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Summer Symposium, 2011

Summer Symposium, 2011.                                                     June 9, 2011 Good Afternoon,      Welcome to Where, Oh Where Has My Science Block Gone?  We will spend the next hour investigating how we can get science instruction back into our daily schedules.

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Summer Symposium, 2011

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  1. Summer Symposium, 2011                                                     June 9, 2011 Good Afternoon,      Welcome to Where, Oh Where Has My Science Block Gone?  We will spend the next hour investigating how we can get science instruction back into our daily schedules.      What can you tell me about corona [kuh-roh-nuh]?  Please put your answer on a sticky note and place near the smartboard.                                                    Sincerely,                                                    Mike, Linda, & Becky http://2011ess.sfinstructionalresources.wikispaces.net/

  2.       One of the most puzzling features of the Sun is what has been dubbed "the solar corona problem." There is a region around the Sun, extending more than one million kilometers from its surface, where the temperature can reach two million degrees. This region, called the solar corona, is where the solar wind originates. The corona has been found to emit X-rayradiation (the corona is a plasma; at temperatures greater than a million degrees a plasma will radiate a lot of X-rays). The corona can be seen only during solar eclipses, when the main radiation from the Sun's surface is blocked by the passage of the Moon or with special instruments.

  3. Research Initial impacts of NCLB on elementary science education       George Griffith and Lawrence Scharmann       Journal of Elementary Science Education, 2008, Vol. 20:3  Elementary School Science National Science Teachers Association, July 2002 Teaching Science Literacy Maria Grant and Diane Lapp Educational Leadership, March 2011, Vol. 68:6 Moving Elementary Science from Afterthought to Inquiry Rick Allen        Educational Leadership, August 2006, Vol. 48:8

  4. Recommendations on Teaching Science Best Practice, Zemelman, Daniels, and Hyde, 2005 Science and Literacy A List of Strategies in the Three-Part Framework (Lesson Planning) Teaching Reading in Social Studies, Science and Math, Laura Robb, 2003

  5. Sticky Note Summary • Interactive Read-Aloud using a Non-fiction story • Read 1 - 2 pages at a time • Students reflect on what they have heard and summarize on a sticky note • Pair Share • At the end of the story, students use their sticky notes to write a paragraph that summarizes the book. Science and Literacy

  6. Cognitively Guided Instruction •  Problem Solving (word problems vs. story problems) Science and Math Math Process Standards Series (NCTM) by Susan O'Connell - Math and the Moon - Stars and Moons

  7. Project Based Learning (The Whole Package) • What is Project Based Learning (PBL)? • Project Analyzation • Trash to Treasures • Earth and Energy • School Zoo

  8. Books • Websites • http://www.fossweb.com/ • http://www.abc.net.au/spark/ • http://www.ncsu.edu/imse/4/elementaryEd.htm • http://www.alline.org/euro/escience.html • http://www.bcps.org/offices/lis/curric/elem/escience.html • http://school.discoveryeducation.com/schrockguide/sci-tech/scigs.html • http://www.sowashco.k12.mn.us/virtualmedia/elementary/science.htm • http://www.suite101.com/content/10-science-teaching-tips-for-elementary-school-a65420 Resources

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