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Preparing Future Teachers to Put Investigation and Design at the Center of Their Classrooms

By Cindy Workosky

Posted on 2019-01-31

The recently released report Science and Engineering in Grades 6–12: Investigation and Design at the Center makes a strong statement right in the title: engaging students in scientific investigations and engineering design should be the core of what teachers do in their classrooms. Other blog posts have described how investigation engages students in doing science and the role teachers play in facilitating students’ investigations and reasoning—and that this is a role that few teachers have been prepared to play.

There is much to be done to support current teachers in taking on this new role. At the same time, however, over 150,000 college students complete traditional teacher preparation programs each year and enter the teaching workforce, and these programs need to evolve to support future teachers in their new roles as well. As the report states, “teachers need not just science content knowledge, but also personal experience with the process of investigation and design and time to reflect” about those experiences (p. 7-18). Recommendation 5 of the report emerges from that need: “Undergraduate learning experiences need to serve as models for prospective teachers, in which they experience science investigations and engineering design as learners.”

As a faculty member at a university with a large and long-lived teacher preparation program, I recognize the challenges underlying recommendation 5. The science courses that future teachers take in college are typically spread across disciplinary departments; instructors who teach those courses may or may not be aware that there are future teachers in their classes. Most of the science courses future teachers take are not part of their preparation program, but are general education requirements. As described in Chapter 7 of the report, these courses rarely provide students with opportunities to engage in investigation and design. Even as the evidence mounts for the effectiveness of active learning strategies not only for increasing student learning but in narrowing achievement gaps, uptake of these strategies is still not widespread in undergraduate science courses.

Active learning strategies include small-group discussion and using classroom response systems to pose questions—these approaches (further described in Chapter 4 of Reaching Students) incorporate aspects of investigation and design, and can build habits that are helpful for future teachers. They do not necessarily engage students in the full suite of science and engineering practices to build their understanding of core concepts, but they are a step along the way and can be leveraged to further transform undergraduate science courses to better serve prospective teachers.

The report also describes several ways in which undergraduate learning experiences can serve as strong models. Many universities offer science courses specifically for future teachers—where these already exist, they can be modified to incorporate more opportunities for future teachers to ask questions, plan and conduct investigations, collect and analyze data, and work together to build their understanding of phenomena and address design challenges. In my own experience, designing such a course in Earth science required rethinking the course from the ground up to make substantial, sense-making investigations the core of my instruction, but the benefits are already paying off as I see my students delve into each new map we look at and start to build connections between concepts.

Other successful strategies have involved providing future teachers with research opportunities through both course-based research experiences, such as in the Research Methods course of the UTeach curriculum, or through externally-funded summer research experiences, such as the Science Teacher and Researcher (STAR) program, which recruits students enrolled in STEM teacher preparation programs and places them in national laboratories for a summer research internship while also pairing them with a master teachers and science education faculty member.

There are two keys to making these experiences effective. The first key is reflection: beyond experiencing investigation and design as learners, prospective teachers need the opportunity to articulate their own learning process and reflect on how to incorporate it into their classroom, especially when it is very different from the way they have learned science in the past.

The second key is that one such experience is not enough. Ideally, all undergraduate science courses that future teachers take would involve investigation and design. University faculty involved in teacher preparation and education research play a critical role in making this happen, by providing evidence of the effectiveness of active learning and investigation in improving all students’ performance—not just future teachers—to their peers and administrators, and even leading professional development for their peers to support them in transforming their courses or developing new ones.

Education is a complex system, and systemic change requires considering all components of the system and how they interact. This report can serve as a resource for university faculty and administrators interested in making change happen in their component and its interactions with the K–12 system.


Anne EggerAnne Egger is an Associate Professor of Geological Sciences and Science Education at Central Washington University and a former president of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers (NAGT). She is a member of the Committee on Science Investigations and Engineering Design Experiences in Grades 6-12.

The recently released report Science and Engineering in Grades 6–12: Investigation and Design at the Center makes a strong statement right in the title: engaging students in scientific investigations and engineering design should be the core of what teachers do in their classrooms.

 

Learn How to Build Community Partnerships at the 8th Annual STEM Forum & Expo

By Carole Hayward

Posted on 2019-01-31

Last spring, an article in the April/May 2018 issue of Science Scope highlighted a community partnership between a middle school in Massachusetts and a group of scientists at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI). In the article, Engineering Partnerships, the authors describe a successful, engaging engineering design project developed by a classroom teacher and a WHOI scientist who studies deep-ocean microbes.

Creating these types of partnerships can be highly rewarding for both students and educators. That is why organizers of the 8th Annual STEM Forum & Expo, hosted by NSTA this coming July in San Francisco, have devoted an entire strand on the subject. Sessions in the “Building STEM Ecosystems: Community Partnerships” strand will highlight select preK–16 partnership initiatives that have been successfully implemented and have demonstrated positive outcomes. School administrators will learn ways to assess the effectiveness of these partnerships.

