Science
Science teaching: Make it more interesting! | Science teaching: Make it more interesting! |
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| by William Atkins | |
| Thursday, 19 June 2008 | |
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Page 2 of 3 The BBC article states:
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“And sometimes pupils misunderstood key principles because their teachers did not understand them well enough to give a clear explanation.”
"Science teaching is at its best when pupils are encouraged to come up with their own ideas to record and plan their investigations, Ofsted says.”
"Schools where pupils' achievements are higher focused on developing their investigative skills, the report adds.”
"One pupil in a particularly successful school said she enjoyed science because she could do what she wanted - pupils were allowed to decide what and how to investigate.”
“Another boy said: ‘When we do practicals, it helps me understand better.’”
In the United States, back in 1992, the Department of Education and the National Science Foundation endorsed mathematics and science curricula that "promote active learning, inquiry, problem solving, cooperative learning, and other instructional methods that motivate students.”
The National Committee on Science Education Standards and Assessment, also in 1992, stated "school science education must reflect science as it is practiced” and science education is "to prepare students who understand the modes of reasoning of scientific inquiry and can use them."
A definition of inquiry is “The act of asking: a request for information.” |
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