Skip to main content

Home/ WMS Science Teachers/ Group items tagged pedagogy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

John Burk

Why Science is "Just So Darn Hard" - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education. - 0 views

  • The traditional lecture format is the not the best method for teaching science. Again to draw an analogy with physical education, lectures are of limited use when the subject being taught is an activity.
  • The competitive model for science education, and for education in general, is poor training for how work is actually accomplished. Corporations compete, athletes compete, politicians compete, but the vast majority of working people have to cooperate if they want to get anything done.
  • Competitive grading systems discourage recreational interest. This is true in school athletic programs and it is also true for science classes. Just as students who get picked last for sports teams conclude athletics is not for them, students who fail to make the cut in science classes, conclude that they lack the "science gene," and should not even try to understand the subject.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Pedagogies that use "inquiry-based" or "discovery" methods have their place in science instruction, but should not, as some educators have advocated, be the only methods used. 
  • Traditional classroom education does not select for some character traits that are critical for success in science. Patience and above all persistence are necessary personal traits for a successful career in science.
  • I tell them that when choosing research assistants I am not necessarily looking for the best student in the classroom, I am looking for a student with a strong work ethic,  one who can accept direction and feedback, and one who is excited about the work.
  •  
    interesting article that compares training of scientists to athletes and flaws with that model. 
John Burk

Experts vs Novices: what students struggle with most in STEM disciplines (pdf) - 0 views

  •  
    hese results seem to indicate a troubling disconnect between how students (novice learners in the discipline), learn and understand their course material and how faculty (expert learners in the discipline) traditionally approach and teach this material. Possible reasons for this disconnect become clearer when we look at what differentiates an expert from a novice learner.
John Burk

A lesson from physics: Even lucid lectures on abstractions don't work « Compu... - 0 views

  • “I point to the following unwelcome truth: much  as we might dislike the implications, research is showing that didactic exposition of abstract  ideas and lines of reasoning (however engaging and lucid we might try to make them) to passive  listeners yields pathetically thin results in learning and understanding – except in the very small percentage of students who are specially  gifted in the field.” Arnold Arons (1997)
John Burk

Drawing to Learn in Science - 0 views

  •  
    good article from science that makes argument that students should draw more to learn science. 
John Burk

You Khan't Ignore How Students Learn | Action-Reaction - 0 views

  •  
    gr8 summary of latest learning research
John Burk

On the Helpfulness of Numbers : Uncertain Principles - 0 views

  •  
    thoughtful post with useful comments on the how students struggle with symbolic manipulation and can do much better with problems that involve only numbers. Comments are interesting too. 
John Burk

Just in time teacihng - 0 views

  •  
    Just in time teaching is the idea of using short formative quizzes to help the teacher better understand student thinking. 
John Burk

Student-Generated Scientific Inquiry - 0 views

  •  
    recommended by brian frank
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page