Sessions in the strand will also guide participants on how to leverage local resources and build partnerships with community organizations such as government agencies, engineering firms, factories, farmers, agricultural extension offices, doctors, and hospitals. These partnerships provide STEM experiences that allow students to develop the skills and mind-sets needed to answer complex questions, investigate global issues, and develop solutions to real-world challenges.

The Earlybird Registration deadline for the 8th Annual STEM Forum & Expo is May 13; register early to save. This unique, focused event, held July 24–26, 2019, at the Moscone Center West in San Francisco, provides resources for educators and organizations seeking to learn more about STEM education, associated outreach programs, partnerships, schools, and curricula. In addition to the Community Partnerships strand, the forum will also feature strands and sessions geared toward elementary, middle, high school, and post-secondary educators. Attendees are eligible to earn graduate-level credit.

Visit the conference website for more information on the STEM Forum & Expo. We hope to see you this July in San Francisco!

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Too cold? Observing animals in winter

By Peggy Ashbrook

Posted on 2019-01-29

National Weather Service temperature forecast map of the United States.With very cold weather settling into many areas, children’s outdoor time may be restricted due to temperature and wind chill limits set relative to the temperature ranges normally experienced in their area. ChildCare Aware of North Dakota’s guidelines include:

  • Outdoor play is recommended when temperature/wind chill is 15 degrees F or above.
  • Use caution when temperature/wind chill is between 0 to 15 degrees F.

Sasha Martin’s blog post about the variety of acceptable temperatures for outdoor play, “How cold is too cold for recess? 24 parents across the globe weigh in,” shares parents’ experiences from around the world. Obtaining appropriate winter weather clothing for all children in a program, and having it available when needed, can make it possible to be outside even in what feels like very cold weather. 

Child uses a tally chart to count the number of crows and squirrels observed.On a walk in the neighborhood preschool children noticed goldfish swimming in a fish pond that had a thin ice sheet around the pond edges. Such an observation could be the beginning of an investigation into how local animals are able to survive and even be active when temperatures are uncomfortable for children without thick jackets and mittens. We talked about how different animals have different needs as we wondered. We decided that something about their environment makes it possible for the fish to stay alive–our evidence was their active presence. (I wanted the specific information for my own curiosity and read up on the University of Illinois Extension Service’s site about how the properties of water create an environment where hardy fish survive.) Maybe you’ll only see evidence of an animal’s presence (deer droppings). Observing from a window allows animal counts to be made without disturbing the animals.

A "Wonder Wall,"  posting of questions, thoughts, and photos, a method of making their learning visible for the children and their families.In her Science and Children article, “How Do Plants and Animals Prepare for Winter? Local resources support an outdoor inquiry-based project” (2017), Brooke Larm writes about preschoolers’ exploration into how and why the plants and animals living in a place might change over time, how they could be connected, and how their coexistence could support their survival. Using a 5E structure and the Project Approach method, teachers and children explored the farm, discussed what fall meant to them, and had many first hand experiences which they documented through journaling, and photography. They created a “Wonder Wall,” posting questions, thoughts, and photos, a method of making their learning visible for the children and their families. Children’s drawings, “their representations of learning as documentation,” were used by teachers to help them assess children’s understandings and planning for further investigation of their essential question, “How Do Plants and Animals Prepare for Winter?”

Focusing children’s attention to seasonal changes of any kind supports their developing understanding of natural phenomena and their place on the planet.

National Weather Service temperature forecast map of the United States.With very cold weather settling into many areas, children’s outdoor time may be restricted due to temperature and wind chill limits set relative to the temperature ranges normally experienced in their area.

 

Confluence of Equity and Education: Featured Strand at NSTA’s 2019 National Conference on Science Education in St. Louis, MO, April 11–14

By Carole Hayward

Posted on 2019-01-27

“Arguably, the most pressing challenge facing U.S. education is to provide all students with a fair opportunity to learn” (Framework; NRC 2012, p. 282). This challenge is of great importance as we continue to embrace changing demographics in our classrooms, communities, and country. Our imperative is to maintain high expectations and broaden access and opportunities in STEM education to increase the likelihood of student success and to prepare them to compete globally. — 2019 NSTA National Conference Committee

Science teachers from all over the country, and even the world, will gather for our national conference this spring. And we have a lot to celebrate, including our 75th anniversary. As part of the celebration, you’ll be seeing how much NSTA has changed over time, and a huge part of that change has been the inclusion of so many different types of science teachers, who are able to model for students that any one of us can be a scientist.

