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How Do You Know That? Guiding Early Elementary Students to Develop Evidence-Based Explanations about Animals

authors:
J. Hunt, C. Cavicchio, M. Schoenemann, A. D'Amato, M. Folsom
project:
published in:
Science and Children
published:
January 2007
keywords:
MSP Papers
MSP Key Features / Challenging Courses and Curricula
Teaching and Learning / Science, Pedagogy
( search for all keyword matches )
description:
"The purpose of many animal studies at early grades is to build observation skills, develop a knowledge base, and practice age-appropriate science skills like comparing, describing, and drawing. While these are important learning experiences, the National Science Education Standards also recommend that students engage in scientific inquiry (NRC 2000). Our SCALE team of educators, curriculum developers, district administrators, and scientists believe that it is possible and beneficial for even the youngest students to participate in a rigorous scientific inquiry that builds a conceptual understanding of animals and the nature of studying animals. To test this idea, the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Madison Metropolitan School District created an inquiry-based unit, or an immersion unit, on animals, implemented it in kindergarten classrooms, and observed the students' responses. Our unit focused on guiding students to formulate explanations about animals based on scientific evidence."

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posted to site:
03/07/2007
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