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Leadership and Assistance for Science Education Reform

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Co-Director Washington State LASER. Vice President, Pacific Science Center, Seattle, WA ... The Seattle Times http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Leadership and Assistance for Science Education Reform


1
Leadership and Assistance for Science Education
Reform
  • Program Presenter
  • Dennis Schatz
  • Co-Director Washington State LASER
  • Vice President, Pacific Science Center, Seattle,
    WA
  • www.WaStateLASER.org schatz_at_pacsci.org
  • Program Mission
  • To implement in all 296 Washington State school
    districts an inquiry-based science education
    program that has the following characteristics
  • Exemplary inquiry-centered curriculum
  • Effective student assessment
  • Regular professional development for staff
  • Appropriate materials support
  • Broad community and administrative support
  • Effective strategies to use science as a
    vehicle to support
  • reading, writing and mathematics learning

2
Leadership and Assistance for Science Education
Reform
  • Program Outcomes
  • Over 150 school districts have attended a LASER
    Strategic Planning Institute and are at some
    stage of implementing an inquiry-based science
    program. These districts serve approximately 75
    of the students in the state (see map of state on
    slide 3).
  • Nine LASER Regional Alliances provide
    professional development and other services to
    these school districts.
  • Program Effectiveness
  • Student success is dramatic when schools have a
    strategic plan, use effective science materials,
    have well trained teachers that use the material
    with fidelity, and have sufficient time allocated
    in the school day to cover the material.
  • The Seattle Times http//seattletimes.nwsource.com
    /html/localnews/2003266789_science20e.html)
    featured the success of two Washington State
    school districts on the 2006 Washington State
    science assessment (WASL).    Both districts
    participated in a Washington State LASER
    Strategic Planning Institute, have adopted
    inquiry-based instructional material and provided
    extensive professional development for their
    teachers. 
  • The West Valley school district near Yakima, WA,
    showed significant increase in student WASL
    scores for students who experienced more
    inquiry-based science modules (see slide 4 where
    horizontal line is the state average for each
    year).

3
(No Transcript)
4
Science WASL WVSD Grade 5 students meeting
standardStudents receiving LASER Science
instruction
State Average
5
Leadership and Assistance for Science Education
Reform
  • Keys to the Programs Success
  • LASER has a shared vision and distributed
    leadership, with strong public/private
    partnerships
  • LASER based on model that people can easily
    understand and support
  • LASER leaders able to build consensus and empower
    others
  • LASER aligned with state standards and
    assessments, plus aligned with the goals of the
    Governor and the State Superintendent of Public
    Instruction
  • LASER attends to the six key LASER elements
    quality instructional material, ongoing
    professional development, effective student and
    program assessment, cost effective material
    support, community and administrative support,
    and science as a vehicle to teach other subjects
  • LASER uses non-profit and business partnership to
    build strong program leadership
  • LASER develops strong grassroots, business and
    community lobbying effort with decision makers
  • LASER leverages dollars from multiple sources
  • LASER provides resources to meet the needs of
    school districts based on the local and regional
    context

6
Leadership and Assistance for Science Education
Reform
  • Program Challenges
  • Science is the 4th R, with some principals even
    telling teachers not to teach science
  • Administrators and the public lack understanding
    of what a quality science education program looks
    like
  • Lack of resources compared to other subject areas
    for instructional material purchase and
    professional development for teachers
  • Lack of science content knowledge by teachers and
    administrators
  • What Would We Do Differently
  • Understand early on that program success goes
    beyond building a quality science education
    program. Success requires wearing three
    different kinds of hats 1)Science Education
    Expert, 2)Collaboration Building Expert, 3)Public
    Affairs Expert
  • Initiate at the beginning a statewide advocacy
    development plan to effectively reach parents,
    school administrators, school board members and
    community decision makers
  • Remember that during their lifetime students
    spend 3 of their awake hours in K-12 education.
    We need to include ways to make science pervasive
    in out-of-school time so that students will
    choose to pursue an interest in science during
    their discretionary time for the rest of their
    life
  • Further information at www.WaStateLASER.org or
    schatz_at_pacsci.org
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