Title: Big Ideas, Virtual Fieldwork, Professional Development
1Big Ideas,Virtual Fieldwork, Professional
Development More...
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2With support from the National Science Foundation.
- This material is based upon work supported by the
National Science Foundation under grant No.
0733303. - Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or
recommendations are those of the authors and do
not necessarily reflect the views of the National
Science Foundation.
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3Contents
- Bigger Ideas
- Inquiry Grid
- Strands of Science
- Essential Features of Inquiry
- How People Learn/
- About Good Teaching
- Effective PD
- Virtual Fieldwork
- PD Structure
- Workshop VFEs
- Virtual Study Groups
- TPACK
- virtualfieldwork.org
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4Contents
- Bigger Ideas
- Inquiry Grid
- Strands of Science
- Essential Features of Inquiry
- How People Learn
- About Good Teaching
- Effective PD
- Virtual Fieldwork
- PD Structure
- TPACK
- virtualfieldwork.org
5Contents
- Bigger Ideas
- Inquiry Grid
- Strands of Science
- Essential Features of Inquiry
- How People Learn
- About Good Teaching
- Effective PD
- Virtual Fieldwork
- PD Structure
- TPACK
- virtualfieldwork.org
Click on this button to take you to the table of
contents slide from any other slide.
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6About good teaching...
- Share a story of some of the best science
teaching youve ever experienced, either as a
teacher or as a student.
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7How do you knowwhat you know?
- Whats something you understand or know how to do
really well? - How do you know?
- How did you gain that understanding or skill?
- What does that have to do with how you teach?
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8Questions/Issues
- What does research say about how people learn?
- How should research on how people learn inform
how we teach? - Why are we here?
- What does good professional development look
like? - What does good teaching look like?
- Can we build teacher networks?
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9Program Objectives
- Effectively teach key principles of Earth system
science across multiple scales. - Create and share a virtual fieldwork experience
that facilitates inquiry teaching. - Offer and receive teaching support within a
network of professionals. - Critically evaluate approaches to and materials
for teaching.
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10How will we know if we meet our objectives?
- What kinds of evidence would convince you someone
teaches through inquiry? - Is it the same kind of evidence that would
convince the National Science Foundation?
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11We want you to substantiate these claims
- I understand the key principles of Earth system
science across multiple scales - At the completion of my class, students
understand key principles of the discipline - I will create a VFE that facilitates meaningful
geoscience inquiry and share that with a
community of peers - I am networked to other teachers in ways that
support my continuing professional development - I will critically evaluate my own teaching
approach and materials and that of my colleagues.
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12What if we only taught five things?On the need
for teaching profound ideas
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13Where we are Essential Principles Fundamental Concepts
7 44
8 47
7 33
9 75
TOTAL 31 198
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14An important consensus...
- These initiatives represent a consensus view of
the most important Earth system science concepts.
- However...
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15- There are no examples of creating a thick
description of what everyone should understand
about any topic that has led to wide swaths of
the population understanding the target content,
in spite of countless attempts to do just that
throughout human history.
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16How can we synthesize?
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17How can we synthesize?
Big Ideas from ReaL Inquiry Project
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18How can we synthesize?
Bigger Ideas from TFG/VFE Project
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19Big ideas simply arent big enough.
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20What if we taught only five profound ideas, but
taught them deeply?
- Deep understanding of profound ideas requires
knowledge of all (or most) of the literacy
principles. - And connects them to a coherent framework, thus
increasing the likelihood of true understanding
and retention.
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21What makes an idea ReaLLy Big?
- The idea cuts across the Earth science
curriculum. - Understanding of the idea is attainable by
students and the understanding holds promise for
retention. - The idea is essential to understanding a variety
of topics. - The idea requires uncoverage has a bottomless
quality.
Furthermore, the entire Earth science curriculum
is represented by this (small) set of ideas.
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22Earth Science Bigger Ideas Overarching Questions Earth Science Bigger Ideas Overarching Questions Earth Science Bigger Ideas Overarching Questions Earth Science Bigger Ideas Overarching Questions Earth Science Bigger Ideas Overarching Questions
Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Earth is a system of systems. The flow of energy drives the cycling of matter. Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment. Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system. To understand (deep) space and time, models and maps are necessary.
