ABSTRACT

Science education has undergone far-reaching changes in the last fifty years. The articles collected together in this reader examine how we have reached our present consensus and what theories we now use to explain how children learn science. The central sections of the reader examine how all this can be translated into effective and stimulating teaching, how learning can be most accurately and fairly assessed and how the impact of gender, ethnicity and other factors on children's performance can be addressed in methods of teaching which make science accessible to all. The articles in the final section of the book are a reminder that the debate is not finished yet and raise some challenging questions about what science education is and what it is for.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part |1 pages

Part I The science curriculum

part |1 pages

Part II A picture of reality

part |1 pages

Part III The art of teaching in the science curriculum

chapter 8|3 pages

Chemical compositions

chapter 9|6 pages

A variety of methods

chapter 10|17 pages

Developing pupils’ skills

chapter 11|3 pages

Something to mop up with

part |1 pages

Part IV Assessment

part |1 pages

Part V Making science accessible to all