Title: Teaching Science Through Inquiry
1Teaching Science Through Inquiry
- Qinhuangdao International Conference on Education
Sari Fine, sfine_at_haugan.aspirail.org Victoria
Jackson, vajackson_at_cps.k12.il.us Cameron Slife,
camsli_at_niles-hs.k12.il.us Terri Sowa,
sowat_at_eths.k12.il.us
2Overview
- What is inquiry, how did it originate, and why is
it important? - How does inquiry-based instruction compare to
traditional instruction? - How can inquiry-based activities be integrated
into science teaching? - How is inquiry-based learning assessed?
- What does inquiry-based learning look like in the
classroom?
3Inquiry Defined
- According to Indiana University, inquiry is a
dynamic approach to learning that involves - exploring the world,
- asking questions,
- making discoveries, and
- rigorously testing those discoveries in the
search for new understanding.
4Inquiry Defined
- The Buck Institute for Education (BIE) states
that Project Based Learning is a systematic
teaching method that engages students in learning
knowledge and skills through an extended inquiry
process structured around complex, authentic
questions and carefully designed products and
tasks. - Projects under this definition recognize
students drive to learn, engages students in
central concepts and principles, leads students
to in-depth exploration of authentic and
important topics, uses performance-based
assessments and encourages collaboration.
5Origins of Inquiry
- Unfortunately, our traditional educational system
has worked in a way that discourages the natural
process of inquiry. Students become less prone to
ask questions as they move through the grade
levels. In traditional schools, students learn
not to ask too many questions, instead to listen
and repeat the expected answers.
6Origins of Inquiry
- The Buck Institute of Education states that over
the last 25 years there have been major
developments in learning theories. - Neuroscience and psychology research has extended
the behavioral and cognitive models of learning.
Learning is partly a social activity, taking
place within the context of culture, community
and past experiences. - The need for education to adapt to the changing
world has led to an increase in popularity in
recent years. Many teachers know that the
industrial culture has shaped our schools and we
are preparing to meet the needs of our current
culture. Children need not only knowledge, but
useful skills to meet the demands of
high-performance workplaces. Employees must be
able to plan, collaborate, communicate and learn
civic responsibilities.
7Importance of Inquiry
- Education is not preparing students for a world
that is static and fixed. Rather, education must
prepare learners to cope with changes that will
increase in complexity throughout their lives and
many of which cannot be foreseen at this time. - Most learners will probably deal with several job
changes, move to several different locations, be
involved in complex social changes, and other
such issues. Education cannot give learners all
the information that they need to know, but
rather it must provide the tools for continuing
to learn. http//www.thirteen.org/edonlin
e/concept2class/inquiry
8Importance of Inquiry
- Within a conceptual framework, inquiry learning
and active learner involvement can lead to
important outcomes in the classroom. - Students who actively make observations, collect,
analyze, and synthesize information, and draw
conclusions are developing useful problem-solving
skills. - These skills can be applied to future "need to
know" situations that students will encounter
both at school and at work. - http//www.thirteen.org/edonline/concept2class
/inquiry
9What does inquiry look like in the classroom?
- Inquiry and projects must fit into your schools
framework. This takes into account length of
classtime, time of year, or any other factors
that affect your day-to-day routine.
10Planning a Project of Inquiry Learning (Buck
Institute)
- Begin with the end in mind. What do you want
your students to know and produce at the end of
the project or unit? - Craft a driving question. The essential question
should be provocative and open-ended. They
should be to the point to as to guide students
the heart of the topic. They should be
challenging and relate to real-world issues.
They should also follow curricular standards.
Creating a solid question may take some drafting. - Next is planning the assessment. You want to
know how you will assess what your students are
learning as they go, as well as assessing their
final products. Assessments should align with
standards and should focus on student achievement
of the goals you are trying to meet. Rubrics are
helpful to set up students for success.