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23Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Earth is a system of systems. The flow of energy drives the cycling of matter. Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment. Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system. To understand (deep) space and time, models and maps are necessary.
Does each idea cut across the entire Earth science curriculum? Does each idea cut across the entire Earth science curriculum? Does each idea cut across the entire Earth science curriculum? Does each idea cut across the entire Earth science curriculum? Does each idea cut across the entire Earth science curriculum?
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24Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Earth is a system of systems. The flow of energy drives the cycling of matter. Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment. Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system. To understand (deep) space and time, models and maps are necessary.
Is understanding of the idea is attainable by students and does the understanding hold promise for retention? Is understanding of the idea is attainable by students and does the understanding hold promise for retention? Is understanding of the idea is attainable by students and does the understanding hold promise for retention? Is understanding of the idea is attainable by students and does the understanding hold promise for retention? Is understanding of the idea is attainable by students and does the understanding hold promise for retention?
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25Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Earth is a system of systems. The flow of energy drives the cycling of matter. Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment. Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system. To understand (deep) space and time, models and maps are necessary.
Is each idea essential to understanding a variety of topics? Is each idea essential to understanding a variety of topics? Is each idea essential to understanding a variety of topics? Is each idea essential to understanding a variety of topics? Is each idea essential to understanding a variety of topics?
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26Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Earth is a system of systems. The flow of energy drives the cycling of matter. Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment. Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system. To understand (deep) space and time, models and maps are necessary.
Does each idea require uncoverage/have a bottomless quality? Does each idea require uncoverage/have a bottomless quality? Does each idea require uncoverage/have a bottomless quality? Does each idea require uncoverage/have a bottomless quality? Does each idea require uncoverage/have a bottomless quality?
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27Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Earth is a system of systems. The flow of energy drives the cycling of matter. Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment. Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system. To understand (deep) space and time, models and maps are necessary.
Is the entire Earth science curriculum represented by this (small) set of ideas? Is the entire Earth science curriculum represented by this (small) set of ideas? Is the entire Earth science curriculum represented by this (small) set of ideas? Is the entire Earth science curriculum represented by this (small) set of ideas? Is the entire Earth science curriculum represented by this (small) set of ideas?
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28Connecting Ideas
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29Connecting Ideas
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30Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making? Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
The Earth is a System of Systems. The Flow of Energy Drives the Cycling of Matter. Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment. Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system. To Understand (Deep) Time and the Scale of Space, Models and Maps are Necessary.
The Earth System is composed of and part of a multitude of systems, which cycle and interact resulting in dynamic equilibrium (though the system evolves). The Earth is also nested in larger systems including the solar system and the universe. However there is an inherent unpredictability in systems, which are composed of an (effectively) infinite number of interacting parts that follow simple rules. Each system is qualitatively different from, but not necessarily greater than the sum of its parts. The Earth is an open system it is the constant flow of solar radiation that powers most surface Earth processes and drives the cycling of most matter at or near the Earths surface. Earths internal heat is a driving force below the surface. Energy flows and cycles through the Earth system. Matter cycles within it. Convection drives weather and climate, ocean currents, the rock cycle and plate tectonics. Photosynthetic bacteria reformulated the atmosphere making Earth habitable. Humans have changed the lay of the land, altered the distribution of flora and fauna and are changing atmospheric chemistry in ways that alter the climate. Earth system processes affect where and how humans live. For example, many people live in the shadow of volcanoes because of the fertile farmland found there, however they must keep a constant vigil to maintain their safety. The human impact on the environment is growing as population increases and the use of technology expands. Earth processes (erosion, evolution or plate tectonics, for example) operating today are the same as those operating since they arose in Earth history and they are obedient to the laws of chemistry and physics. While the processes constantly changing the Earth are essentially fixed, their rates are not. Tipping points are reached that can result in rapid changes cascading through Earth systems. The use of models is fundamental to all of the Earth Sciences. Maps and models aid in the understanding of aspects of the Earth system for which direct observation is not possible. Models assist in the comprehension of time and space at both immense and sub-microscopic scales. When compared to the size and age of the universe, humanity is a speck in space and a blip in time.
