posted by:
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Cheryl Pilatowski
on May 13, 2003
at 9:37PM
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subject:
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Content Knowledge in Science
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It is crucial the teachers have the background knowledge of the subject they teach. They must feel comfortable with the topic in order to convey the knowledge to the students. In our TAPESTRIES program, the teachers spend two weeks with teacher educators and scientists at the college level developing a deeper understanding of the science concepts they will be imparting to their students. BUT the teachers must know how to do more than impart the knowledge. They must teach the students to ask questions, explore ways to arrive at answers, communicate data, recognize explanations are generated in response to observations, analyze, design, explain, formulate, and compare. In our program they are given strategies to use to help the students arrive at their own explanation of the concepts and to develop those important skills and processes. Even with all the background knowledge and strategies presented we find many teachers continue to equate learning “content” with reading. They reason the content must be in black and white in order for it to be valid. They believe “doing” science does not teach the students any content. Once they are given the knowledge and strategies needed to move them past this, we find there is still a hesitation to move away from the book. Why? Is one of the reasons because teachers are often uncomfortable giving the students control over their own leaning? This is not easy for teachers to do. They like to be in total control of the lesson and they want all students to arrive at the answer the same way. It is very difficult for teachers to relinquish that control of their classrooms. Learning math and science is so much more than a set or rules…it is determining the how and why! We must give our students the necessary skills needed to arrive at the correct answers, no mater how the students choose to get there.
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