Items related to Activities for Teaching Science as Inquiry (5th Edition)

Activities for Teaching Science as Inquiry (5th Edition) - Softcover

 
9780130212818: Activities for Teaching Science as Inquiry (5th Edition)
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This is the quintessential science book designed to introduce future teachers to science instruction through inquiry. Infused with the philosophical intent of the National Science Education Standards, it includes the theory behind knowledge construction, the how-tos of knowledge acquisition, and questioning strategies that promote inquiry. It is overflowing with practical and meaningful activities, information, inquiries, strategies, and lessons. The first chapter provides an in-depth look at using activities for inquiry, with subsequent chapters discussing activities involving physical science; life, ecology, and environmental science; earth and space science; and inquiry science activities for students with special needs. For elementary school science teachers.

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From the Inside Flap:
Preface

THE FIFTH EDITION of Activities for Teaching Science as Inquiry introduces prospective and experienced teachers to inquiry activities necessary to teach science in contemporary ways. Inquiry is both a way to teach and a way for students to investigate the world. Doing inquiry means asking simple but thoughtful questions about the world and engaging students to answer them. Inquiry incorporates the use of hands-on and process-oriented activities for the benefit of knowledge construction. Inquiry encourages students to connect their prior knowledge to observations and to use their observations as evidence to increase personal scientific knowledge. In this instructional environment, teachers act as facilitators of learning rather than "bankers" who have stored knowledge that they transfer into students' heads. New to the Fifth Edition

Prodigious efforts of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the National Research Council, and other groups in the 1990s have provided a coherent vision and a research-based framework for a new era of science education. As a result, the National Science Education Standards (NSES) were created to coordinate the goals and objectives for science instruction. The National Science Education Standards provide directives not only for the setting up of district-wide science programs but also for the science concepts that are to be covered in inquiry activities at each grade level. These standards are not rigid but rather provide you, and the school system in which you teach, concrete guidelines for exposing students to science experiences throughout their schooling. As you become familiar with the National Science Education Standards you will be able to incorporate the activities provided in this text into your lesson plans and curricular goals for your school science program.

Significant changes within this edition include:

Practical suggestions for building learning communities include guidelines for the development of cooperative group strategies. Members of cooperative groups encourage the exchange of ideas among students during inquiry experiences. Instructional models for continuing professional development are illustrated in Video Case Studies. Nine elementary and middle school teachers reflect on their growth as science teachers as they work with science mentors and explore how they could teach science better. The Companion Website identifies how to utilize technology while learning how to teach science effectively. The Video Case Studies

Your professor will have copies of several exemplary Video Case Studies. These cases illustrate the professional development of classroom teachers in their search to become more effective at teaching science. When reviewing the Video Case Studies, it is important to explain how to get the most out of using them to advance your own learning.

The Value of Video Cases. In their practical guide Designing Professional Development for Teachers of Science and Mathematics, Susan Loucks-Horsley, Peter Hewson, Nancy Love, and Katherine Stiles (1998) identified the case study method as one of the most important strategies for professional development. The process of observing and reflecting on teachers' actions, and on students' learning and thinking, can lead to changes in the knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and ultimately the practice of pre-service and in-service teachers. You and your colleagues can use classroom discussions about the Video Case Studies to:

extend and apply knowledge presented in the chapters, formulate questions and ideas, learn from one another, become aware of alternative perspectives and strategies, reflect on real problems faced by practicing teachers, and increase your science knowledge, as more than 30 science topics are taught in the case studies.

The Annenberg Case Studies. The Video Case Studies are available free to your professor, and are part of the professional library developed by Annenberg. In the cases chosen to accompany your study of this text, ten video cases depict nine different teachers in three videos in Annenberg's Case Studies in Science Education series. Each video case is divided into three segments: An Introduction to the Case, Trying New Ideas, and Reflecting and Building on Change. The three parts of each Video Case Study enable you to look in on a teacher and his or her students at intervals throughout the school year. From one segment to the next, in each case you will see how the teacher undergoes professional changes in approaching science teaching. The changes reflect the real life experiences of teachers who see a need to improve the way they teach, meet with a teaching mentor to gather ideas, and implement ways to improve their science teaching practice. As a result of this work you will witness not only a teacher's growing confidence and capability in science teaching but also a growing involvement of students in their own science learning.