11Planning a Project of Inquiry Learning (Buck
Institute)
- Next is planning the assessment. You want to
know how you will assess what your students are
learning as they go, as well as assessing their
final products. Assessments should align with
standards and should focus on student achievement
of the goals you are trying to meet. Rubrics are
helpful to set up students for success. - The next step is mapping your project. How will
you launch the project? What resources will you
use and what will your students use to guide
their exploration? What is the timeline you will
follow and what goals will you set along the way? - The next step is to manage the process. Share
the goals with the students (this can be in the
form of rubrics). Use problem-solving tools,
daily logs for students to track their progress
and solve problems they may come across.
Finally, guide students with short meetings to
plan, investigate and reassess goals.
12Traditional Instruction
- Focuses on mastery of content, with less emphasis
on the development of skills and the nurturing of
inquiring attitudes - Is teacher centered teacher gives information
about "what is known" - Student is receiver of information, teacher is
dispenser. - Assessment is focused on "one right answer."
- Concerned with preparation for the next grade
level and in-school success, not with helping a
student learn to learn through life - Tends to be a closed system
- Resources limited to what is in class or school
building - Focuses on learning technology rather than using
technology to enhance learning
13Inquiry-Based Instruction
- More student centered, with the teacher as a
facilitator of learning - Emphasis on "how we come to know" and less on
"what we know" - Assessment is focused on determining the progress
of skills development in addition to content
understanding - Concerned with in-school success equally with
preparation for life-long learning - Open systems where students are encouraged to
search and make use of resources beyond the
classroom and the school - Uses technology to connect students appropriately
with local and world communities which are rich
sources - Can be done in lectures that provoke students to
think and question as well as labs and group
projects - Focuses on the how instead of the what
14Traditional vs. Inquiry
15Sequence and Development of Scientific Reasoning
Skills
16STC Learning Cycle
- The Learning Cycle is based on research findings
about childrens learning. These findings
indicate that knowledge is actively constructed
by each learner and that children learn science
best in a hands-on experimental environment where
they can make their own discoveries. The steps
of the learning cycle are as follows - Focus
- Explore
- Reflect
- Apply
17FOCUS
- Explore and clarify the ideas that children
already have about the topic.
18EXPLORE
- Enable children to engage in hands-on
explorations of the objects, organisms, and
scientific phenomena to be investigated.
19REFLECT
- Encourage children to discuss their observations
and to reconcile their ideas.
20APPLY
- Help children discuss and apply their new ideas
in new situations.
21Science and Technology for Children (STC)
- provides all students with stimulating
experiences in the life, earth and physical
sciences and technology while simultaneously
developing their critical-thinking and
problem-solving skills - provides children with the opportunity to learn
age-appropriate concepts and skills and to
acquire scientific attitudes and habits of mind
22- provides teachers with a variety of strategies
with which to assess student learning - offers teachers opportunities to link the
teaching of science with the development of
skills in mathematics, language arts, and social
studies - encourages the use of cooperative learning to
help students develop the valuable skill of
working together
23Proof of Effectiveness
- Educational studies show that student learning
increases after the use of an inquiry-based
science curriculum such as STC. Remarkably, the
studies also indicate that this benefit extends
to reading, writing and math. - El Centro, California science, reading, writing
- Michigan science
- Delaware science
24Integrating Inquiry-Based Activities
- What are the essential elements of an
inquiry-based activity? - How does an inquiry investigation compare and
contrast to the typical textbook lab? - How do I get my students started in an inquiry
activity if they have no prior experience in
inquiry? - (Llewellyn, 2005, p. 65)
25Integrating Inquiry-Based Activities
- Essential Elements of an Inquiry Activity
- Posing the question
- Planning the procedure
- Formulating the results
- (Llewellyn, 2005, p. 66)
26Integrating Inquiry-Based Activities
- Categories of Science Learning Experiences
- Demonstrations
- Laboratory Experiences and Activities
- Teacher-Initiated Inquiries
- Student-Initiated Inquiries
- (Llewellyn, 2005, pp. 66 - 71)
27Integrating Inquiry-Based Activities
(Llewellyn, 2005, p. 66)
28Integrating Inquiry-Based Activities
(Llewellyn, 2005, p. 66)
29Assessing Inquiry
- Assessment includes a multiple focus
- determining the criteria for learning and quality
of student work, - monitoring student progress, and
- adjusting and improving instruction.
