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Preschool play as assessment tool

By Peggy Ashbrook

Posted on 2009-06-01

Preschool play can reflect young children’s knowledge about the natural world and the human interaction experiences they’ve had. I get to observe and learn what the children express through play when we finish our opening discussion and they move about the room.
Twelve four-year olds and two teachers spend about 45 minutes in the Tree House Room where I set up materials more or less tied to the topic of the activity I am sharing that week. The plan was to observe, draw, and read about tadpoles borrowed from a local nature center. But the Fours have been playing “Doctor’s Office” in their classroom with dress-up uniforms, pretend medical tools such as stethoscopes and blood pressure cuffs, and plenty of tape for bandages on dolls. The doctor play was especially significant to the Four’s class because the school’s director and one child had casts on limbs for several months.

To support this learning, I put out x-rays on the light table, a foam human skeleton puzzle, and small clip boards, but they mostly create their own props, taking some plastic bugs and turtles, and drawing materials from the shelves. Tadpoles do get a little attention but the world the children re-create is most important to them.
A few children lie down on their backs. One child tucked some plastic bugs and turtles underneath the “patient’s” shirts. Enter the doctor:

Child 1: How is my little girl doing?
Child 2: She broke her leg and she had those bugs in her tummy. (Showing an x-ray drawing she made.)
Child 1 (in a quiet aside): I called you “little” girl because I’m pretending to be a doctor.

Later with the second patient:

Child 1: First we have to do an x-ray of what’s in his tummy. (Holds paper over the stomach and draws the turtle.)
Child 1: He has a poisonous turtle in his tummy. You’re going to have to open it because I don’t have the tools.
Child 2 (removing the turtle): It sure is a poisonous one!

This play is so delightful but that’s not all. I’m delighted to have a window into what children know about doctors and what x-rays are. They certainly know the difference between pretend and real, understand the need for cooperation between medical personnel, and can represent animals through drawing. We can work on “poisonous” turtles next week and the tadpoles will become more interesting when they develop legs.
(Note that the child is making the skeleton “preschool” size without all the leg bones! This may have been his re-design or an accidental omission. The puzzle allows for several inventive adjustments to the human skeleton. At first I was concerned that the alternate assemblies might create some misconceptions about the human skeleton but when children find a few pieces leftover, or stand back and see the proportions, they usually self-correct. And other scientists often chime in and make changes, and we count the number of “sections” in our actual legs and arms.)
Share your science play stories by clicking on the word “Comments” below!
Peggy

Preschool play can reflect young children’s knowledge about the natural world and the human interaction experiences they’ve had. I get to observe and learn what the children express through play when we finish our opening discussion and they move about the room.

 

Science fairs

By Mary Bigelow

Posted on 2009-05-31

The June/July issue of Learning and Leading with Technology has a description of the website Science Buddies, a comprehensive resource for science fair participants of all ages. Getting started with a topic was the hardest part for my students, and this site has a “topic selection wizard” that guides students through the process of selecting and fine-tuning a topic. It has sections that can help students with planning a project and teachers with planning a science fair (including rubrics for evaluating projects).
This site is already in SciLinks, along with many other resources for planning a science fair and helping students with their projects. (My favorite resources are those that have suggestions for alternative science fairs, including online science fairs and those that include presentations.)
The cartoon here was created with another online (and free) tool that was spotlighted in Learning and Leading with Technology. MakeBeliefsComix allows users to create simple comic strips by manipulating characters and word balloons. Text can be added in many languages, and there are suggestions for how this can be a tool for learning and literacy skills. The strips can be printed or saved with screen shot or grab tool.

The June/July issue of Learning and Leading with Technology has a description of the website Science Buddies, a comprehensive resource for science fair participants of all ages.

Take-Home Physics is an excellent resource for high school physics teachers who want to devote more classroom time to complex concepts while challenging their students with hands-on homework assignments. This volume presents 65 take-home physics labs that use ordinary household items or other inexpensive materials to tackle motion and kinematics; forces and energy; waves, sound, and light; and electricity and magnetism.
Take-Home Physics is an excellent resource for high school physics teachers who want to devote more classroom time to complex concepts while challenging their students with hands-on homework assignments. This volume presents 65 take-home physics labs that use ordinary household items or other inexpensive materials to tackle motion and kinematics; forces and energy; waves, sound, and light; and electricity and magnetism.
 