Earth System Science Profound Ideas
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31Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
The Earth is a System of Systems.
The Earth System is composed of and part of a multitude of systems, which cycle and interact resulting in dynamic equilibrium (though the system evolves). The Earth is also nested in larger systems including the solar system and the universe. However there is an inherent unpredictability in systems, which are composed of an (effectively) infinite number of interacting parts that follow simple rules. Each system is qualitatively different from, but not necessarily greater than the sum of its parts.
Earth System Science Profound Ideas
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32Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
The Flow of Energy Drives the Cycling of Matter.
The Earth is an open system it is the constant flow of solar radiation that powers most surface Earth processes and drives the cycling of most matter at or near the Earths surface. Earths internal heat is a driving force below the surface. Energy flows and cycles through the Earth system. Matter cycles within it. Convection drives weather and climate, ocean currents, the rock cycle and plate tectonics.
Earth System Science Profound Ideas
toc
33Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Life, including human life, influences and is influenced by the environment.
Photosynthetic bacteria reformulated the atmosphere making Earth habitable. Humans have changed the lay of the land, altered the distribution of flora and fauna and are changing atmospheric chemistry in ways that alter the climate. Earth system processes affect where and how humans live. For example, many people live in the shadow of volcanoes because of the fertile farmland found there, however they must keep a constant vigil to maintain their safety. The human impact on the environment is growing as population increases and the use of technology expands.
Earth System Science Profound Ideas
toc
34Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
Physical and chemical principles are unchanging and drive both gradual and rapid changes in the Earth system.
Earth processes (erosion, evolution or plate tectonics, for example) operating today are the same as those operating since they arose in Earth history and they are obedient to the laws of chemistry and physics. While the processes constantly changing the Earth are essentially fixed, their rates are not. Tipping points are reached that can result in rapid changes cascading through Earth systems.
Earth System Science Profound Ideas
toc
35Overarching Questions How do we know what we know? How does what we know inform our decision-making?
To Understand (Deep) Time and the Scale of Space, Models and Maps are Necessary.
The use of models is fundamental to all of the Earth Sciences. Maps and models aid in the understanding of aspects of the Earth system for which direct observation is not possible. Models assist in the comprehension of time and space at both immense and sub-microscopic scales. When compared to the size and age of the universe, humanity is a speck in space and a blip in time.
Earth System Science Profound Ideas
toc
36Overarching Questions How do we know what we
know? How does what we know inform our decision
making?
37But really, whats the big idea?
- E.O. Wilson -- Two Laws of Biology
- All organic processes are ultimately obedient to
the Laws of Physics and Chemistry. - All living systems and processes evolved by
natural selection.
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38known
Most school science
Procedure
known
unknown
Answer
The most cool science!
unknown
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39Four Strands of Science
- Understanding Scientific Explanations
- Generating Scientific Evidence
- Reflecting on Scientific Knowledge
- Participating Productively in Science
Strand 1 2 3 4
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401. Understanding Scientific Explanations
- "This strand includes the things that are usually
categorized as content, but it focuses on
concepts and the links between them rather than
on discrete facts. It also includes the ability
to use this knowledge."
Back
Strand 1 2 3 4
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41 2. Generating Scientific Evidence
- "...it includes a wide range of practices
involved in designing and carrying out a
scientific investigation. These include asking
questions, deciding what to measure, developing
measures, collecting data from the measures,
structuring the data, interpreting and evaluating
the data, and using results to develop and refine
arguments, models, and theories."
Back
Strand 1 2 3 4
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423. Reflecting on Scientific Knowledge
- "This strand includes ideas usually considered
part of understanding the nature of science,
such as the history of scientific ideas. However,
it focuses more on how scientific knowledge is
constructed. That is, how evidence and arguments
based on that evidence are generated. It also
includes students ability to reflect on the
status of their own knowledge."
Back
Strand 1 2 3 4
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434. Participating Productively in Science
- "Proficiency in science entails skillful
participation in a scientific community in the
classroom and mastery of productive ways of
representing ideas, using scientific tools, and
interacting with peers about science."