- (Llewellyn, 2005, p. 112)
30Assessing Inquiry
- Traditional Objective Tests
- Consist of multiple-choice, true/false, matching,
and fill-in-the-blank question format - Assess content knowledge
- Are easy to administer and score
- Work well for assessing large numbers of students
in a short amount of time - Are generally inappropriate for assessing inquiry
and science process skills
31Assessing Inquiry
- The goal of inquiry-based assessment is to
balance objective testing with authentic
performance tasks that mirror or apply the work
completed during the investigation. - (Llewellyn, 2005, p. 112)
32Assessing Inquiry
- An appropriate inquiry-based assessment will
test not only content knowledge but also science
process skills, scientific reasoning skills, and
metacognitive skills. - (Llewellyn, 2005, p. 112)
33Assessing Inquiry
- inquiry is difficult to assess in a one-time
test. A teachers position in the classroom
allows for personal judgments of ones abilities
over extended investigation that cannot be
matched by an feasible external testing
procedure. -
- (National Research Council, 2001, p. 17)
34Assessing Inquiry
- Assessment should
- be ongoing
- rely on multiple strategies and sources for
collecting information - bear on the quality of student work
- used to help both the students and the teacher to
think about how the quality of work might be
improved - (National Research Council, 2001, p. 30)
35Types of Assessments for the Inquiry-Based
Classroom
- Authentic assessment is often used to describe
measurements to assess inquiry. - Authentic assessments
- are embedded tasks similar in form to tasks in
which students will engage outside the classroom
or are similar to the activities of scientists - are designed to measure what students know as
well as what they can do - provide opportunities for students to demonstrate
creativity problem solving, and decision making - (Llewellyn, 2005, p. 115)
36Types of Assessments for the Inquiry-Based
Classroom
- Before the Inquiry
- Concept maps
- During the Inquiry
- Monitoring charts
- Rubrics
- After the Inquiry
- Self-evaluations
- Performance tasks
- Concept maps
- Structured interviews
- Capstone projects
- Application questions
37Inquiry That Hits Home
38Inquiry That Hits Home
- Inquiry is best when students can relate it to
their lives - Exploring their own community makes lasting
connections between content and real science
situations
Duwayne testing pond water for dissolved oxygen
39Inquiry That Hits Home
- Students are learning about ecology by studying
in our Outdoor Nature Classroom in Evanston,
Illinois, USA
Students are collecting data on soil temperatures
to order to create planting proposals
40Inquiry That Hits Home
41Inquiry That Hits Home
- Testing water sources in the area provided a
means to teach about water quality and healthy
living conditions for aquatic life
- Local Water Sources
- Lake Michigan
- Chicago River
- Canal
- Pond
- Personal fish tanks
42Inquiry That Hits Home
Obtaining water sample
Obtaining water sample
Testing for carbon dioxide
Calcium test
testing for nitrates
43Inquiry That Hits Home
- Field Trip to city zoo provides a rich source of
environmental education - Zoos assist in teaching about
- Habitats
- Animal adaptations
- Classification
- Energy transfer (food webs)
- Environmental concerns
- Scientific professions
44Inquiry That Hits Home
- Students must read posted information and ask zoo
keepers questions about the diet and natural
habitat for - various animals
45Inquiry That Hits Home
- Information recorded from the zoo will be used to
create food webs back in the classroom
- In an urban environment, the zoo is a way to
travel around the world in just one day.
46Inquiry That Hits Home
Students are using information from zoo to
construct regional webs
47Inquiry That its Home
These are the final projects from our zoo field
trips. Students collaborated and shared
information to make regional food webs of Africa,
South America, and Asia.
48Inquiry That Hits Home
- Students must first
- be engaged in the
- content to learn
- Synthesizing the
- information on their
- own is more
- powerful than a lecture
- This style of learning provides the opportunity
for continued research
Interview