"My Kid Isn't Into STEM" – And Why That's Perfectly Okay (Plus What to Do About It)
You've heard the constant push: STEM, STEM, STEM. But what if your kid prefers poetry, music, art, or sports? Relax. It's okay—and often beneficial.
Explorer les guides et outils adaptés à cette situationHey there,
You've heard the constant push: STEM, STEM, STEM. Parent meetings, college prep articles, and worried chats with other parents often focus on whether your child shows interest in science, technology, engineering, or math. But what if your kid prefers poetry, music, art, or sports?
Relax. It's okay—and often beneficial. The pressure to force STEM can backfire. Instead, focus on nurturing their natural curiosity and passions. Research shows that interest-driven learning leads to better long-term engagement.
STEM occupations are important but not the only path. Recent data from the National Science Foundation and Bureau of Labor Statistics indicate STEM makes up a significant portion of the workforce (around 25% in broader definitions), with projected growth in key areas. Yet society often pushes it as the sole route to success.
The real goal is helping kids find joy in learning and problem-solving, in whatever field sparks them.
The EASY Way to Make STEM Fun (For Your Child)
Parent-focused video on making STEM engaging
Many kids engage with STEM ideas without labeling them as such. For instance, a child who loves drawing might naturally explore geometry and patterns. A music enthusiast could discover sound waves through production tools.
This reflects how creative activities intersect with STEM concepts.
A concrete example from research: In a study co-authored by NC State professor Gail Jones, families participating in monthly museum-based STEM activities (meals, hands-on science, scientist talks) saw boosts in children's confidence and interest in STEM subjects. Parents reported that doing science together signaled its value and built on kids' natural curiosity.
Kids show reluctance differently. Here's a breakdown with practical approaches.
Type 1: "I'm Not Good at Math" (Often Due to Anxiety)
Math anxiety is learned from pressure, not innate. YouCubed's research links timed tests and speed pressure to math anxiety.
What works: Low-pressure tools like Mathigon make math playful.
Why do people get so anxious about math? - TED-Ed
A short explainer on math anxiety and test-day stress
Type 2: "That's Not for Me" (Stereotypes and Belonging)
Stereotypes deter many groups.
What works: Diverse role models help. Try Girls Who Code for creative coding or PBS SciGirls.
Type 3: "I Have Other Passions" (Often the Strongest Starting Point)
Strong interests elsewhere build transferable skills like creativity and persistence.
What works: Bridge naturally (examples below).
Approaches vary by age—tailor to their developmental stage.
- Elementary (5-10 years): Focus on play-based exploration. Use hands-on activities like building with blocks, simple experiments, or nature walks to spark curiosity without pressure. Encourage questions like "What do you notice?" rather than seeking right answers.
- Middle School (11-13 years): Shift to interest-driven projects. Let them choose topics tied to hobbies (e.g., coding a game if they love gaming). Group activities or short challenges build confidence.
- High School (14-18 years): Emphasize career exploration. Discuss internships, online courses, or shadowing in fields that blend passions (e.g., game design for artists/gamers). Support self-directed learning.
Call it "passion bridging"—find STEM in what they love.
Music Lover Example
A child into music explores coding music. Sonic Pi lets them program beats, naturally introducing programming.
Sports Fan Example
Analyze game physics with Physics Girl videos on trajectories or gear.
Social Issues Example
Use The Pudding for data on social topics or En-ROADS for climate modeling.
- Drop "STEM" Language
Ask open questions: "What excites you?" or "What would you fix?" - Explore as a Team
Try Exploratorium activities weekly.
- Normalize Failure
Watch Simone Giertz's TED talk on why you should make useless things.
Why you should make useless things | Simone Giertz
A TED talk on experimentation, failure, and learning through prototypes
- Gateway Activities
- Gamers: Scratch
- Makers: Instructables
- Activists: Zooniverse
- Artists: Processing
- Embrace STEAM
Arts integration enhances innovation.
"Free" resources often need devices/internet—consider community libraries or school programs. For neurodivergent kids (e.g., ADHD, dyslexia), adapt with sensory-friendly options or breaks. If persistent struggles (beyond disinterest) like trouble following directions, poor focus unrelated to interest, or inconsistent performance appear, consult a teacher, pediatrician, or specialist for assessment. Signs of potential barriers include avoiding tasks due to difficulty (not just boredom) or masking struggles with behavior.
That's perfectly fine—and common.
Distinguish true disinterest from barriers: If they engage deeply in non-STEM passions but shut down on schoolwork broadly, it might signal learning challenges (e.g., attention issues, processing differences). Watch for patterns like trouble organizing thoughts, impulsivity, or anxiety around specific tasks. If suspected, seek professional input early—early support can make a big difference.
For genuine lack of STEM pull, actively support their path. Encourage depth in their interests, build skills like critical thinking through hobbies, and expose them to varied opportunities (clubs, volunteering). Many thrive without STEM focus.
Non-STEM paths can lead to rewarding, high-paying careers: fields like business, marketing, communications, or creative roles often yield strong salaries (e.g., marketing managers ~$119k median, per BLS data). Success stories abound—people pivot later, learning needed tools on the job.
Forcing interest risks burnout. Instead, foster adaptability and lifelong learning. Parents share: A gifted child uninterested in traditional STEM thrived in writing and history, turning passions into deep expertise without a "STEM kid" label.