Conference organizers, with an eye toward advancing the best and most inclusive strategies for teaching science, offer a special strand “Confluence of Equity and Education” at our 2019 National Conference on Science Education, in St. Louis, April 11–14. Sessions organized around this strand include a featured presentation on Thursday, April 11, 3:30 to 4:30 PM (“Equity: The Power of Understanding the Impacts of Equity and Science Instruction”) by Joseph Davis, Superintendent, Ferguson-Florissant School District; and Tiffany Besse, Chief Academic Officer, Ferguson-Florissant School District. Davis and Besse will focus on the importance of serving all children with the high-quality education they deserve, particularly those who statistically are predicted to fail in the current model. Discussion centers on how partnering with NGSS-focused curriculum leads to equitable instruction in the science classroom and improvement in overall quality of education for students, teachers, and community. This strand will be targeted by level: novice, intermediate, or advanced attendees.

And there will be hundreds more sessions in St. Louis that focus on equity in science education; below is a small sampling:

  • Equal Access to Science: Universal Design and Students with Disabilities
  • STEP UP 4 Women: Bringing the Representation of Women in Physics to 50% with High School Interventions
  • A Cancer Education Curriculum for Underserved Elementary Schoolchildren
  • Meaningful Notebooking!
  • Two Growth Mind-Set Activities to Help Motivate and Teach All Students Nature of Science
  • Equity, Leadership, and Change
  • Standards-Based Grading: Impact on Student Engagement in a Science Classroom
  • STEM Teaching for Dummies: How to Build a STEM Kid Using Nothing but Who’s Already in Your Class
  • Inviting All Students into the NGSS: Fostering Equitable Learning Communities Through Culturally Relevant Science Teaching
  • Launching Your NGSS Unit: Focus on Equity and Access
  • Providing Equitable Learning Experiences for ELLs in Science
  • Counter Racism Science Pedagogy: Race, Racism, and Science Through History and into Our Classrooms
  • Non-Scientists: The Forgotten Majority
  • When Physics and Pop Culture Collide! Strategies for Engaging Assessment and Instruction
  • SC-10: Equity Through STEM Education (ticket required)
  • All Kids Have A Voice: Using Protocols and Other Activities in the Middle School Science Classroom to Build Equity
  • Empowering Experiences for Girls in Computer Science
  • Counteracting Implicit Bias in Science Classrooms
  • Vocabulary Instruction for English Language Learners!
  • Can You Hear Me Now? Doing Science with Students with Limited and Interrupted Education (SLIFE)
  • Connecting Makerspaces to Speech and Occupational Therapy
  • STEM, Language, and Learning
  • Supporting All Students to Make Sense of Phenomena by Building All of Their Intellectual Resources
  • CEREBROedu/BRAINedu: Education and Family Engagement Around Brain Health in Latinx Communities

Extend your exploration of equity beyond our borders and attend Global Initiatives Enhancing Science Education: An International Share-a-Thon and Poster Session on Friday, April 12, in Grand Ballroom D/E, Hyatt Regency St. Louis at the Arch. Join the organizers to hear about international initiatives and programs on diverse areas of science education, including formal elementary to college science education, best practices, novel content delivery, scientific literacy, policy standards, and informal education.

Pro Tips

Check out more sessions and other events with the St. Louis Session Browser. Follow all our conference tweets using #NSTA19, and if you tweet, please feel free to tag us @NSTA so we see it!

Need help requesting funding or time off from your principal or supervisor? Download a letter of support and bring it with you.

And don’t forget, NSTA members save up to $90 off the price of registration. Not a member? Join here.

Future NSTA Conferences

2019 National Conference
St. Louis, April 11–14

2019 STEM Forum & Expo
San Francisco, July 24–26

The mission of NSTA is to promote excellence and innovation in science teaching and learning for all.

Follow NSTA

Facebook icon Twitter icon LinkedIn icon Pinterest icon G+ icon YouTube icon Instagram icon

 

“Arguably, the most pressing challenge facing U.S. education is to provide all students with a fair opportunity to learn” (Framework; NRC 2012, p. 282). This challenge is of great importance as we continue to embrace changing demographics in our classrooms, communities, and country. Our imperative is to maintain high expectations and broaden access and opportunities in STEM education to increase the likelihood of student success and to prepare them to compete globally. — 2019 NSTA National Conference Committee

 

Jazzing Up Science with Cross-Curricular Connections: Featured Strand at NSTA’s 2019 National Conference on Science Education in St. Louis, MO, April 11–14

By Carole Hayward

Posted on 2019-01-27

It’s too time-consuming… We haven’t been properly trained… Assessment is too difficult… Subject integrity may be relaxed… There are many reasons teachers find it challenging to make cross-curricular connections. But the benefits far outweigh them—curricula can be more relevant, more diverse voices can be shared, learning time and space can be more flexible, and so many more.

For science teachers who enjoy this type of collaboration (or want to be able to enjoy it), we’re pleased to invite you to take a closer look at a special strand “Jazzing Up Science with Cross-Curricular Connections” being featured at our 2019 National Conference on Science Education, in St. Louis, April 11–14. Our conference organizers know that Integration within the sciences or among other disciplines leads to deeper learning and understanding for all students. This strand will focus on ways that science and other subject areas can be integrated, including the best way to bundle disciplinary core ideas. This strand will be targeted by level: novice, intermediate, or advanced attendees.

