ABSTRACT

Offering a fresh take on inquiry, this book draws on current research and theory in science education, literacy, and educational psychology, as well as the history and philosophy of science, to make its case for transforming the way science is taught.

Re-thinking the Way We Teach Science addresses major themes in national reform documents and movements--how to place students at the center of what happens in the classroom; how to shift the focus from giving answers to building arguments; how to move beyond narrow disciplinary boundaries to integrated explorations of ideas and issues that connect directly with students; and most especially, the importance of engaging students in discussions of an interactive and explanatory character.  Deeply anchored in the classroom, highly interactive, and relevant across grade levels and subject matter, above all this is a book about choosing to place the authority of reason over that of right answers.

chapter 1|13 pages

On Wonder

chapter |3 pages

Interlude: A Note on City Schools

chapter 2|19 pages

On the Shift from Answers to Arguments

chapter 3|25 pages

On the Logic of the Classroom

chapter |3 pages

Interlude: The History of Greece

chapter 4|11 pages

Inquiry as Reconstruction

chapter |3 pages

Interlude: Peter Rabbit and Plato

chapter |6 pages

Interlude: Uncovering the Gods

chapter 7|14 pages

STEM—A Promethean Program

chapter |5 pages

Interlude: Taking Measure of Things

chapter 8|12 pages

On the Politics of Learning