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This collection was written by educators who are engaging in multi-
and interdisciplinary education and are led by curiosities
encompassing the collaborative nature of cognitive and kinesthetic
engagement and awareness. The chapters are designed as sources for
inspiration, replication, and adaptation. They are a place to start
or continue. Each chapter, in varying modalities, addresses
interdisciplinary course development and implementation in
institutions of higher education. The common themes that emerge in
the collection include navigating administrative systems and
solving the challenges encountered when crossing departments or
colleges, whether it be regarding listing of courses or the
intricacies of course load on each professor. Many chapters also
provide detailed information on the nuts and bolts of the specific
course or courses taught, including syllabi, lesson examples, and
both formal and informal assessments implemented. Multiple case
studies are included in this collection, with many chapters
providing specific examples of students' work. Contributors
candidly offer discussions of failures and successes of their
interdisciplinary collaborations, be it in course design, lesson
planning or complications brought in by unforeseen pandemics. Most
chapters end with a section entitled 'Lessons learned', where
experiences from the field provide opportunities for growth and
continued exploration. Readers can follow the book from cover to
cover or dip in, finding the chapters that serve a particular
project or teaching endeavour. The varying writing styles and
topics are in direct relationship with the exact nature of the
inspiration for this text. The over-arching themes of collaboration
(diverse backgrounds, ideas, and skill sets, multidisciplinarity,
and interdisciplinarity) are the consistent touchstones that create
a thematic self-guided journey of exploration through the book. The
chapters offer readers guidance and encouragement to implement some
of the approaches described, and inspiration to forge their own
paths in the world of multi- and interdisciplinary teaching and
research. The depth and breadth of collaborative possibilities are
exciting, and the editors' goal is to spark further
experimentation. An excellent and practical resource for any
educator hoping to teach his or her subject matter through an
interdisciplinary approach and for all courses revolving around
topics of pedagogy. The key audience will be graduate students, and
teachers in all stages of education from primary to higher
education.
This collection draws insights from an interdisciplinary group of
scholars who specialize in diverse methods ranging from
ethnography, archival research, and oral histories, to quantitative
data analysis and experiments used in the social sciences and
humanities to reflect on the empirical, methodological, and
practical implications of conducting research beyond one's national
borders. The goal of this book is to help researchers contemplate
existing orientations that dominate current research processes and
consider the need for transnational multidisciplinary practices
that remain aware of the inequalities which continually inform
research practices. With this focus, this collection is also a
resourceful initiative that seeks to share experiences as well as
extract key ideas and approaches likely to overlap or resonate in
different disciplines.
Discover how to effectively incorporate literacy instruction into
your middle or high school science classroom with this practical
book. You'll find creative, inquiry-based tools to show you what it
means to teach science with and through writing, and strategies to
help your students become young scientists who can use reading and
writing to better understand their world. Troy Hicks, Jeremy Hyler,
and Wiline Pangle share helpful examples of lessons and samples of
students' work, as well as innovative strategies you can use to
improve students' abilities to read and write various types of
scientific nonfiction, including argument essays, informational
pieces, infographics, and more. As all three authors come to the
work of science and literacy from different perspectives and
backgrounds, the book offers unique and wide-ranging experiences
that will inspire you and offer you insights into many aspects of
the classroom, including when, why, and how reading and writing can
work in the science lesson. Featured topics include: Debates and
the current conversation around science writing in the classroom
and society. How to integrate science notebooks into teaching.
Improving nonfiction writing by expanding disciplinary vocabulary
and crafting scientific arguments. Incorporating visual
explanations and infographics. Encouraging collaboration through
whiteboard modeling. Professional development in science and
writing. The strategies are all aligned to the Next Generation
Science Standards and Common Core State Standards for ease of
implementation. From science teachers to curriculum directors and
instructional supervisors, this book is essential for anyone
wanting to improve interdisciplinary literacy in their school.
Discover how to effectively incorporate literacy instruction into
your middle or high school science classroom with this practical
book. You'll find creative, inquiry-based tools to show you what it
means to teach science with and through writing, and strategies to
help your students become young scientists who can use reading and
writing to better understand their world. Troy Hicks, Jeremy Hyler,
and Wiline Pangle share helpful examples of lessons and samples of
students' work, as well as innovative strategies you can use to
improve students' abilities to read and write various types of
scientific nonfiction, including argument essays, informational
pieces, infographics, and more. As all three authors come to the
work of science and literacy from different perspectives and
backgrounds, the book offers unique and wide-ranging experiences
that will inspire you and offer you insights into many aspects of
the classroom, including when, why, and how reading and writing can
work in the science lesson. Featured topics include: Debates and
the current conversation around science writing in the classroom
and society. How to integrate science notebooks into teaching.
Improving nonfiction writing by expanding disciplinary vocabulary
and crafting scientific arguments. Incorporating visual
explanations and infographics. Encouraging collaboration through
whiteboard modeling. Professional development in science and
writing. The strategies are all aligned to the Next Generation
Science Standards and Common Core State Standards for ease of
implementation. From science teachers to curriculum directors and
instructional supervisors, this book is essential for anyone
wanting to improve interdisciplinary literacy in their school.
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