Sessions organized around this strand include a featured presentation on Saturday, April 13, 2:00 to 3:00 PM (“Hulahula and Learn Something…Expressing Science Through Culture and Dance”) by Kiana Frank, Assistant Professor, Pacific Biosciences Research Center. Weaving stories from traditional and contemporary scientific observations to explain the world around her—from micro to macro scales—Frank hopes to advance our understanding of how we fit into and influence our place. The expression of these stories through movement, as was done traditionally in Hawaii through the art of hula (dance), enables the expression of emotion and spirituality that is vital to perpetuating indigenous science and increasing comprehension, engagement, and enthusiasm of science in our students and communities. Expressing science in a cultural context through dance, not only better connects us to a concept or a place, but also engages the imagination by developing connections to that which we cannot see—the multiple layers of meaning and levels of knowledge that cross disciplines to achieve deeper learning.

And there will be hundreds more sessions in St. Louis that explore the use of phenomena in the science classroom; below is a small sampling:

  • Crosscutting Concepts and Using Your Science “Eye”
  • Physics Is a Story: Weaving History and Diversity into Physics Education
  • Do It, Talk It, Write It: Incorporating Literacy and Digital Media to Promote Meaning Making for Young Learners
  • Not Enough Time? Fill Your Day with Nature!
  • Serving Up Science Through Independent Learning Menus
  • The Flight of the Bumblebee: A New Multimodal STEM Text Set and Related Activities for Diverse Middle School Learners
  • Learn Physics, Not Equations
  • SC-5: Blending the E and the S in STEM (ticket required)
  • Providing Real-World Relevance to Students of All Abilities Using CDC Public Health Lessons
  • Place-Based Projects Making a Difference on Your School Campus
  • STEAM on the Street: Surprising Everyday STEAM Encounters!
  • Maker Movement: Building Bridges Between Science and English Language Arts
  • Busy Beavers: Engineering Excitement in the Classroom
  • STEM All Day Long…and Still Cover the Standards!
  • Integrating Science and Literacy Instruction with Struggling Readers
  • Science Stated Clearly: Teaching Chemistry and Biology with Animation
  • The Young Artist as Scientist: What Can Leonardo da Vinci Teach Us?
  • Blocks and Beyond: The Importance of Spatial Understandings in STEM
  • Engaging Early Learners Through Cross-Curricular Integrated STEM Experiences
  • STEM and NGSS No Longer Separate, But Still Equal
  • Learning from Nature: STEAM Investigations for the Elementary Classroom

Some of the connections teachers make happen outside of the classroom. Attendees thinking of working across the curriculum, or even to expand their students’ horizons further, can join their peers on Saturday, April 13, for the Community Connections Share-a-Thon. The organizers invite you to come and engage with organizations that bring you exciting resources, programs, and opportunities available to you from museums, after-school, media, and other informal science education providers! At the share-a-thon, you’ll find:

  • Interactive hands-on activities
  • New and engaging ways to connect with your students
  • FREE programs and resources

Pro Tips

Check out more sessions and other events with the St. Louis Session Browser. Follow all our conference tweets using #NSTA19, and if you tweet, please feel free to tag us @NSTA so we see it!

Need help requesting funding or time off from your principal or supervisor? Download a letter of support and bring it with you.

And don’t forget, NSTA members save up to $90 off the price of registration. Not a member? Join here.

Future NSTA Conferences

2019 National Conference
St. Louis, April 11–14

2019 STEM Forum & Expo
San Francisco, July 24–26

The mission of NSTA is to promote excellence and innovation in science teaching and learning for all.

Follow NSTA

Facebook icon Twitter icon LinkedIn icon Pinterest icon G+ icon YouTube icon Instagram icon

 

It’s too time-consuming… We haven’t been properly trained… Assessment is too difficult… Subject integrity may be relaxed… There are many reasons teachers find it challenging to make cross-curricular connections. But the benefits far outweigh them—curricula can be more relevant, more diverse voices can be shared, learning time and space can be more flexible, and so many more.

 

Is It Any Wonder That Thousands of Science Teachers Will Gather in St. Louis to Explore Phenomena This Spring?

By Carole Hayward

Posted on 2019-01-27

Merriam-Webster has several definitions for phenomenon—among them are “an observable fact or event” and “an object or aspect known through the senses rather than by thought or intuition.” And just as they find varied ways to look at the word, so too do science teachers find varied ways to use phenomena in their classrooms. Join your peers this spring in St. Louis to hear creative ideas for doing just that.

The National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) will feature a special strand “Phenomena: Gateway to Learning” at our 2019 National Conference on Science Education, in St. Louis, April 11–14. Our conference organizers recognize that using phenomena in science experiences expands learning. Inclusion of multiple disciplines or subject areas in three-dimensional learning aids in deepening student thinking, learning, and reflecting. This strand will show how teachers can use structures such as the 5E instructional model, Claims-Evidence-Reasoning (CER), Problem-Based Learning, Place-Based Learning, or Project-Based Learning as viable approaches to facilitate student understanding. This strand will be targeted by level: novice, intermediate, or advanced attendees.

