.
What are the benefits
to the students in a competitive situation?
They can measure themselves with other students and I think
there are real benefits in that.
Competitions within different layers of Science Olympiad can draw out
their interests. We had a student in the
late 90’s, he covered for another student in astronomy, and fell in love with
it. Now he runs Astronomy and Reach for
the Stars at the national level. You see
through competition what you are able to do, and it shapes what you want to do
with your life. Very few people become
journalism or communication majors through Science Olympiad. A lot of doctors and engineers come out of
here. I have one or two students that I
have coached in volleyball and track that have become professional athletes,
but many more professional scientists come out of Science Olympiad.
Talk about how you
structure your team.
Our team is structured in a way that I’m the main coach, and
then I have an assistant coach and parent coaches. I try to get the parents to coach events so
my assistant coach and I only have one or two events. When we start out the year we have 100 kids
try out for the team, and we cut it down to just over 30. At our first meeting, the assistant coach has
them sign up for 4 events they want to do, and he makes two schedules, where
one week half of the events meet for a half hour, and the other half of the
events meet the second week. They get a
lot of good material from their event coach.
We’re not really spoon feeding them, but giving then more opportunities
to gain more knowledge. The kids do all
the work, the coach just gives them a little bit of a challenge.
How has this
structure changed over time?
When I first started, we met in January, went to Regionals
in February and in two months we were done.
Now we start in August, tryout through the month of September, meet and
practice until January, and go to about 10 – 12 tournaments the rest of the
year. Other successful teams have more
than one coach or they have parent coaches.
It took me a long while to realize I couldn’t coach 23 events. It’s a lot of work.
Talk more about the
difficulty of going from 100 to 30 kids to start the season, and then down to
15 after Regionals.
Well, to go from 100 kids down to 30 plus kids, it’s hard. A
few of them don’t mind not making the team because their parents are pushing
them to be on the team, but the majority of the kids want to do it because the
program has such a strong reputation. So
you see a lot of tears in their eyes.
The hardest cut is the one going from Regionals to States, cutting from
30 plus kids to 15. They’ve had so much
fun at the invitationals that when they get cut and can’t make it as an
alternate, it tears them apart a little bit, and I feel bad for that.
Do you think not
making the team diminishes their interest in science?
A lot of the kids, if they don’t make it, will try out
again. I know there are kids out there
that would have been perfect for this program. The way I run my tryouts, I think it’s fair,
but I still miss the one factor of who is genuine in how they want to approach
Science Olympiad. It’s that one
invisible factor you wish you could evaluate.
Is the rumor true that
you have a special class that is only for Science Olympiad?
No, we’ve never had a special class. The closest we’ve ever come is when the 8th
graders are in my study hall and I allow them in my room instead of going to
study hall so they could study quietly.
We’ve always kept our Science Olympiad club as an extracurricular
organization that meets from 7pm – 9pm every Thursday night.
How do you deal with
conflicts with other activities?
I tell them that it’s a commitment but I don’t prevent them
from belonging. I’m all for kids being involved in a lot of
different activities. We work around
that.
What do you do as a
coach to foster good sportsmanship?
About 12 years ago, one of my friends, a Science Olympiad
coach, kept saying that when your kids walk up to the stage at States, if they
don’t get first place, they frown. So as
a result, almost every week we talk about how you receive yourself, how people
perceive you. When you walk up on stage,
we don’t want any chins dragging; we want to have smiles on our faces no matter
how we do. I always point out examples
at tournaments where one of the younger kids will jump up and get excited over
a 7th place ribbon and I think that is something that is really
precious to see that happen. We also try
to install sportsmanship. Never laugh at
someone if they don’t perform well, whether from your school or another school. If another school were to leave a set of
goggles at home, we would be the first ones to offer it to them. It’s all about meeting people, and becoming
friends, and not about cut-throat competition.
What other attributes
do you see arise from the students that participate in Science Olympiad?
Leadership and a culture of team work. Even though we run two teams and groups of
people are competing against each other, we try not to hide stuff. We share it with each other. We try to instill a culture that we are a
family. Teamwork is the most important
thing. There is also the responsibility
that beyond the practices, they spend some time studying on their own. Each event meets every other week for a half
an hour. The kids have to figure out
what they need to learn, and spend the time to learn it.
What keeps coaching
Science Olympiad fresh and exciting year after year?
I guess you never know what to expect with the new group of
kids. It keeps it live. I start out slow at the beginning of the
year, then I go to the coaches clinic and that fires me up. Then we have weeks of practices after that,
and at the first competition you see the excitement in their eyes, and I see
how they support their team. That’s
what it’s all about.
What advice do you
have for a new Science Olympiad Coach?
Number one, a lot of coaches hold back, they don’t want to
try it. I think the first think it to
jump in feet first and just give it a go.
Second thing, you have to win over the students, and one of the ways is
to get them into more than one tournament.
A lot of schools go to regionals, hope to go to states, and then to
nationals. But I can see that the growth
during the invitationals is very important.
Along with that, you have to be able to come up with some money. They have to come up with some kind of a
budget and a way to achieve that budget.
Have you been able to
recruit other teachers to help with Science Olympiad?
Gosh, I’ve been knocking on doors for 26 years. I’ve had maybe 2 teachers help. One fizzled out because he was late, and I
didn’t want to be late for the tournament, so I left him behind, and he never
forgave me for that. I’ve had almost no
help from teachers until this past year, and that is my first success at
getting a teacher to help. Teacher’s
nowadays want to get here just before school begins and leave right after
school ends. Some will put in extra
time coaching athletics, but very few do it for academic extra-curriculars. It is sad to see, but that is the new
trend. That’s why we see so many parent
coaches in Science Olympiad now.
What are some characteristics
of a well-coached team?
Some coaches work with their kids every night. That’s not my type of coaching. I think it burns the kids out. A good coach gives the kids the opportunity
to learn. I coached Rocks and Minerals
and we went to Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh (PA) to see more samples of rocks
and minerals, and last weekend we went to Cleveland Museum of Natural History
to see their displays, and we ran into the curator and got ask questions. Well-coached teams look for that little edge
where you get a little bit more information.
Give the kids opportunities to learn more and build better devices.
What will you be
doing now that you have retired from both teaching and Science Olympiad?
I am moving to California with my wife to be near my
grandchildren. I may start coaching a new
team once I get out there. I enjoy
watching the kids be successful and achieve their dreams, and it will be hard
to walk away from Science Olympiad.
science olympiad is not that great in fact it is too much and I think the events are just very juvenile, not real science. Just stupid tests made by parents the night before. Kids study for months and all they get is a pathetic test, not even following the rules. There are way too many hacks in this organization.
ReplyDeleteObviously, the original comment came from someone who had a bad experience with the Science Olympiad program. Most of the time the event test is prepared in advance of a competition and challenges the students to be their best. If there is a better program out there that can motivate students in science, please let me know. I have had students attend very good universities and have chosen careers in science because of SO.
ReplyDelete