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|a 9789463004114
|9 978-94-6300-411-4
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|a 10.1007/978-94-6300-411-4
|2 doi
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|a Spector, Barbara S.
|e author.
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|a Constructing Meaning in a Science Methods Course for Prospective Elementary Teachers
|h [electronic resource] :
|b A Case Study /
|c by Barbara S. Spector.
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|a Rotterdam :
|b SensePublishers :
|b Imprint: SensePublishers,
|c 2016.
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|a XII, 112 p.
|b online resource.
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|a text
|b txt
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|a computer
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|a Preface -- Prologue -- National Context -- Theoretical Framework -- Change Principles -- Resistance to Change -- Method -- About the Course -- Course Premise -- Flipped Classroom -- Course Scaffolding -- Formats for Sharing Products -- Assignments as Learning Opportunities -- Use of Community -- Variants in Context from Earlier Courses -- Findings about Course Participants -- Experiential Learners -- Student-Student Interactions and Relationships as a Cohort -- Receptivity to Change -- Student-Instructor Interaction: Cause and Effect Deficit -- Following Directions -- Living Student-Centered Schooling -- Students’ Grade Obsession: A Key -- Responses to an A Grade at Mid-Semester -- Interventions -- Attenuating the Grade Obsession: Deconditioning -- Self-Assessment/Self-Evaluation -- Delayed Grading -- Structure of the Mid-Semester “Test” Episode as a Learning Opportunity -- Critical Event Episode -- Accelerating Passage through Stages of Grief -- Responses to Instructor’s Reflections -- Applying Constructed Knowledge: Outcomes after Mid-Semester -- Presentations -- Site Visit Exploration Episode -- Recognize Science Could Be Found Anywhere -- Interactions Created a Productive Community -- Recognizing Benefits of Open Discussion -- Testing Inquiry in Elementary Schools -- Final Unit Plans -- Tying It All Together -- Advice to Future Preservice Teachers -- Change Principles in Action -- Conclusion -- Future Studies -- Epilogue -- Appendix A: Next Generation Science Standards -- Appendix B: Common Core Standards from the National Governors Association & Council of Chief State School Officers (2009) -- Appendix C: The Clash of the Culture of Science and the Culture of Traditional Preservice Students -- Appendix D: More Emphases – Less Emphases NSES Charts -- Appendix E: More Advice to Future Students and Other Student Perspectives -- References -- About the Author. .
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|a How do prospective elementary science teachers think? This case study • reveals thinking patterns common to preservice elementary teachers; • identifies their behavioral characteristics while learning to teach science which are not commonly noted in current literature; • provides change strategies to accelerate preservice elementary teachers embracing the holistic, constructivist, inquiry/practice-based paradigm consistent with the standards set by the curriculum. The chapters in this book immerse the reader in a sequence of episodes in this science methods course, and reveal the adventure of turning theory into practice while analyzing student-student/student-instructor interactions and their outcomes in an inquiry-driven, flipped classroom. Strategies presented empower preservice elementary teachers to • implement national and state standards; • change science learning/teaching from “business as usual” to applying science and engineering practices in the classroom; • make cognitive and behavioral changes required to shift paradigms and eliminate science anxiety; • pass through stages of grief inherent in the loss of dominant mechanistic paradigm. This book will interest a wide readership including science educators; scientists and engineers; administrators, supervisors, and elementary teachers in a clinical education setting; preservice elementary teachers; and anyone seeking to improve STEM education in elementary schools. .
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|a Education.
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|a Education.
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|a Education, general.
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|a SpringerLink (Online service)
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|t Springer eBooks
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|u http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6300-411-4
|z Full Text via HEAL-Link
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|a ZDB-2-EDA
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|a Education (Springer-41171)
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