Sessions organized around this strand include a featured panel on Friday, April 12, 3:30 to 4:30 PM (“Place-Based Phenomena for Extraordinary Learning”) by Leslie Cook, Senior Director, Teacher Learning Center, Teton Science Schools; Kevin Krasnow, Graduate Faculty and Research Specialist, Teton Science Schools; and Joe Petrick, Vice President of Field Education, Teton Science Schools. Teton Science Schools (TSS) has practiced place-based science learning in the Greater Yellowstone Geo-ecosystem for the past 51 years.  This panel discussion will focus on how TSS is practicing place-based education and offer new ideas for teachers to take back to their classrooms.

And there will be hundreds more sessions in St. Louis that explore the use of phenomena in the science classroom; below is a small sampling:

  • Student Engineers Build on Foundations
  • NASA’s Educator Tool Kit: Framing Phenomena-Based Student Investigations
  • Daytime Astronomy: Elementary Celestial Navigation
  • NOS Naturally
  • Harry Potter and the Science of Invisibility
  • Do Your Students Really Understand Chemical Equilibrium?
  • Students Collecting Data for the GLOBE Urban Heat Island Effect Campaign
  • It’s All About Connections: Antarctic Ice to Local Climate
  • The Saint Louis Box Turtle Project: Using Local Species to Understand World Issues
  • SC-7: Promoting Children’s Science Inquiry and Thinking About Living Things in Preschool and Kindergarten (ticket required)
  • Invigorate Your Classroom Through Science Literacy
  • What Happened Here? Using the 5Es to Explore Phenomena Outdoors
  • Phenomenon-“Mah na mah na:” How to Use a Local Anchoring Phenomena to Drive a Lesson Series
  • SC-11: The World Ender: A NASA Cross-Disciplinary PBL Unit (ticket required)
  • Place-Based Curricula and Project-Based Learning Units Address a Real-World Problem of Marine Debris in the U.S. Virgin Islands
  • CER…CERtainly a Way to Help Students Become Scientists
  • Wild Spiders in Three Dimensions
  • Climate Science and Stewardship Project: Plants as Bioindicators and Solutions
  • After an Earthquake: Real-Time Earthquake Data as a Hook to Encourage Answer-Seeking About the Geologic and Societal Context of the Event
  • Science Curriculum from the Grassroots
  • Jurassic Mystery: Using Real Research to Teach Critical-Thinking Skills
  • Phenomenon-Based Learning: The Other PBL Approach to STEM Instruction
  • Biophilia and Young Scientists

Need some off-campus inspiration? Consider this special offer for St. Louis conference registrants: Show your NSTA St. Louis Conference Badge and receive complimentary admission to the Butterfly House for a self-guided tour, courtesy of the Missouri Botanical Garden. Great care was taken in the design and engineering of the 8,000-square-foot glass conservatory garden to assure a natural and safe habitat for the butterflies. As many as 80 butterfly species and 150 tropical plant species are exhibited. The Butterfly House is located at Faust Park, 15193 Olive Blvd., Chesterfield, MO (a 40-minute drive from America’s Center).

Pro Tips

Check out more sessions and other events with the St. Louis Session Browser. Follow all our conference tweets using #NSTA19, and if you tweet, please feel free to tag us @NSTA so we see it!

Need help requesting funding or time off from your principal or supervisor? Download a letter of support and bring it with you.

And don’t forget, NSTA members save up to $90 off the price of registration. Not a member? Join here.

Future NSTA Conferences

2019 National Conference
St. Louis, April 11–14

2019 STEM Forum & Expo
San Francisco, July 24–26

The mission of NSTA is to promote excellence and innovation in science teaching and learning for all.

Follow NSTA

Facebook icon Twitter icon LinkedIn icon Pinterest icon G+ icon YouTube icon Instagram icon

 

Merriam-Webster has several definitions for phenomenon—among them are “an observable fact or event” and “an object or aspect known through the senses rather than by thought or intuition.” And just as they find varied ways to look at the word, so too do science teachers find varied ways to use phenomena in their classrooms. Join your peers this spring in St. Louis to hear creative ideas for doing just that.

 

Three-Dimensional Grand Slam: Featured Strand at NSTA’s 2019 National Conference on Science Education in St. Louis, MO, April 11–14

By Carole Hayward

Posted on 2019-01-27

Explorers Lewis and Clark began their westward trip from the St. Louis area in 1804, trying to find a better way to the west coast; as they made their way to the Pacific Ocean, they mapped the area and cataloged its natural resources. If you’re feeling like an explorer making your way through unchartered territory as you navigate three-dimensional teaching or the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), join us this April to get your own road map.

