Date of Proposal: 9/99 (Course approved by UCC January 2000)
Catalog Description:
309 INTEGRATED SCIENCE FOR ELEMENTARY EDUCATORS 3 F,S
Elementary Education major with 24 hours of science req.
Modeling of exemplary science teaching practices using a unified
science approach.
Course Overview:
Integrated Science for Elementary Educators is a required
science course that is part of an 18-semester-hour science concentration
for elementary education majors. It assumes that students have
a solid background in life and physical sciences. Students participate
in integrated science lessons that model the best ways of teaching,
and are actively engaged in the process of scientific discovery.
Multidisciplinary topics serve as the organizing themes for this
course, and integrate the areas of biology, chemistry, earth and
space science, and physics. Integrated Science for Elementary
Educators is a natural extension of a number of content courses,
and Foundations of Inquiry. It is a course that demonstrates
science as a way of knowing and a process of analysis. Students
develop the skills of inquiry and critical thinking, and become
experienced in the use of technology to collect, evaluate and
interpret data. Though this is not a methods course per se, class
time will be utilized to explain the educational theory underlying
the pedagogical approaches used in this course. In addition, class
time will be used to discuss scientific method and technology,
critical analysis, and scientific dispositions. Finally, students
will experience activities that unite the moral and intellectual
aspects of teaching outlined in ISU Teacher Education's conceptual
framework -- Realizing the Democratic Ideal.
Course Goals:
While working through this course, prospective elementary
school teacher candidates will:
Student Objectives:
By the end of this course, each student will have demonstrated
the ability to:
Topical Outline:
This course will use a number of organizing themes. Four to
six themes will be selected each semester from among the following
and similar topics:
STREAMS AND RIVERS
Biology -- collection and identification of wildlife
Chemistry -- water chemistry, concentrations, pH, equilibrium, acid rain
Earth Science -- rock formation/erosion
Physics -- current and water flow
Inquiry -- human impact on waterways, differences between ponds, streams, and rivers
BONKERS OVER BUGS
Biology -- physiology of bugs and insects, social insects, communication
Chemistry -- pheromones in bees, insect venom, ants & formic acid, insecticides,
acid/base neutralization
Earth Science -- making a butterfly garden
Physics -- the sounds insects make
Inquiry -- insect adaptations to the environment
EARTH-SKY RELATIONSHIPS
Biology -- physiology and working of the eye, light and color perception
Chemistry -- composition of the air, ozone depletion, respiration, acid rain
Earth Science -- solar motion, constellation, latitude determination, meteorology, seasons
Physics -- auroras, twinkling, blue skies and red sunsets
Skepticism -- astrology
Inquiry -- near earth orbiting objects
KITCHEN SCIENCE
Biology -- nutrition
Chemistry -- chemical reactions, baking, digestion, decomposition, and gas reactions
Earth Science -- soils for food growth, minerals in the diet
Physics -- microwaves and cooking, cooking at high altitudes
Inquiry -- interpreting food labels, analyzing supplement claims
LIGHT AND SIGHT
Biology -- physiology
Chemistry -- dark adaptation, UV light, tanning and sun screen, rhodopsin/retina, atomic
structure
Earth Science -- polarized light and minerals, phosphorescence and luminescence
Physics -- wave nature of light, spectra, lenses and the eye
DETECTIVE SCIENCE
Biology -- finger printing, blood typing, hair analysis
Chemistry -- ink matching, substance identification (mystery powders), forensics, arson,
and chromatography
Earth Science -- soil analysis, shoe impressions
Physics -- ballistics, measurements
Inquiry -- investigation skills
DIGGING FOR DINOSAURS
Biology -- hypotheses about physiology, reproduction
Chemistry -- fossilization reactions, carbon cycle/dating, glacial frozen animals/people
Earth Science -- fossils, amber, earth stratification
Physics -- radioactive dating
Inquiry -- formation of hypotheses based on fossil record
THE NATURE OF MATTER
Biology -- living and non-living matter, definition of life
Chemistry -- conservation of mass, particulate matter, unknown solids
Geology -- types of rocks
Physics -- buoyancy, density
BONES
Biology -- physiology, health concerns
Chemistry -- bone components, drinking milk/osteoporosis, bone scans/density, X rays,
and fractures
Earth Science -- mineralization
Physics -- structure and function, motion, "cathedral" structure of skull
Inquiry -- identification of bones, calcium supplements
WASTE MANAGEMENT
Biology -- microbes
Chemistry -- chemical degradation, recycling
Earth Science -- tracking waste products
Physics -- compression and compaction
Inquiry -- design of environmentally sound waste management systems
Tentative Schedule:
This tentative schedule assumes initial readings and discussions,
followed by in-class activities and/or a field trip, and finally
more classroom sessions to conclude the material and allow discussion
time. Final course topics will be chosen from among the list above
based upon instructional considerations. The schedule below is
illustrative of the schedule during a typical autumn semester.
