Title: WISTR: WESTCONNs INSTITUTE FOR SCIENCE TEACHER RESEARCH
1WISTR WESTCONNs INSTITUTE FOR SCIENCE TEACHER
RESEARCH
- Department of Education and Educational
Psychology - INQUIRY IN
- SCIENCE EDUCATION
- Dr. Marcy Delcourt
- Dr. Aram Aslanian
- Dr. Edward Duncanson
2INQUIRY IN SCIENCE EDUCATION
- What is inquiry?
- Types of questions
- How to improve questioning
- Science Fairs and how they started
- Science lab rubric
- Science activities
3What is inquiry?
- To be human is to inquire. Inquiry is the engine
for independent, curiosity- and interest-driven,
life-long learning. It is the ability to link
experiences in order for learning to occur.
However, inquiry is a process which of itself
demands a very large succession of skills to
proceed in growth from asking and answering
questions of daily life to problem solving, to
doing projects and investigations requiring
substantial time commitments, to scholarly
research in a specific domain. - Shore, B. M., Aulls, M. W., Delcourt, M. A. B.
(Eds.). (2007). Inquiry in education Overcoming
Barriers to Successful Implementation. Mahwah,
NJ Erlbaum.
4Types of questions
- Observations- asked as questions
- Philosophical questions
- Requests from simple facts
- Complex thinking
- Investigable questions
5Types of questions
- Observations questions that can be rephrased
from observations, turning comments into
questions - Student Look at that fish that has too much
mercury. - Teacher Can you describe how the fish behaves?
6Types of questions
- Philosophical questions these have no correct
answers, can be debated, allow students and
teachers to gather evidence for discussions - Examples
- What will be future applications of genetics
research? - How can the CDC control the spread of
communicable diseases?
7Types of questions
- Requests for simple facts these are knowledge
and comprehension questions that should be
answered directly - Examples
- What are toxins?
- What is a communicable disease?
8Types of questions
- Requests requiring complex thinking these
require higher order thinking skills, applying
earlier knowledge, analyzing information, putting
new ideas together, assessing based on criteria - Examples
- Why does the Earth have only 1 moon?
- Why are some lobsters blue?
9Types of questions
- Investigable questions these have identifiable
variables or constructs a research question is
feasible, clear, significant, and ethical - Example
- Is there a significant difference in the growth
of fish between using food A or food B? (Grade 5
student, Norwalk)
10Levels of thinking
- Blooms taxonomy knowledge, comprehension,
application, analysis, synthesis, evaluation - Cognitive levels of questions data recall, data
processing, data generation - Types of knowledge declarative, procedural,
conditional
11Cognitive levels of questions
- Data recall questions that ask students to
respond with a descriptive statement - Recall, recite, enumerate, list
12Cognitive levels of questions
- Data processing questions that ask students to
use data to show relationships or cause and
effect - Synthesize, classify, analyze, compare,
contrast, evaluate data
13Cognitive levels of questions
- Data generation questions that direct students
to respond by using divergent thinking - Predict, theorize, apply a principle to a new
situation
14Types of knowledge
- Declarative- basic facts answers questions
beginning with what - Procedural- refers to processes answers
questions beginning with how - Conditional- refers to circumstances answers
questions beginning with under what conditions
15How to improve questioning
- Write down higher order thinking skills (HOTS)
questions in advance of a lesson - Ask only HOTS questions
- Teach students to write and identify types of
questions - Model asking HOTS questions in every lesson
16How to improve questioning
- Make all students responsible for answering HOTS
questions - Use prepared materials that have higher order
questions or verbs already on them in order to
serve as prompts - Do the activity first in order to elicit
curiosity and inquiry
17Inquiry Models
- The Concept Attainment Model
- The Concept Development Model
- The Synectics Model
- The Suchman Inquiry Model
- The Classroom Discussion Model
- Gunter, M. A., Estes, T. H., Schwab, J. H.
(1990). Instruction A models approach. Boston
Allyn and Bacon.
18Science fairs and how they started
- 1829- Science and Technology Exposition sponsored
by the American Institute of Science and
Technology (AIST) held in NY showed Morses
telegraph and Bells telephone evolved into the
International Science and Engineering Fair that
is still held today
19Science Fairs
- 1929- First Science Fair sponsored by American
Institute of Science and Technology (AIST) and
the Museum of Natural History - 1942- Westinghouse Science Talent Search (STS)
- 1998- Westinghouse STS becomes Intel Science
Talent Search (STS) over 1,250,000 in awards
and scholarships
20- Mary Masterman of Westmoore High School, Oklahoma
City, OK wins first place. - The Intel Science Talent Search (Intel STS)
recently named its top ten winners at the annual
Intel STS 2007 awards. Forty finalists were
selected to travel to Washington, D.C. to
participate in the rigorous judging process, meet
with national leaders, interact with leading
scientists and display their research at the
National Academy of Sciences. For the first time
in the history of the program there were an equal
number of female and male finalists who represent
38 schools from 20 different states. - First Place Winner
- Mary Masterman, a 17-year-old Westmoore High
School senior from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, was
awarded a 100,000 scholarship for describing the
spectrograph system she built. Mary machined her
own parts, and aligned her own optics. Using
lenses from a camera and a microscope as well as
a laser for her light source, Mary was able to
separate the individual photons scattered by the
tested molecules, similar to the effects a prism
has on light, and record their wavelengths. - She found she could attain fairly accurate
wavelength measurements compared to published
readings for household solvents and other objects
despite using an inexpensive laser. The cost for
building her spectrograph was only 300 quite an
accomplishment compared to the 20,000 - 100,000
cost for commercial units. - "Even if you think that what you want to do is
impossible, go ahead and go for it because you
never know what you can accomplish." - Mary Masterman
- First Place Winner
- 2007 Intel Science Talent Search
21National Science Teachers Association (NSTA)
- Science Fairs should be voluntary
- The emphasis should be on the learning experience
- Science fairs should supplement the educational
experience not BE the educational experience
22National Science Teachers Association (NSTA)
- The emphasis should be on science process
- It must be the work of the student
- Mentors must have clear guidelines
23Formats for Science Fair projects
- Research report
- Poster
- 3-D display
- Model
- Research presentation
24Types of Science Fair projects
- Observation of the environment
- Demonstration of a basic scientific principle
- Collecting and analyzing data
- Controlled experiment
25Presentation options
- Judged presentations
- Expo- can combine student work with competitions
and commercial exhibits - Share fair- students swap ideas as they display
their work - Class demonstration- student explain their
projects to classmates
26Example science lab rubric
- Categories- purpose, procedures, data and
observations, results, conclusions, written
communication - Ratings- exceeds expectations, meets
expectations, approximates expectations, not
ready yet (For a copy of this
rubric, contact Dr. Kenneth Martinelli,
Instructional Specialist, K-12 Science and
Health, KenM_at_norwalkpublicschools.net.)
27Science Activities
- Life As We Know It
- People tend to be on best behavior when theyre
being watched. But what if the only eyes staring
at them are on paper? In a University of
Newcastle (England) lounge where paying for
coffee was optional, researchers placed a picture
of either flowers or a pair of eyes next to the
suggested price list. Visitors donated almost
three times more money when the eyes were posted.
Apparently, even a 2-D witness was enough to
deter some potential coffee-kitty cheapskates.
28Life As We Know It
- What is the dependent variable?
- What is the independent variable? What are the
categories or levels? - What variable needs to be controlled? This means
that a variable needs to be constant (the same)
for each level of the Independent Variable. - What is the research question and the hypothesis?