The National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) will feature a special strand “Three-Dimensional Grand Slam” at our 2019 National Conference on Science Education, in St. Louis, April 11–14. Our conference organizers really understand that shifting science educators’ focus from simply teaching science ideas to helping students figure out solutions is exciting. But it’s not just about changing the way you teach; in their learning, students must use all three dimensions of the NGSS or NRC Framework in an integrated fashion in order to make sense of phenomena or design solutions to problems. This strand will focus on implementing three-dimensional learning to increase student understanding and will be targeted by level: novice, intermediate, or advanced attendees.

Sessions organized around this strand include a featured presentation on Friday, April 12, 11:00 AM–12 Noon (“Unlocking the Power of the NGSS”) by Paul Andersen (Educational Consultant and Creator of the wildly popular YouTube channel, Bozeman Science). Not familiar with Andersen? Check out one of his most popular videos, below, explainig CRISPR.


And there will be hundreds more sessions in St. Louis to help teachers explore 3-D teaching and the NGSS; below is a small sampling so you see what’s in store:

  • Case Studies: Compelling and Engaging 3-D Instructional Tools
  • Using Energy, Engineering, and Explanations in Elementary ML-PBL Science Classrooms
  • Implementing Three-Dimensional Assessment Practices in High School Science
  • Merging Three-Dimensional Assessments with Standards-Based Grading
  • SC-4: Developing and Using Models for Better Conceptual Understanding (ticket required)
  • Formative Processes in the NGSS Classroom
  • Where Does Our Clean Water Come From and Where Does It Go After We Make It Dirty? A Grade 5 NGSS Storyline
  • Transforming Elementary Classrooms with Engineering Challenges: Three-Dimensional Planning Tools for Teachers
  • Student Drivers: Driving Question Boards Empower Students to Figure Out What They Really Need to Know and How They Will Get There
  • States of Matter…Where Did They Go? Transforming Existing Elementary and Middle Grades Lessons to Meet NGSS Matter and Its Interactions
  • SC-8: Designing and Using Three-Dimensional Assessments in Your Classroom (ticket required)
  • Engaging Students in Scientific Arguments from Evidence
  • What About the Crosscutting Concepts? How to Make Them Explicit in Your Science Lessons
  • Developing Models Through Peer Critique and Feedback
  • Cultivating the Scientific Practice of Asking Questions: Tools for Teachers and Students
  • Engaging Students: Using Crosscutting Concepts to Prompt Student Sensemaking of Phenomena
  • Integrating Content in a 3-D World
  • The Trifecta: Driving Question Boards, Anchor Models, Anchor Charts
  • Writing Three-Dimensional Storylines
  • Assessing 3-D Learning: You Can Do It!
  • When the Performance Expectations Aren’t Enough: Unpacking the NGSS Evidence Statements to Plan for Three-Dimensional Science Instruction
  • Raising the Bar: Developing Effective Three-Dimensional Lessons

Not enough? Take a really deep dive and attend these:

  • The NGSS@NSTA Forum | Friday, April 12 | 226, America’s Center
    This year’s NGSS@NSTA Forum focuses on instructional materials. The opening session describes tools you can use to evaluate resources and then five additional sessions highlight instructional units designed to address three-dimensional standards. Click here for a list of the sessions.

  • NGSS@NSTA Share-a-Thon | Saturday, April 13 | 9:30–10:30 AM | Hall 1, America’s Center
    At the NGSS@NSTA Share-a-Thon, meet education experts from around the country, and get tips and tools to help implement three-dimensional instruction. Leave with plenty of handouts and ideas you can use in your classroom right away.

Pro Tips

Check out more sessions and other events with the St. Louis Session Browser. Follow all our conference tweets using #NSTA19, and if you tweet, please feel free to tag us @NSTA so we see it!

Need help requesting funding or time off from your principal or supervisor? Download a letter of support and bring it with you.

And don’t forget, NSTA members save up to $90 off the price of registration. Not a member? Join here.

Future NSTA Conferences

2019 National Conference
St. Louis, April 11–14

2019 STEM Forum & Expo
San Francisco, July 24–26

The mission of NSTA is to promote excellence and innovation in science teaching and learning for all.

Follow NSTA

Facebook icon Twitter icon LinkedIn icon Pinterest icon G+ icon YouTube icon Instagram icon

 

Explorers Lewis and Clark began their westward trip from the St. Louis area in 1804, trying to find a better way to the west coast; as they made their way to the Pacific Ocean, they mapped the area and cataloged its natural resources. If you’re feeling like an explorer making your way through unchartered territory as you navigate three-dimensional teaching or the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), join us this April to get your own road map.

 

Flying the PowerUp X FPV

By Edwin P. Christmann

Posted on 2019-01-25

Introduction

The PowerUp X FPV allows users to view a video as their paper airplane flies. Subsequently, the PowerUp X FPV is designed for users in middle grades to high school and can offer opportunities to go outside to test the airplane. Moreover, students can use their cellular phone to view images of the flight at it is compatible with both Android and Apple products. Hence, a free “app” allows users to control their airplane’s flight from their cell phone. Moreover, the “app” contains tips for getting started with a pre-flight tutorial video and a pre-flight checklist to better prepare for the flight. Within the “app,” there is also an alarm users can sound to locate their plane if the flight goes into an area where it is hard to find.

