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This edited book explores different international practices in
reforming science teacher education programs for STEM education.
Incorporating case studies in Asia, the Middle East, Africa,
Europe, North America and South America, the contributors emphasise
the large variety in STEM teacher preparation. Including
science-centric versions of STEM programs as well as more
integrated models of STEM, this contextual diversity will help
readers learn about the design, opportunities, and challenges of
STEM teacher preparation in a variety of circumstances, in order to
innovate and improve STEM education more broadly.
Inquiry pedagogy was promoted heavily by John Dewey in the early
1900s as he described how students should not only learn about
science, but also participate in problem-solving and scientific
practices as part of their education. Sixty years later, the
National Science Education Standards (NSES) were published
(National Research Council, 1996) echoing Dewey's recommendations
for educators to teach science less didactically and to include the
development of critical thinking in a variety of ways - including
scientific inquiry. The NSES (pg. 31) stated, "Inquiry into
authentic questions generated from student experiences is the
central strategy for teaching science." Despite emphasis placed
upon inquiry teaching practices in the ebb and flow of
conversations over the last century, science educators still
struggle to move current and future educators to a place where
inquiry pedagogy is a regular part of what happens as part of
science learning in the classroom. This is a multifaceted issue
facing us with factors inhibiting inquiry teaching practices
including the lack of prior experiences learning through inquiry,
the pressures of high-stakes standardized tests that seemingly do
not support inquiry learning, and other school culture issues that
exist. Most science majors who are inspired to become teachers of
children learning science have experienced very didactic or
traditional forms of learning throughout their educational careers.
These science majors, a relatively small group of U.S. students,
have experienced a type of success in learning about science that
is not necessarily paralleled by their peers who were not
successful in science classes. This dilemma poses a problem for
science educators as we work to include science "for all Americans"
making science accessible to all students -- not only the few who
later enter science careers. These same science majors, some of who
become preservice science teachers, are often resistant to new
types of teaching as they have felt personal success in learning
science traditionally through textbook reading and verification
labs and are hesitant to teach in any other way than how they were
taught. This book examines secondary science preservice teachers as
they reflect upon their teaching practices, their educational
philosophies, and their student teaching experiences as they
attempt to teach using inquiry pedagogy. Little research literature
exists that follows preservice teachers through their development
in a science education program as they are challenged in learning
how to teach using inquiry pedagogy. This book highlights the
successes and struggles as told by preservice teachers through
their writing and interviews. Additionally, as part of their
student teaching, the preservice teachers were asked to submit a
video showing evidence of inquiry pedagogy in their classrooms. The
lesson plans and video data were analyzed to determine whether or
not the preservice teachers were indeed attempting to teach science
content through inquiry. The lessons learned include the importance
of the influential teacher-mentor, as well as the need for science
educators to provide repeated, sustained, and guided inquiry
experiences for preservice science teachers. Inquiry Pedagogy and
the Preservice Science Teacher is an important book for those who
are studying and researching about inquiry pedagogy in science
education.
How do you change your life? Many books tell you how, but they fail
to show you how. FocusPocus will show you how. Written in a
conversational tone, FocusPocus is full of inspirational
activities, questions, and insights to help you create the life you
truly deserve. You can tell what you are creating in your life by
what is showing up. Is it what you want? This Spirit-inspired book
contains fun ways to easily help you change your thoughts,
feelings, words, and actions by inviting you into direct practice.
You will discover how your thoughts create, how to recognize when
you are creating the things you don't want, and how to consciously
create what you do want.
This volume discusses Alfred Binet's works on pedagogy based on his
"Orthopedie Mentale". Binet had empirically found that his idea of
a test of general intelligence could be replaced by a test on
"problem areas". These problem areas were then to be specifically
addressed and improved within a relatively short time. As a result,
students dramatically improved in their IQ test results. Binet died
before he could publish the results. Fortunately, the rector of the
school, Victor Vaney, published the results of Binet's experiments
in his school. This volume provides the first English translation
of Vaney's publication as well as an introduction to Binet's mostly
forgotten late work.