For optimum benefit while watching the video segments, you as a participant have an opportunity to "share a commitment to improve your teaching practice, a willingness to share and critically discuss aspects of practice and curiosity about important assumptions that underlie teaching and learning" (Loucks-Horsley et al., 1998, pp. 108-109). A knowledgeable and experienced facilitator can enhance the case discussions. The role of the facilitator is to help participants

understand the situation and issues in the case, focus on the thinking of students in the video classrooms, examine the approach taken by the teacher, reflect on the theoretical foundation for the teachers' actions, and consider alternative actions and their consequences (Loucks-Horsley et al., 1998).

Although these Video Case Studies are not intended to replace actual classroom visits, they can provide a more focused picture of specific aspects of teaching and learning than might be obtained from real-time observations of classes. The Companion Website

A Companion Website designed for student and professor use accompanies this text. The Syllabus Manager allows professors the opportunity to place the class syllabus online. This enables students to also see a course calendar, chapter assignments and course changes as they are posted. In addition, content information is organized as chapter-by-chapter features and provides you with study guide questions and self-assessment tests so you can check your own understanding of teaching science in an ongoing way. Links on the website navigation bar can transport you to

focus questions you can use as a study guide, online quizzes that are self-pacing and self-evaluating, with scores e-mailed to professors if desired, Web destinations and links to wonderful science resources on the Internet, and a Message Board where you can engage in meaningful discourse about science teaching and learning issues with others taking the course.

Unique to this Companion Website are virtual classroom experiences. Although they are linked more directly to the ninth edition of the core text, Teaching Science as Inquiry, the video essays depicted in certain Website chapters will let you see how well you understand the components of good science teaching. Videostreaming on the video essays illustrates the various teaching strategies of classroom teachers teaching properties of air in grade 1, balance beams in grade 4, and pendulums in grade 8. As you begin to understand the components of good science instruction, test yourself on the strategies that exemplify effective science teaching. You should also see opportunities for improving each science lesson. As you become more familiar with the rudiments of effective science instruction, you 'nay choose to revisit these virtual sites and reassess your understanding of science teaching and learning. Acknowledgments

To be meaningful, educational visions have to be practically implemented in teacher education and staff development programs, and most important, in our nation's classrooms. Our goal in writing and revising this textbook has been to present the new vision of science education and provide you with specific help, guidelines, and examples as you prepare to teach science in a new millennium.

The reviewers for the third edition of this text, as well as those who read and commented on the chapters in the fourth edition, have been very perceptive and insightful and have offered many comments and suggestions that, hopefully, have led to significant improvements. We acknowledge and express our gratitude to the following reviewers: Carol Brewer, The University of Montana; Rosemarie Kolstad, East Texas State University; Mark R. Malone, The University of Colorado; Richard H. Moyer, The University of MichiganDearborn; Michael Odell, The University of Idaho; William A. Rieck, The University of Southwestern Louisiana; Joseph D. Sharpe, Tennessee Technological University; Leone E. Snyder, Northwestern College; M. Dale Streigle, Iowa State University; and Dana L. Zeidler, The University of South Florida-Tampa.

We thank editor Linda Ashe Montgomery at Merrill Education who has provided substantive, as well as editorial assistance throughout the writing and revision efforts. She has a great sensitivity to education issues, not only in science but in other specialized fields as well. We wish to acknowledge her contributions to this text and convey our appreciation to her.

We also wish to thank Kathy Deselle, copyeditor; Kate Nichols, designer; Mary Harlan, production editor; and Betsy Keefer, project coordinator.

From the Back Cover:

Infused with the philosophical intent of the National Science Education Standards, the fifth edition of Activities for Teaching Science as Inquiry includes hands-on and process-oriented activities, and guides teachers to act as facilitators of learning.

Features of the fifth edition include:

  • Inclusion of a model lesson to illustrate how to structure scientific inquiry within the framework of a teaching model.
  • Practical suggestions for building learning communities.
  • Integrated multimedia package:
    • For professors: Three free videos from the Annenberg/CPB math and science series. Video Cases illustrate professional practice in science education, model science inquiry in classrooms, and exemplify the ongoing, reflective process teachers engage in to assess the effectiveness of their instruction.
    • For students: A free Companion Website presents additional classroom video with corresponding performance assessment activities.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

  • PublisherPrentice Hall
  • Publication date2000
  • ISBN 10 0130212814
  • ISBN 13 9780130212818
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages249

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