Title: Learning and Teaching Aspects of Inquiry-based Chemistry Experiment
1Learning and Teaching Aspects of Inquiry-based
Chemistry Experiment
2What is chemistry?
3How to help students learn chemistry?
4Why chemistry is difficult to learn?
- Matter can be represented on the macroscopic,
particulate, and symbolic levels. - It is important to provide opportunity for
students to link up their understanding through
hands-on activities, processing of information
and thinking.
5Practical work an important component in
science learning
- Cognitive domain
- Improve pupils understanding of science
- Promote their conceptual development
- Illustrate, verify or affirm theory work.
6Practical work an important component in
science learning
- Skills domain
- Develop manipulative skills
- Promote higher-level, transferable skills(such
as observation, measurement, prediction and
inference) - Develop communication skills
7Practical work an important component in
science learning
- Affective domain
- Practical work is motivating and exciting
- Generate interest and enthusiasm
- Help learners to remember things
8Two types of practical work
- Verification
- Inquiry-based / Investigation
- Inquiry involves raising questions, posing
explanations, testing them for validity, and
presenting the evidence to others. (Yager, 2001)
9What is the present situation?
- Cookbook dominated ? Ownership?
- Do students have opportunity to decide on / think
about data collection strategies to be used in an
experiment? - Hands-on ? Minds-on?
10Science as Inquiry the NSESs
- Design and conduct a scientific investigation
- Use appropriate tools and techniques to gather,
analyze and interpret data - Apply critical thinking skills to establish
relationships between evidence and explanations
11The NSESs claim that students who are involved
with inquiry are the ones who
- better understand basic science concepts
- develop an appreciation of "how we know" the
science that we think we know - understand the real nature of science
- develop the needed skills to become independent
inquirers - can use the skills, abilities, and attitudes
associated with science and scientists
12ASEs Recommendation
- Teaching and learning in science should provide
opportunities for learners to - enquire, predict and hypothesize
- explore, observe, investigate and discover
- solve problems
- discriminate, judge and evaluate
13Excerpts from UK Scheme of Work for KS3 Unit 9M
Investigating scientific questions
http//www.standards.dfee.gov.uk/pdf/secondarysche
mes/sci9m.pdf
14Pan-Canadian Protocol for Collaboration on School
Curriculum
- Skills
- It is expected that students will...
- Initiating and planning
- Performing and recording
- Analysing and interpreting
- Communication and teamwork
15Science as Inquiry Science education in Hong
Kong
16What is an inquiry-based chemistry experiment?
- addressing problems
- making hypotheses
- designing ALL or PART of the experimental
procedures - decide what and how data to record, to analyse
and to interpret - drawing conclusions
- making evaluation
17What do students acquire in S1-3?
- The ability to
- observe closely and carefully
- classify
- measure accurately
- handle equipment and apparatus properly and
safely - infer from observations and experimental data
- predict
- propose hypotheses
- interpret data
- control variables
18The new chemistry curriculum Skills and Thinking
Processes
- performing experiments to expect
- more instructions to help students develop
practical skills - designing and performing experiments to
expect - less instructions but more space to students to
carry out inquiry-based learning
19The new chemistry curriculum Skills and Thinking
Processes
20The new chemistry curriculum Skills and Thinking
Processes
21The new chemistry curriculum Skills and Thinking
Processes
22The new chemistry curriculum Skills and Thinking
Processes
23The new chemistry curriculum Skills and Thinking
Processes
24Prepare for implementation
- Analyse current situation and reflect critically
- Strength Weakness Opportunity Threat (SWOT)
- review current practice
- understand culture
- Share experience
- Develop vision and visualize potential benefits
25Resources for implementation
- Resources on inquiry-based chemistry experiments
- acquire
- modify
- develop
- Equipment and apparatus
- Textbooks
- Reference books
- MSDS
26Prepare people for implementation
- Team building
- panel chairman
- teachers
- laboratory technician
- Work and teach collaboratively to bring the best
skills to make learning meaningful - Find creative ways of looking at using existing
resources and making better use of them - Develop mission and implementation plan together
27Implementing tip 1
- Prepare students to
- review their concepts and understanding about
scientific investigation or inquiry - develop their and practical skills
- learn how to develop a plan and write a report
- Allow students to use inquiry for learning
28Implementing tip 2
- Remind students to consider safety issues
- Provide adequate safety instruction and feedbacks
to students plans - Provide personal protection equipment (PPE) and
access to fume cupboard etc. for students and
remind them to use
29Prepare for implementation
- Be ready for
- noise (unavoidable for active learning, healthy
phenomenon) - encountering a little messy at start
- students are not ready to write their own
reports, start with small
30Evaluation
- Work with students, laboratory technicians and
fellow teachers to review the implementation - Positive and negative comments are equally useful
- Be prepare to make changes and seek ways to
improve
31How many?
- What is the number of inquiry-based chemistry
experiments needed?
32Reference Article
- Title A Model for Extending Hands-On Science to
Be Inquiry Based. - Author Huber, Richard A. Moore, Christopher J.
- Source School Science Mathematics, Jan 2001,
Vol. 101 Issue 1, p32 - Abstract Presents a model describing one
approach for extending hands-on activities into
inquiry-based science lessons. Disadvantages of
student's engagement in worksheet and
textbook-based hands-on activities Facilitation
of students in planning investigation
Implication for the professional development of
science teachers.
33Reference Book
- Title Inquiry-based experiments in chemistry
- Author Valerie Ludwig Lechtanski
- Publisher Washington, D.C. American Chemical
Society Oxford Oxford University Press, 2000.
34Thank You