Back
Strand 1 2 3 4
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44Five Essential Features of Inquiry (Center for
Science Mathematics and Engineering Education.,
2000
- Learner engages in scientifically oriented
questions - Learner gives priority to evidence in responding
to questions - Learner formulates explanations from evidence
- Learner connects explanations to scientific
knowledge - Learner communicates and justifies explanations
to others
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45How People Learn
http//www.nap.edu
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46How People LearnKey Finding 1
- Students come to the classroom with
preconceptions about how the world works. If
their initial understanding is not engaged, they
may fail to grasp the new concepts and
information that are taught, or they may learn
them for purposes of a test but revert to their
preconceptions outside the classroom.
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47How People LearnKey Finding 2
- To develop competence in an area of inquiry,
students must - have a deep foundation of factual knowledge,
- understand facts and ideas in the context of a
conceptual framework, and - organize knowledge in ways that facilitate
retrieval and application.
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48How People LearnKey Finding 3
- A "metacognitive" approach to instruction can
help students learn to take control of their own
learning by defining learning goals and
monitoring their progress in achieving them.
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49Characteristics of Effective Professional
Development in Mathematics and Science (from
Garet et al 2001).
- Form. Traditional classes, workshops or a
"hands-on" activity like mentoring were less
effective than reform types of activities, such
as teacher networks or study groups. - Duration. Longer professional development
programs are more likely to make an impact.
Sustained and intensive programs are better than
shorter ones. - Collective participation. Activities designed for
teachers in the same school, grade or subject are
better than professional development programs
that do not target groups of teachers who work
together. - Content. Professional development courses that
focus on how to teach but also on what to
teach-the substance and subject matter-are key. - Elementary schoolteachers especially may have
taken fewer courses in science or math and may be
less familiar with the subject matter, the
researchers note. - Active learning. This aspect is fostered through
observing and being observed teaching, planning
for classroom implementation, reviewing student
work, and presenting, leading and writing. - Coherence. Teachers need to perceive professional
development as part of coherent programs of
teacher learning and development that support
other activities at their schools, such as the
adoption of new standards or textbooks.
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50Flexibly Adaptive Professional Development
(adapted from Trautmann MaKinster, 2010).
- Flexibly adaptive professional development
intends to offer differentiated instruction in
the context of teacher professional development. - This approach recognizes that
- Teachers need for and comfort with technology
varies widely from classroom to classroom and
school to school. - Teachers, like students, benefit from learning
situations and supports tailored to their own
specific needs. - Professional development providers ought to
practice what they preach. - Read more about Flexibly Adaptive Professional
Development - Trautmann, N., MaKinster, J. (2010). Flexibly
Adaptive Professional Development in Support of
Teaching Science with Geospatial Technology.
Journal of Science Teacher Education, 21(3),
351-370. doi10.1007/s10972-009-9181-4
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51Why Virtual Fieldwork?
- As curriculum development
- As professional development
- Use the local to understand the global
- Building a database
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52About TPACK
- Teachers of Earth System Science have very
specialized skills and knowledge.
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53About TPACK
Pedagogy Understanding how to facilitate
learning
Technology Understanding its role in teaching
Content Understanding Earth Science
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54About TPACK
Technology Understanding its role in teaching
Pedagogy Understanding how to facilitate
learning
Content Understanding Earth Science
TPACK Technological and Pedagogical Content
Knowledge
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55Learn more about TPACK
- Mishra, P., Koehler, M. (2006). Technological
pedagogical content knowledge A framework for
teacher knowledge. The Teachers College Record,
108(6), 10171054. - Thompson, A. D., Mishra, P. (2007). Breaking
News TPCK Becomes TPACK! Journal of Computing in
Teacher Education, 24(2), 38.
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56Virtual Fieldwork Experiences (VFEs)
- Taughannock Falls
- Powers of Ten (Google Earth)
- Norwich, NY (website)
- Akron Falls (PowerPoint)
- Niagara Gorge (GigaPan)
- Chapman Creek (Keynote)
More VFEs _at_ http//virtualfieldwork.org/A_VFE_D
atabase.html
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