A bullet dropped and a bullet fired from a gun will reach the ground at the same time. Plants get the majority of their mass from the air around them, not the soil beneath them. A smartphone is made from more elements than you. Every day, science teachers get the opportunity to blow students’ minds with counter-intuitive, crazy ideas like these. But getting students to understand and remember the science that explains these observations is complex. To help, this book explores how to plan and teach science lessons so that students and teachers are thinking about the right things – that is, the scientific ideas themselves. It introduces you to 13 powerful ideas of science that have the ability to transform how young people see themselves and the world around them.
Each chapter tells the story of one powerful idea and how to teach it alongside examples and non-examples from biology, chemistry and physics to show what great science teaching might look like and why. Drawing on evidence about how students learn from cognitive science and research from science education, the book takes you on a journey of how to plan and teach science lessons so students acquire scientific ideas in meaningful ways.
Emphasising the important relationship between curriculum, pedagogy and the subject itself, this exciting book will help you teach in a way that captivates and motivates students, allowing them to share in the delight and wonder of the explanatory power of science.
Author(s): Jasper Green
Publisher: Routledge / David Fulton
Year: 2020
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
List of figures
List of tables
About the author
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Thinking about the right things
Section 1: Aims for school science education: For whom andfor what?
Chapter 1: Fallacies of science education
Chapter 2: Powerful ideas of science
Chapter 3: The nature of science and the rules of the game
Section 2: The science of learning science
Chapter 4: Why learning science is hard but wonderful
Chapter 5: How we learn: A cognitive science perspective
Chapter 6: Why motivation matters
Section 3: Planning lessons with thinking in mind
Chapter 7: Preparing to plan: Thinking about progression over time
Chapter 8: Planning what to teach in the lesson
Chapter 9: Planning how to teach it
Section 4: Planning and teaching the phases of instruction
Chapter 10: Rewind and success for all: Retrieval practice
Chapter 11: Trigger interest and activate prior knowledge
Chapter 12: Introducing new ideas: Explanations and models
Chapter 13: Practice to build understanding: Worked examples and deliberate practice
Chapter 14: Apply and integrate to make and break connections
Section 5: Responsive teaching
Chapter 15: Making thinking visible so feedback can take place
Conclusion: Time to reflect
Lesson planning templates
Index