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Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point
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Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Jan 20, 2016

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Page 1: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Curriculum Planning:From Lessons to Units

Reading Assignment

Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child:

Using Culture as a Starting Point

Page 2: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

From Lessons to Units

• Curriculum – refers to the subject matter that is taught in schools and that the children are expected to learn.

• Everything from units to individual science activities and

from instructional strategies to the methods to assess student learning.

• Curriculum developers range from teachers to large

publishing companies.

• Curriculum is influenced by social, political, and other external forces.

Page 3: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Implications of a “Mile Wide and

Inch Deep” Curriculum

Science achievement is notdirectly related to the scope of the curriculum.

The number of state standardshave decreased.

Useful science curriculum isnot designed with the purposeof content coverage.

Page 4: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Selecting and Using TextbooksEven with the reform of science curriculum from the 1960’s, the research

shows that 21st century classrooms still rely on a single textbook as the basis for science instruction.

Science textbooks still contain some shortcomings in the areas of gender bias, persons of color, people with disabilities, and science vocabulary continues to be emphasized much more than science concepts.

Texas, California, Florida and North Carolina all have statewide adoption of textbooks.

Their student population account for 25% of school students in the United States.

Textbook selection committees of these statestremendously influence the content that most publishers choose to put into their textbooks.

Thus a few states tend to determine the content and features offered to the rest of the nation.

Page 5: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Life on an Ocean Planet Table of Contents

History of Ocean Exploration and

Marine Sciences

Theories of the Origins of Life

The Energy of Life

A Survey of Life in the Sea

The Nature of Water

Water: A Physically Unique Molecule

Air Sea Interactions

Highways in the Sea

Waves and Tides

 

A Revolution in Science:

The Theory of Plate Tectonics

Sediments in the Sea

The Dynamic Coast

Marine Ecosystems

Marine Resources

Pollution and the Health of the Oceans

Research, Management, and the Future of an Ocean Planet

Adopted in Florida, Alabama,

Georgia, and several other large

districts in the U.S. and Australia.

Page 6: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Selecting Texts and Curriculum MaterialsContent: What science topics are taught in the resource? Do you think that the

topics are taught coherently and in the best sequence? Do the materials include study of problems that are important to us now and in the future? Do materials require students to apply major science concepts to everyday life situations? Are the materials accurate?

Science Processes: Do the materials include large amount of hands-on investigations and activities that the students can do? Does the resource do a good job teaching science through an inquiry-based approach? (This means more than having hands-on activities.)

Other Considerations: Do the materials appear interesting to the students and relevant to their levels? Are quality evaluation (assessment) materials included? Is there a teacher’s guide included and is it helpful for using the materials? Are different cultures, races, genders, social groups, ages included with respect and equity?

Page 7: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Designing CurriculumCreativity

Feature of Good Teaching – Ability to be creative.

Example:

Using existing materials and modifying them for a specific situation.

“Creative teachers do not begin with nothing.”

Spiral Curriculum

Curriculum in which one cycle of instruction (learning cycle) is built on another. Spiral curriculum may be a

A unit consisting of several learning cycles (or)

A science program spread across several grade levels

Standards – National and state

SPEAK Act – Standards to Provide Educational Achievement for

All Kids will be reintroduced to congress.

The Act encourages states to adopt common standards.http://trianglecoalition.blogspot.com/2009/06/speak-act-introduced-in-congress.html

Benchmarks Online

http://www.project2061.org/publications/bsl/online/index.php

Page 8: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Activitymania

• Activity mania – the naïve overexcitement of having children doing activities (Moscovici and Nelson, 1998).

• Students need to talk, think, argue, and write about what they have been doing (social constructivism).

Two Major Problems with Activity Guides

The essential features of inquiry are not evident in activity-based materials.

The main goal may be for students to have fun.

“Just because students are participating in enjoyable activities, does not mean that they are learning science.”

Page 9: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Kit-Based Programs

Common Characteristics• Do not rely on student texts as information sources.• Have a teacher guide, binder of supplemental

materials, and supplies. • Packaged as curriculum modules• Many are field-tested and address the national

standards.

Which do you think promotes student learning the best?

textbook series or kits

Page 10: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Three Kit-Based Programs

Title Developer Publisher Modules Characteristic

Insights Education Development Center

Kendall-Hunt

17 for elementary grades

Most effective use oflearning cycle.

FOSS Lawrence Hall of Science

Delta 26 for elementary grades, 9 for middle school

Cover a broader range of topics and does a better job with Earth science.

Science and Technology for Children

Smithsonian CarolinaBiologicalSupply

24 for elementary, 8 for middle school

Includes a student activity book, most scientifically intensive

Page 11: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Topics - SSS Science Big Ideas K- 8

• Properties of Matter

• Changes in Matter

• Forms of Energy

• Energy Transfer and Transformations

• Motion of Objects

• Forces and Changes in Motion

• Earth in Space in Time

• Earth Structures

• Earth Systems and Patterns

• Processes of Life

• Organization and Development of Living Organisms

• Diversity and Evolution of Living Organisms

• Heredity and Reproduction

• Interdependence

• Matter and Energy Transformation

Page 12: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

What to do in absence of kit-based programs?

• Develop your own.• Obtain kits from local science museums.• Buy one to rotate through your grade level. • Write a grant to develop a kit. There is a lot of funding for climate

change education!

Guidelines for Writing a Proposal• http://www.nsta.org/pd/tapestry/guidelines.htm

  Toyota Tapestry Grants• http://www.toshiba.com/tafpub/jsp/home/default.jsp

 

Other Ideas?

Page 13: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Earth SystemsScience

GuidedInquiry-based

Science

English Language and

Literacy

Home Language and

Culture

Curriculum ProfessionalDevelopment

Conceptual Framework for the Earth Systems Curriculum

Objectives of Program:

Promote science inquiry and understanding of earth systems science.

Incorporate English language and literacy development as part of science instruction; and

Relate the science content to students’ home language and cultures.

Example Unit - Developed by Dr. Lambert “Science for All” Using an Inquiry-based Earth Systems

Science Program Postdoctoral Research at University of Miami

Page 14: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

The Living Planet

Julie Lambert, Ph.D. Science for All University of Miami

Page 15: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

Strategies for Teaching Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students Incorporated in The Living Planet

Science

Global Theme – Earth systems

Inquiry-based Approach

English Language and Literacy

Vocabulary words listed at beginning of reading passages and in bold throughout.

Figures and tables support concepts.

Lessons follow a consistent format.

Hands-on activities depend less on formal mastery of language.

Students participate in cooperative learning groups.

Writing activities are embedded. Students receive a consumable edition in which they may write in. (Examples of ways to re-present text – Students write 2 minute public service announcement about global warming. Students document the development of an imaginary island. Several literacy activities are included.

Page 16: Curriculum Planning: From Lessons to Units Reading Assignment Chapter 9 in Teaching Science to Every Child: Using Culture as a Starting Point.

The Living Planet Strategies Continued

Vocabulary words are translated to Spanish and Haitian Creole.

Lessons incorporate students cultural beliefs and backgrounds. (Examples –

The Lorax and Humans Needs and Wants,

The Island Development Project,

The Life of Rachel Carson and her famous works, A Silent Spring

http://www.fws.gov/rachelcarson/Rachel%20Carson384K_Stream.wmv

Lessons incorporate Eco Public Service announcements which show the interconnectedness of all people across Earth.

http://www.oneearth.org/