Image 1: PoweUP X
PowerUp X

Before flying the plane, to get the most out of the experience, make sure the battery is fully charged. To charge the battery, a USB cord is needed and will take about 90 minutes. Next, users can follow the simple folding instructions on the PowerUp X FPV website to construct their plane. The instructions can be found under the “How to Fold” section of the PowerUp website. The instructions were easy to follow and can be found at https://flightdeck.poweruptoys.com/cwists/preview/959x. Finally, when the battery is fully charged (as indicated by a green charging light) users can “convert from paper plane to paper drone.” This can be done by following the diagram included in the instructions for connecting the paper plane to the PowerUp FPV Module.

When it is time to fly the plane, users must connect to the PowerUp WiFi network and then launch the PowerUp FPV App. Users must then go through the pre-flight checklist to ensure that their plane is ready for takeoff. Once the pre-flight checklist is complete, users are ready for takeoff. To begin the takeoff, users need to double-tap in the region indicated on the screen of their cell phone to unlock the throttle. Once this is done, an automated voice will say, “You are cleared for takeoff.” Image 2 shows the area that must be double tapped and is circled in yellow.

Users must then move the sliding bar on the left side of their screen to turn the throttle up (the throttle can be turned up anywhere from 0-100%). Moving the sliding bar is what allows the motors to activate the propellers to move the plane. Image 3 shows the sliding bar which controls the throttle and is circled in yellow. Thus, to fly the place, the user simply releases the plane into the wind and the plane will take off! A nice feature is that the plane is equipped with crash detection. Therefore, when the plane lands or crashes, an alarm sounds from the plane to help users locate their plane.

Image 2: The area users must tap to unlock is circled in yellow.

Power UPX

Image 3: The throttle bar is circled in yellow.

Power UpX

What’s Included:
-4 sheets of paper with lines to guide students in folding their paper airplanes
-1 PowerUp FPV Module
-2 extra blades
-1 instruction manual
-1 battery

What Needs Purchased Separately:
-Micro USB cord for charging
-Micro SD card- If you want to save your flight videos

Classroom Uses:

The PowerUp website provides an assortment of resources for teachers to select kits their classrooms. As you will find, ther are a variety of different models for teachers to choose from, and classroom sets can be purchased at reasonable prices with academic discounts available. In addition, the website provides a free “Teacher Guide” in PDF format with lesson plan ideas for teachers. From what we found, the lesson plans are good and aligned with primary, middle, and high school NGSS standards. The lessons are focused on aeronautic related concepts and are will suited to the physical sciences. The following is a link to the free Teacher Guide PDF https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0165/4322/files/PowerUp_Teacher_Guide_21.06.2018.pdf?5564353080247095108.

Tips for Getting Started:

To begin, take a look at the PowerUp website and review the resources, guides, and answers to frequently asked questions. Once there, you will find video tutorials to help get you started can be found at https://www.poweruptoys.com/pages/powerup-fpv-lp. From our experience, the PowerUp X offers students a meaningful learning experience that is motivating and enjoyable!

Specifications:
-Video: Swivel wide angle VGA camera
-Video latency: 80-120ms
-Video frame rate: 30 fps
-Camera lens: 100×130 wide angle
-Battery size: Hot swap 550 mAh Lithium polymer
-Battery life: 10 Minutes flight per charge
-High Intensity Buzzer- perfect for finding a lost drone
-Charging time- 90 minutes
-Max speed: 20 mph/32 km/h/ 9m per second (depending on the airplane design)
-Airplane gross weight: 2.8 oz/ 80 grams/ 3 ounces

Video 1: Auto Pilot Test

Cost:
$139.99

 

About the Authors:

Edwin P. Christmann is a professor and chairman of the secondary education department and graduate coordinator of the mathematics and science teaching program at Slippery Rock University in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania. Emily Ferraro is a graduate student in the mathematics and science teaching program at Slippery Rock University in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania.

Introduction

 

Ed News: Paid Professional Development Key to Teaching STEM Effectively

By Kate Falk

Posted on 2019-01-25

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This week in education news, more state governments should take necessary steps to ensure they can provide public support for paid professional development for teachers of STEM subjects; new study finds programs with strong organization structures are the key to effective early-childhood education; L.A. public school teachers reach a deal to end weeklong strike; elementary schools are introducing their students to engineering principles, hoping to inspire a life-long interest in STEM fields; DonorsChoose analysis shows that demand for STEM education continues to rise; 2019 National Teacher of the Year finalists announced; and programs that focus on content creation and extended classroom accessibility will help K–12 teachers get the most out of their AR and VR investments.