Recycling efforts

By MsMentorAdmin

Posted on 2009-05-29

My school does not have a recycling program, but as a science teacher I’d like to set an example of “green” behavior. What can I do in a single classroom?
— Tyler, Louisville, KY

I’m sure you’ve heard of the expression “Think globally, act locally.” Although many schools do have recycling programs, their success depends on what happens in individual classrooms like yours.
Isn’t it depressing when you have a desk or locker clean-out event and you see students discarding tests, handouts, and papers you thought had gone home weeks ago? I read about a teacher who started her recycling efforts with a “garbology” lesson. She collected her classroom trash for a week. The students weighed it, and they examined the contents (wearing gloves), separating the actual trash and recyclable materials such as paper, cans, and bottles. They then weighed the recyclables to estimate what percent could be recycled. Perhaps the amount of paper used in your classroom might be a good place to start your efforts to reduce, reuse, and recycle.
Save old handouts or outdated materials printed on one side. Cut the paper in halves or quarters to use for quizzes, notes, or practice work. Use the double-sided option on the copier for any new copies. Put a box next to the copier for any “mistake” copies whose blank sides could be reused.
Use science notebooks in which students do their assignments (notes, lab reports, diagrams, etc.) rather than lots of handouts. Encourage students to write on both sides of the paper. If you teach more than one section of a subject, consider whether it’s necessary to give each student a copy of a multi-page test. Could you make a class set of tests and have the students use separate answer sheets?
For lab activities, you could give a copy of the directions to each group, rather than to each student. A lot of teachers laminate handouts so that they could be used again. My school did not have a laminator, so I used 3-ring sheet protectors. As a plus, I could take out the papers and re-use the protectors for other handouts.
Take advantage of available technology. Use a class website to share announcements and your class newsletter or syllabus. Post copies of class handouts, too. Some teachers also post podcasts of their lectures/discussions rather than giving out notes. Use parents’ email addresses to send announcements home. Depending on the grade level, students could submit written work online.
Since your school does not recycle paper, you’ll have to be creative as to what to do with it. If your community has recycling bins or curbside pickup, you could recycle there. Perhaps a high school student or class is in need of a project and could pick up your recycling periodically.
Another suggestion is to recycle inkjet printer cartridges. Some organizations collect them as a fundraiser (a Google search could give you some ideas). Check with a local office supply store to see if they have a recycling plan. The one in my neighborhood has a “reward” program giving a credit for each one recycled. (I recently got a coupon for $30 in the mail to spend at the store!) Some parents might send in their used cartridges for this program so you can get extra goodies for your classroom.
Be sure your students are aware of your efforts and ask them for other suggestions. For example, one elementary class suggested adding a “recycling monitor” to the list of classroom duties. This student would remind others to put materials to be reused or recycled in the proper container. Another class suggested covering bulletin boards with plain fabric or wrapping paper rather than construction paper that fades quickly and has to be replaced. Once you and your students show reducing, reusing, and recycling can be done in a classroom, perhaps your local effort will lead to a schoolwide one.
Readers, do you have any tips to share?

My school does not have a recycling program, but as a science teacher I’d like to set an example of “green” behavior. What can I do in a single classroom?
— Tyler, Louisville, KY

I’m sure you’ve heard of the expression “Think globally, act locally.” Although many schools do have recycling programs, their success depends on what happens in individual classrooms like yours.

 

Tadpoles are baby frogs

By Peggy Ashbrook

Posted on 2009-05-26

From the Early Years photo cache (click the pic for more).


What percentage of children ever get to see a tadpole grow into a frog? Reading about tadpoles amazing metamorphosis into adult frogs is less amazing than observing the living animals and noticing a daily change in size or form.
The seasonal nature of this transformation means that young children may not remember the last time they saw it because it happened one third of their lifetime ago, so teachers may want to repeat this observation activity every year. There are concerns among scientists that even common species of frogs and other amphibians are facing extinction because infectious diseases are damaging their ability to grow and reproduce. To prevent any accidental spread of disease causing organisms, officers from the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles (SSAR) and Amphibian Ark wrote a letter to the editors in the 2009 April/May Science and Children (also posted at www.ssarherps.org) describing the strict but feasible hygiene conditions and procedures that must be followed by anyone keeping and then releasing amphibians into nature. They said that observing live amphibians “is a great approach for fostering “’bioliteracy.’” IF YOU KEEP LIVE TADPOLES AND OTHER AMPHIBIANS IN YOUR SCHOOL PLEASE READ THE EXPANDED LETTER, “Considerations and Recommendations for Raising Live Amphibians in Classrooms, SSAR’s response to a recent article in Science and Children.”
I won’t quote from the letter because I believe it’s important to get the accurate information in the entire letter but will say that bleach is used in the disinfection procedure.
Now that you know where to get information on how to prevent the spread of disease in amphibians by classroom activities, here is a photo of the baby Wood frog, newly released back to the pond where it hatched. I wish I could have taken each of my students (a few at a time!) with me to see the frog in its natural environment.
Please read the letter and follow these best practices so that generations of frogs will be alive to inspire wonder in generations of children, both animals that are growing and changing.
Perhaps we will be inspired to create school yard habitats so children can observe animals in nature every day.
Peggy