An evocative new voice in Canadian poetry, Lisa Martin-DeMoor
fearlessly channels the weathered West, the half-truths of memory,
and present day loss in her first collection. One Crow Sorrow is
smoothly varied, from sparsely drawn meditations on relationships,
to longer and bolder verse rich in image. Each one holds our
mortality up to the light, fragile against the earth's sturdiness.
Her command of language and unifying tone create a heightened
attention and a crisp view of all that makes us feel
vulnerable-grief, love, nature and solitude.
As economic, social and environmental connections among states have
grown stronger and denser in the last decades, new levels and types
of governance have emerged. The process of globalization, while not
entirely new, has created new challenges for policymakers
attempting to reap its benefits and manage its effects. This volume
pulls together work on global governance that examines these
challenges and looks at the patterns of governance that emerge. The
work is organized into six sections. The first introduces concepts
crucial to the analysis of global governance, including
representation, efficiency, and hierarchy. The next two sections
turn to specific patterns of governance in two realms, security and
economic affairs respectively. The fourth section examines legal
dimensions of governance. The fifth section concentrates on the
impact of global governance on domestic politics, while the sixth
looks at how concepts of norms and legitimacy structure our
understanding of governance. Overall, this collection reveals a
rich scholarly understanding of globalization, governance, and
institutions that builds on deep theoretical roots while shedding
light on major policy issues.
This charming book, told from two perspectives, reveals what
happens when an unexpected guest visits a classroom. Children will
delight in experiencing the action from different points of view.
Lisa Martin Suber has been a teacher for almost 20 years and a bug
lover all her life.
Sarah journeys between remembering who she was and realizing the
truth of what she had become. Trapped in an abusive reality, her
only escape is in her memories. Will she persevere or succumb to
the madness?
How do you change your life? Many books tell you how, but they fail
to show you how. FocusPocus will show you how. Written in a
conversational tone, FocusPocus is full of inspirational
activities, questions, and insights to help you create the life you
truly deserve. You can tell what you are creating in your life by
what is showing up. Is it what you want? This Spirit-inspired book
contains fun ways to easily help you change your thoughts,
feelings, words, and actions by inviting you into direct practice.
You will discover how your thoughts create, how to recognize when
you are creating the things you don't want, and how to consciously
create what you do want.
Spirit Connections is an uplifting collection of true stories about
people who have had a sign or a visit from a loved one who has
died.
Remarkable for its delicate use of language and for its
watertight descriptions of seafaring . . . The story is engrossing
and unpredictable with likeable heroes and charming accomplices . .
. There s even a bit of history lurking in the background. --The
New York Times Book ReviewCat brothers Anton and Cecil are as
different as port and starboard. Cecil, stocky and black with white
patches, thirsts for seafaring adventure. Slim, gray Anton prefers
listening to the sailors' shanties at the town saloon. One day when
Anton goes to port, he's impressed as a ratter on a ship bound for
the high seas. Cecil boards another ship in hopes of finding Anton.
What begins as a rescue mission turns into a pair of high-seas
adventures. Anton takes on a fierce rat, outwits hungry birds, and
forges a forbidden friendship, while Cecil meets dolphins and
whales and finds himself in a pirate raid. On an ocean as vast as
the one Anton and Cecil have discovered, will they ever see
home--or each other--again?Black-and-white drawings illustrate each
chapter."
Lisa Martin's new poetry collection seeks the kind of lyric truth
that lives in paradox, in the dwelling together of seeming
opposites such as life and death, love and loss, faith and doubt,
joy and sorrow. Here readers will find a range of moods, tones, and
subjects, as well as both traditional and contemporary forms-from
sonnets to prose poems. This is a collection imbued with the light
of an enduring, if troubled, faith. With its focus on spirit,
ethics, and how to live well, Believing is not the same as Being
Saved offers a tender meditation on the moments that make a life.
There's a way of speaking as if the difference matters, as if the
road home is finite-everything begins and ends somewhere, like your
hand in mine, or how last light fractures in the limbs of
pine-while beyond my window, a coyote follows a trail into the dusk
that only it can see. - from "Map for the road home"
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