Week In-class Topics Special Activities:
1 Intro & Overview / Ways of Knowing
2 Inquiry, Attitudes, & Assumptions
3 Science Teaching Pedagogy
4 Begin Topic #1: Intro & Technology
5 Data Collection & Analysis Field Trip #1
6 Data Interpretation & Reporting
7 Begin Topic #2: Intro & Technology
8 Data Collection & Analysis Field Trip #2
9 Data Interpretation & Reporting
10 Begin Topic #3: Intro & Technology
11 Data Collection & Analysis Field Trip #3
12 Data Interpretation & Reporting
13 Begin Topic #4: Science as Research
14 Data Collection & Analysis Field Trip #4
15 Data Interpretation & Reporting
16 (Finals Week) Science Fair
Readings:
Students will be assigned readings from a number of teacher-identified
sources. They will be expected to regularly refer to textbooks
from previous content courses in the sciences. Each student will
be required to read and make weekly reports from WWW-based sources
that deal with breaking science news. Readings will be taken from
the following and similar resources:
PRINTED RESOURCES:
Allison, L., & Katz, D. (1983). Gee, Wiz! How to Mix Art and Science or the Art of Thinking Scientifically. Yolla Bolly Press.
Bosak, S. (1991). Science Is..., New York: Scholastic, 1-15.
Crawford, B. (1998, April). The scientific method -- A fatal flaw. Science Scope, 50-52.
Haynes, L. (1997, September). Consumer Testing: Applying the Scientific Method to Everyday Life. Science Scope, 34-38.
Peters, E. K. (1996). No Stone Unturned: Reasoning About Rocks and Fossils. New York: W. H. Freeman and Company.
INTERNET RESOURCES:
A Science Fair Project Resource Guide:
http://www.ipl.org/youth/projectguide/
Bad Astronomy:
http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/index.html
Ban Dihydrogen Monoxide:
http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/dhmo.htm
Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal
http://www.csicop.com/
Discover Magazine:
http://www.discover.com/
Quack Watch:
http://www.quackwatch.com/
Science News:
http://www.sciencenews.com/
Required Student Tasks/Assignments:
Multiple assessment strategies will be used to determine the
course grade of students. There are seven basic tasks that students
will concern themselves with over the course of the semester.
The assessment procedures are elaborated below. Along with the
title is an indication of the relative weight each has in the
determination of the final course grade. Following summaries of
the required tasks are brief statements denoting which how objectives
for this course are matched with the various assessments.
1. Daily Journals (10%)
Students will be required to critically evaluate and assess
the experiences of each class and field trip, and to record these
reflections in a daily journal. Reflections will be from two perspectives
-- that of student and that of teacher. (Objectives 2, 4, 8)
2. Weekly Article/Website Reviews (10%)
Students will be required learn more about and report on recent
science events and discoveries using computer technology to visit
such Web sites as www.discover.com and www.sciencenews.com.
In addition, students will be required to take virtual field
trips using Web resources to such sites as www.exploratorium.edu
The weekly article review should emphasize that students apply
the argumentation skills (i.e., identifying premises and conclusion)
learned during Foundations of Inquiry. Students will demonstrate
structured and logical analysis of scientific research and summarize
such work clearly and succinctly. In order to improve on those
vital analytical skills, they will receive feedback on their performance.
Reviews will be submitted using electronic mail. (Objectives 2,
8)
3. Field Trip Notebook (10%)
Students will be required to participate in a number of data
collecting field trips including such sites as planetarium, observatory,
greenhouse, water plant, river, nature center, and stone quarry.
Data collected on these field trips will be analyzed and interpreted
using graphical analysis and statistics. All work will be recorded
in the field trip notebook. (Objectives 2, 4)
4. Science Fair Project (20%)
Students will be required to design and carry out an authentic
science research experiment from the discipline of their choosing.
Experiments will include hypothesis formulation, experiment design,
data collection, data analysis, error analysis, and conclusion.
Results will be presented for peer assessment as science fair
projects. (Objectives 7, 8, 9)
5. Participation (10%)
Students will be expected to attend class regularly, to participate
fully in class discussion and in hands-on and minds-on group work,
and to complete and turn in homework. (Objectives 5, 6, 7, 8)
6. PBL Preparation/Presentation (10%)
Students will be required to prepare an age-appropriate problem-based
learning experience for an elementary school class that integrates
science, technology, and society. (Objectives 1, 3, 5, 6)
7. Lesson Plans (15%)
Students will prepare a series of three highly detailed lesson
plans that serve to integrate in a meaningful and useful way two
or more scientific disciplines. (Objectives 1, 3, 5, 6, 8)
8. Quizzes (15%)
Quizzes will be associated with each organizing topic, and
will be related to readings, in-course experiences, and expected
outcomes. (Objectives 5, 6, 8)
Grading Scale:
A > 94% 83% < B < 94% 72% < C < 83% 66% <
D < 72% F < 66%