Paid Professional Development Key to Teaching STEM Effectively

The foundation upon which science teachers base their curricula is shifting in many states, but in too many districts across the country, this shifting ground has not been accompanied by practical — and paid — opportunities for teachers to catch themselves up to where science instruction is headed. Read the article posted in The Hill.

New Gene-Editing Kit Puts the Power of Frog Growth into Citizen Scientists’ Hands

Since founding his company, The Odin, in 2006, Josiah Zayner and his team have been striving to give the public the education and tools to safely edit organisms’ genes. So far, they have sold thousands of gene-editing kits and brought in around $500,000 in revenue just last year. With these inexpensive devices, individuals can practice feats of science once contained to a lab, such as making glow-in-the-dark yeast and precise gene mutations in bacteria. Read the article featured in the Mercury News.

New Study Finds Strong School Climate Key to Effective Early Learning

A new study says programs with strong organizational structures hold the key to effective early-childhood education, and lists exceptional administrators and collaborative teachers as the two most important components of those structures. Read the article featured in Education Week.

Los Angeles Teachers’ Strike to End as Deal Is Reached

Los Angeles public school teachers reached a deal with officials on Tuesday to end a weeklong strike that had affected more than half a million students, winning an array of supplementary services after an era in education marked by attacks on traditional public schools and their teachers. Read the article featured in The New York Times.

How Arizona Is Building Its Own Talent Pipeline to Solve the Stubborn Teacher Shortages Hitting State’s Low-Income Schools

The Vail school district in southern Arizona has grown from a few hundred to more than 12,000 students over the past two decades. The district’s expansion has been managed by a respected and resourceful district leader who credits much of the success of its schools, which rank among Arizona’s best, to its selection of teachers. Teachers who have earned credentials through traditional programs “remain our meat and potatoes,” said Calvin Baker, the superintendent who has run Vail schools for 30 years. But the district also serves as its own school of education, training non-certified staff — as well parents and community volunteers — to become educators. Read the article featured in The 74.

How to Build An Engineer: Start Young

A few years ago, a young female engineer named Isis Anchalee was featured on one of her company’s recruiting posters only to be subjected to a barrage of digital feedback questioning whether she was really an engineer. People posting on Facebook and Twitter said Anchalee was too attractive to be an actual software engineer and must be a model. Anchalee responded like the techie she is. She wrote a blog post about her experience and added a photo of herself with the hashtag #ILookLikeAnEngineer. Read the article featured in The Hechinger Report.

Crowdfunding Data Shows Rise in STEM, Rural Requests

An analysis of 274,000 projects funded through DonorsChoose shows that demand for STEM education continued to rise in classrooms in 2018, and that rural educators are becoming more comfortable with the crowdfunding website. Read the article featured in EdScoop.

How to Get Teachers to Believe in a New School Program? Ask Them to Help Design It.

A veteran teacher in any school district will likely be able to tell the same story: A faddish new initiative comes sweeping in, perhaps promoted by the just-hired superintendent. Grand promises are made, and teachers get a few days of training (if they’re lucky). Then, it slowly fades away, as teachers ignore mandates they see as unhelpful or impractical. A new study looks closely at that phenomenon and its flip side — when teachers are bought in to programs designed to help their schools. Read the article featured in Chalkbeat.

These Are the Four Top Teachers in America

An environmental leader, a champion of student activism, a culturally responsive educator, and an advocate for students’ civic empowerment—these are the four educators who were announced today as finalists for the 2019 National Teacher of the Year Award. Read the article featured in Education Week.

Here Is What the Right Tools for Mixed Reality in the Classroom Look Like

In K–12, educators have found ways to use augmented and virtual reality to enhance and support deeper learning in the classroom. However, evaluating the best immersive technology resources requires an understanding of current technology limitations and offerings. Read the article featured in Ed Tech.

Problem-Solving in Elementary School

In a school district in New Jersey, beginning in kindergarten each child is seen as a future problem solver with creative ideas that can help the world. Vince Caputo, superintendent of the Metuchen School District, explained that what drew him to the position was “a shared value for whole child education.” Caputo’s first hire as superintendent was Rick Cohen, who works as both the district’s K–12 director of curriculum and principal of Moss Elementary School. Cohen is committed to integrating social and emotional learning (SEL) into academic curriculum and instruction by linking cognitive processes and guided self-talk. Cohen’s first focus was kindergarten students. “I recommended Moss teachers teach just one problem-solving process to our 6-year-olds across all academic content areas and challenge students to use the same process for social problem-solving,” he explained. Read the article featured in edutopia.

Stay tuned for next week’s top education news stories.

The Communication, Legislative & Public Affairs (CLPA) team strives to keep NSTA members, teachers, science education leaders, and the general public informed about NSTA programs, products, and services and key science education issues and legislation. In the association’s role as the national voice for science education, its CLPA team actively promotes NSTA’s positions on science education issues and communicates key NSTA messages to essential audiences.

The mission of NSTA is to promote excellence and innovation in science teaching and learning for all.


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