From the Early Years photo cache (click the pic for more).

 

Standards and guidelines are great resources for lesson planning

By Peggy Ashbrook

Posted on 2009-05-25

Wanting to use best teaching practices and develop my students’ science thinking to the best of their capability, I look at what governments and curriculum developers think should be happening in an early childhood classroom, and what topics should be taught. When are children able to understand what makes a “fair test” and ready to experiment in addition to doing activities? Is learning about the solar system best taught in preK or in grade 2? What big ideas can be learned through a unit on the ever popular dinosaurs?
Do your curriculum and state standards seem as well thought out and complete as others? Do they cover the science content areas or objectives that you feel they should? Are there gaps? Are the standards appropriate for your grade? What content should be mastered before students arrive in your classroom? Standards and guidelines are great resources for lesson planning.
Look at some other guidelines to judge for yourself if you are meeting children’s needs for science learning. In alphabetical order:

Can you recommend any standards that you think we can all learn from, or should try to meet to the best of our ability?
Peggy

Wanting to use best teaching practices and develop my students’ science thinking to the best of their capability, I look at what governments and curriculum developers think should be happening in an early childhood classroom, and what topics should be taught. When are children able to understand what makes a “fair test” and ready to experiment in addition to doing activities? Is learning about the solar system best taught in preK or in grade 2? What big ideas can be learned through a unit on the ever popular dinosaurs?

 

Science talk

By Peggy Ashbrook

Posted on 2009-05-24

From the Early Years photo cache (click the pic for more).


One misconception about science is that discoveries or new ideas are “discovered” then agreed upon by scientists in a complete form. Talking to children about the process of scientific inquiry as they do an activity may help them appreciate the long, exploratory, route to being certain in science. Foster discussion by letting children know it is okay to disagree about what you think might happen.
These children are pointing to answer the question, “What shape bubble will you make with a square bubble wand?” and they are comfortable disagreeing with their neighbors.
As you do science with young children, include comments about science, such as these, in the discussion:

  • I hear more than one answer. That’s how science is, people don’t always agree. We can try this and find out.
  • Observations may not be the same. What do you see?
  • Sharing your information about what you see is what scientists do.
  • Yes, we can look in a book. Scientists research what people have learned already.

Here are two resources that explain how science talk is part of the process of science:
A good visual explanation of how science works is available from the Understanding Science website. See “The real process of science” showing the nonlinear paths in doing science.
For more about talk in science teaching, view a slideshow by Karen Worth of the Educational Development Center, Inc., Science Talk and Science Writing: A View from the Classroom, at the 2008 Literacy Institute.  The Inquiry Diagram (slide six) is another clarifying diagram about the process of scientific inquiry.
Some students may need repeated encouragement to talk freely; others may need a reminder to listen. Listening to my students helps me find out what they know about science.
Peggy

From the Early Years photo cache (click the pic for more).

 

Take a look at the future

By Mary Bigelow

Posted on 2009-05-21

Even if you’re not a member of the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE), you can access their 2009 NECC conference blog. The National Educational Computing Conference is scheduled for June 28-July 1 in Washington, DC, and if you’re in the area, this is a great conference, with up-to-date and visionary sessions and exhibits in the field of educational technology.
The conference is more than a month away, but there has been a lot of activity and some interesting questions and suggestions: libraries of the future, iPhone apps for education, and digital graphing tools. Several interesting topics were discussed: Should schools sacrifice class time for professional development? Is it necessary for conference presenters to provide hard copies of materials? How can students submit assignments via cell phones?
If you’re looking for ideas more closely related to science, the NSTA journals have many articles on the relationship between science and technology. My favorites are the ones that describe how students of all ages are using technology creatively.

