Saving Science Class Saving Science Class

Saving Science Class

Why We Need Hands-on Science to Engage Kids, Inspire Curiosity, and Improve Education

    • $24.99
    • $24.99

Publisher Description

Much of what our students are learning about science in school bears little resemblance to real science. That is the main theme of this critique of science education by a veteran scientist and former school teacher. The author charges that today's teaching mandate has been taken over by educational specialists, people with little or no understanding of science. They clutter curricula with extraneous material, like engineering and technology, and focus so much attention theorizing over hypotheses and models and categorizing everything, that no time remains for doing science. There is little to entice youngsters to the science classroom today. McGowan emphasizes that the problem is not the teachers but the materials they are obliged to teach. He is especially critical of the widely influential "Next Generation Science Standards" (NGSS). This is based upon "A Framework for K-12 Science Education," which has been inordinately influenced by educational specialists. This is evident from the esoteric language, the almost exclusive citation of educational publications, and by glaring errors in science. The author urges a rethinking of science education to bring the focus back to conducting real hands-on science in the classroom. This approach was pioneered by the Nuffield Science Teaching Project in the UK, where working scientists acted as resource personnel for teachers designing curricula. Given the catastrophic problems facing planet Earth, scientific literacy has never been more important.

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2017
February 14
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
302
Pages
PUBLISHER
Prometheus
SELLER
The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
SIZE
4.3
MB

More Books Like This

More Random Walks in Science More Random Walks in Science
2017
In Defense of Science In Defense of Science
2010
Galileo's Gout Galileo's Gout
2020
NOBEL PRIZES 2019, THE NOBEL PRIZES 2019, THE
2022
One Legacy of Paul F. Brandwein One Legacy of Paul F. Brandwein
2010
This is Improbable Too This is Improbable Too
2014

More Books by Christopher McGowan