posted by:
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Elaine Woo
on May 18, 2003
at 11:39AM
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subject:
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"When is science taught?..."
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I don't know so much about this, but we have been told over the last several years that Boeing, Microsoft, and former Immunex leaders would continuously go back to Washington, D.C. year after year to up the number of visas allowed to bring foreigners in to take the jobs we cannot fill with our own people. It is good to bring talent into the country, and businesses that are international need to hire internationally, but I am getting the impression that perhaps we should be filling some of these positions with our own.
Since I can remember, science was seen as something for only a few and even a subject for nerdy types. It seems slowly over time we are getting away from this through these different waves of reform. And, the young children in our program now do not have that sense I thnk. Almost all of them love science, and they see that all other children can do science. I believe that it is when those who start with this kind of guided inquiry at the kindergarten level and continue having it in most of their K-12 years become the superintendents and other leaders that science may get more quality time and recognition as a core subject. (Right now most teachers and principals are convinced that science instruction benefits children in multiple ways, but people who are not in the classroom very much or at all still need convincing.)
In the eleven years that I have been involved in science reform, I have seen substantial change in how science is viewed but we probably need another twenty years or more with the same intense level of work to be where we want to be. (One scientist said to me it is not a twenty year project, it is a forever project.)
Bill Schmidt (TIMSS study) focuses on the need for providing all children with a common, coherent, rigorous curriculum. It struck me as unusual that he focuses on curriculum when everyone else is focusing on student conceptual understanding and instruction. The notion of common, cohherent, and rigorous curriculum make a lot of sense. (In the higher scoring TIMSS countries, they have that according to Schmidt.) Also, the professional development needs to be added to provide some level of common, coherent, and rigorous level of implementation/instruction. He makes a lot of sense; more people should listen to him and take heed. Such as, why is every district in our country spending thousands and thousands of dollars on developing their own standards; we are all trying to reinvent the wheel so often. It is not cost effective!
I think these LSCs are helping us address some of Schmidt's concerns.
As long as science is taught during the school hours so that all children receive it, then perhaps providing the common, coherent, rigorous curriculum with support on how to teach the curriculum is a good start to the big shift we need to make to allow science to be a core curriculum.
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