Even if you’re not a member of the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE), you can access their 2009 NECC conference blog. The National Educational Computing Conference is scheduled for June 28-July 1 in Washington, DC, and if you’re in the area, this is a great conference, with up-to-date and visionary sessions and exhibits in the field of educational technology.

 

End-of-year reflections

By MsMentorAdmin

Posted on 2009-05-20

I just finished my first year in the classroom. It was a challenge, but I learned a lot. With the end of the school year approaching, do you have any tips for what should I think about or prepare for next year?
—Rene, South Bend, Indiana

Congratulations for completing your first year! You’ll find the end of the year is as hectic as the beginning, with exams, grades, inventories, and lab clean-up. You’re also looking forward to vacation time, graduate courses, home improvements, a summer job, or some much-needed rest. But while your memory is fresh, take some time now to review, reflect on, and learn from your experiences. Record your thinking in a journal or in your planning files.
As you go back over your class list(s), ask yourself which students seemed to improve through the year. What did you do to encourage this improvement? Did some students regress during the year? What could you do if this happens again? What strategies did you use to connect with your students? Are there any new strategies you would like to try next year? How effective were your classroom management routines and procedures? Did your students seem to enjoy learning?
Consider your course curriculum. Did some units have different results than you anticipated? Should you change the amount of time or emphasis you put on some units? Did you have an effective combination of science content, skills, and processes? Identify any gaps in your own knowledge base that could be supplemented this summer with online courses, readings, websites, or visits to local informal science institutions (museums, zoos, planetariums, etc.). How well were you able to access and use the technologies available in your school? What kinds of interdisciplinary connections did you make?
As you complete final evaluations/grades for students, ask yourself how well the grades reflect student learning. Or did you factor in things not related to course content? How well did your assessments align with the unit goals and lesson objectives? Did you provide opportunities for students to reflect on their own learning (e.g., through a science notebook, rubrics)?
Although some schools do not require detailed written lesson plans, there are advantages of having plans that can be revisited and adapted the following year. Were your lesson plans detailed enough to be adapted for next year, or will you have to recreate them? Based on your assessment data, what instructional strategies should you change (or keep)? How well were your in-class and homework activities aligned to the unit goals and lesson objectives? Did your lab activities help students to develop their inquiry skills?
On a practical note, check with your principal or department chair for any end-of-year checkout procedures. Your classroom may not be secure during the summer months, so stow your lab equipment in locking cabinets or storage rooms. Take valuable or irreplaceable personal belongings home or lock them in a cabinet. Label any large personal items such as a desk chair or stool with your name. If you have personal documents, tests, grades, or other sensitive information on an unsecured hard drive, transfer them to a network drive or transfer them to a flash drive. Some schools allow teachers to take their assigned computer home for the summer, but don’t take any school equipment home without permission.
Update any equipment inventories and note if anything needs to be repaired. Keep your requisition list for next year handy so you can check in the new materials arriving over the summer. Inventory textbooks, if you keep them in your classroom, so you’ll know if you have enough when you get your new class list. If any books need repair, take care of them now. Make sure items such as glassware, cages, aquariums, sinks, or table tops are clean and ready for next year. If you can, turn off the gas and water in your lab.
Based on your reflections, this might also be a good time to formulate your goals for next year. It’s tempting to say, “I’ll think about this in August.” But if you take some time now for thinking, reflecting, and planning, you’ll have more time in the fall for getting your second year off to a good start.

I just finished my first year in the classroom. It was a challenge, but I learned a lot. With the end of the school year approaching, do you have any tips for what should I think about or prepare for next year?
—Rene, South Bend, Indiana

This collection of 16 essays is ideal for staff development providers (university faculty, district supervisors, lead teachers, and principals) as well as preservice science methods instructors. Each essay describes a specific program designed to train current or future teachers to carry out the constructivist, inquiry-based approach of the Standards. These professional development programs are in universities and school districts around the country—from Florida to Alaska, in rural and urban areas, and in contexts ranging from summer institutes to on-site support programs.
This collection of 16 essays is ideal for staff development providers (university faculty, district supervisors, lead teachers, and principals) as well as preservice science methods instructors. Each essay describes a specific program designed to train current or future teachers to carry out the constructivist, inquiry-based approach of the Standards. These professional development programs are in universities and school districts around the country—from Florida to Alaska, in rural and urban areas, and in contexts ranging from summer institutes to on-site support programs.
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