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Through analyses of disciplinary knowledge, school curricula, and classroom learning, the book uncovers flaws in the unifying dimensions of the science standards. It proposes respect for disciplinary diversity and attention to questions of value in choosing what science to teach.
List of contents
Contents
Foreword by John L. Rudolph
Introduction: Halting the Quest
Part I: The Nature of the Problem
Chapter 1: Unity v. Diversity
Chapter 2: The Scientific Method from Cradle to Grave
Chapter 3: Old Wine in New Bottles
Chapter 4: The "Alphabets" from NSF
Chapter 5: Abstract Liabilities
Chapter 6: Cataclysms Outside the Classroom
Chapter 7: The Downward Spiral
Part II: Diversity's Starting Points
Chapter 8: The Second Style
Chapter 9: Geological Reasoning
Chapter 10: Metaphor and Analogy
Part III: Prospective Solutions
Chapter 11: The Twin Pillars of Thinking and Doing
Chapter 12: The Promising Idea of Core Progressions
Chapter 13:The Elbow and Ankle Tour of the Zoo
Chapter 14: Cracks in Unity's Armor
Chapter 15: The Promise of Place
Conclusion: A New Coherence
About the author
Charles R. Ault, Jr. (“Kip”), professor emeritus, Lewis & Clark Graduate School of Education and Counseling, coordinated the school’s Master of Arts in Teaching program for science teachers for more than two decades. Kip began his career teaching primary grades and middle school science in Connecticut and Colorado. Author of Do Elephants Have Knees? and Challenging Science Standards, his writing reflects an interest in paleontology and the value of subject diversity in the reform of school science.
Summary
Through analyses of disciplinary knowledge, school curricula, and classroom learning, the book uncovers flaws in the unifying dimensions of the science standards. It proposes respect for disciplinary diversity and attention to questions of value in choosing what science to teach.