Your role: Raise a curious, resilient person ready for whatever comes.
Exploration is personal. Ask what they've created or wondered about—then listen.
You might uncover surprises.
You've got this.
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Guides et outils
Ressources citées dans ce guide pour aller plus loin
Free K–12 Curriculum for Computer Science and AI | Code.org
Bring computer science and AI education to your classroom with Code.org’s free K–12 curriculum, hands-on projects, and teacher professional development—no prior experience needed.
STEM Talent: Education, Training, and Workforce | NCSES | NSF
Talent is critical to the U.S. science and engineering enterprise and competitiveness. The U.S. science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workforce represented about a quarter of the total domestic workforce in 2023, with distinct education, employment, and wage patterns. Recent assessments reveal incomplete recovery for U.S. K–12 students from pandemic-related STEM learning losses. STEM degree production grew at U.S. higher education institutions at all levels between 2013 and 2023. In 2023, the United States was the leading destination for international students, despite a small decline in overall share since 2013.
Girls Who Code | Home
Learn to code! Free summer programs and after-school clubs for teen girls. Explore coding in a fun and friendly environment. Find a program near you!
Scratch - Imagine, Program, Share
Scratch is a free programming language and online community where you can create your own interactive stories, games, and animations.
24 hours in an invisible epidemic
Watch 24 hours of an American day, and the invisible crisis hiding in plain sight
Welcome to Processing! / Processing.org
Processing is a flexible software sketchbook and a language for learning how to code. Since 2001, Processing has promoted software literacy within the visual arts and visual literacy within technology…
Physics Girl | How SMOOTHNESS of a SOCCER BALL affects curve | Season 1 | Episode 25 | PBS
Curving and bending a ball using the magnus effect is common in every sport.
Employment in STEM occupations : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Base and projected employment in STEM groups
Sonic Pi - The Live Coding Music Synth for Everyone
Sonic Pi is a new kind of instrument for a new generation of musicians. It is simple to learn, powerful enough for live performances and free to download.
Explore | Exploratorium
Dive into websites, activities, apps, and more.
CrashCourse - YouTube
At Crash Course, we believe that high-quality educational videos should be available to everyone for free! Subscribe for weekly videos from our current cours...
Physics Girl - YouTube
Physics Girl is a YouTube channel created by Dianna Cowern that adventures into the physical sciences with experiments, demonstrations, and cool new discover...
STEM to STEAM | RISD
In 2010, RISD began to champion the addition of art and design to STEM education and research, toward creating STEAM, an educational model that inspires creative innovation.
Tinkercad
Tinkercad is a free, easy-to-use app for 3D design, electronics, and coding.
How Families Can Boost Children’s Interest in STEM | NC State News
A study co-authored by an NC State education researcher offers insight into how families can boost children's interest in STEM subjects.
A Parent's Guide for Getting Girls Into STEM Careers | Edutopia
A Parent's Guide for Getting Girls Into STEM Careers
En‑ROADS
Yours for the making
Instructables is a community for people who like to make things. Come explore, share, and make your next project with us!
Mathigon – The Mathematical Playground
Discover Mathigon, the Mathematical Playground. Learning mathematics has never been so interactive and fun!
Role Model Profiles | SciGirls | PBS LearningMedia
Welcome to SciGirls CONNECT on PBS LearningMedia! SciGirls has the bold goal of changing how millions of girls think about science, technology, engineering and math—or STEM. Each half-hour episode highlights the processes of science and engineering, following a different group of middle school girls who design, with the help of scientist mentors, their own inquiry-based investigations on a variety of topics. They also learn how rewarding and fun it is to work with their peers, and the shows’ female mentors offer girls a glimpse of exciting STEM career possibilities.SciGirls educational materials provide gender-equitable teaching strategies and hands-on inquiries based on the concepts modeled in SciGirls’ videos. The SciGirls approach is rooted in research on how to engage girls in STEM. A quarter of a century of studies have converged on a set of common strategies that work, and these have become SciGirls’ foundation—aka the SciGirls Strategies. All SciGirls activities were created with the SciGirls Strategies in mind and incorporate as many strategies as possible.
Why you should make useless things | Simone Giertz - YouTube
In this joyful, heartfelt talk featuring demos of her wonderfully wacky creations, Simone Giertz shares her craft: making useless robots. Her inventions -- d...
Supporting STEM Learning in Young Children - Embracing a STEM Mindset - YouTube
24 R2 11ET Supporting STEM recordingKYAC Conference 2024 PresentationSupporting STEM Learning in Young Children - Embracing a STEM MindsetAre you being asked...
The EASY Way to Make STEM Fun (For Your Child) - YouTube
From video games to grocery stores, fashion to politics — STEM is literally EVERYWHERE! In this inspiring talk, I share a fresh, fun approach to teaching STE...
The Pudding
The Pudding explains ideas with visual essays.
Link Between Timed Tests and Math Anxiety - YouCubed
An article summarizing the evidence on timed testing and anxiety and offering alternatives. Note: The article includes a misplaced citation. On page 469, instead of Engle (2002) the correct citation […]
How to Not Pass Math Anxiety Down to Your Kid - YouCubed
Jo Boaler on how to support your math-learning child when you have math anxiety.