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Context

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Title: Context


1
Context Framework for Looking at the History
of Science Education
  • What phases has science education gone through
    in the past 200 years?
  • Where did we start?
  • How and why has the focus of science education
    changed?
  • What worked? What did not work? ( why)
  • Who came up with the Big Ideas?
  • What role did science education play in the
    History of the U.S.?
  • Which of our current ideas in science education
    are rooted in the past?

2
Early to Mid 1800s
  • Science versus Classical Studies
  • What are classical studies?
  • Who was educated?
  • What was the purpose of education?

3
Arguments for the Replacement of Classical
Studies with Science
  • The assault on classical education was launched
    by scientists, not educators per se.
  • Proponents of change argued that science should
    replace the study of classical languages in the
    curriculum.
  • Proposed that science concepts be derived from
    direct contact with the natural world.
  • Proposed that the lab be a place where skills in
    observation and inductive reasoning powers would
    be developed.
  • Successfully opened the door for the widespread
    inclusion of science in the school curriculum.

4
Influential People in this Movement
  • Edward L. Youmans ( 1821-1887)
  • H. Spencer (1820- 1903)
  • Thomas Huxley (1825 1895)

5
Edward Youmans
  • Science instruction is superior to classical
    studies because it requires a broader range of
    mental abilities.
  • Science instruction should be useful and based on
    systematic observations.
  • People need to understand the science in their
    lives.

6
Thomas Huxley
  • Science is essential to understand the modern
    world.
  • Science helps develop the mind to deal more
    intellectually with everyday life. (Habits of
    Mind)
  • The source of knowledge is objects.
  • Science labs are justified because they rely on
    everyday objects.

7
  • Huxley advocated a program of broad primary
    school instruction that is essentially what we
    have today reading, writing, arithmetic, art,
    science, and music. We take this for granted now,
    but it was an opportunity unobtainable in England
    during Huxleys youth.
  • The basic form of nearly every American college
    curriculum is exactly what Huxley advocated more
    than 100 years ago two years of more liberal
    basic studies followed by two years of what we
    now call upper-division work. This was a novelty
    in 19th century England, where Oxford and
    Cambridge focused on education in the classics.

8
Herbert Spencer
  • He emphasized the need for more independent
    thinkers in school. (This parallels the rise in
    democracy in our nation.)
  • He believed in presenting materials at the level
    the child could understand. (What is the
    modern-day term for this?)
  • Discovering relationships is useful because it
    makes the learner forever independent of the
    authority of the teacher.

9
Science began to be thought of as a part of the
curriculum.
By the 1850s
10
Contrast Classical Education with modern
Science Education
11
Assignment
  • Read for next Tuesday -
  • DeBoer Chapters 2 3
  • Remember to keep working on your BIG IDEAS
    diagram/table.
  • Remember to check web page for possible handouts.
    You may want to print the powerpoint outline to
    make notes on during class next week.
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