students generally enjoy conducting experiments - but the abuse at them when the teachers should be teaching the theory asks again
Alom Shaha Rememberburning magnesium in school? Doing this for the first time when I was 11, just starting high school is one of those magical experiences that all students should have. But I am not convinced that the same is true of all practical work in science classes in school.
Coursespractice are very popular among students and teachers. However, its popularity among students may be in the fact that they are less demanding than the theory. The same can be true for teachers - after all, it is easier for a child bunsen correct about what is to verify that he or she understood the corpuscular theory of matter is easier to teach a child connect an ammeter to teach a correct understanding of electric current. In fact, a study of future teachers reported in the journal this month, the School of Science concluded that "most of them approach learning as a way to lower order objectives, such as the names of the teams and using standard procedures. "
many standard practices of school science experiments intended to be when they are nothing of the sort. What we are doing a lot of time, for example, when asked "to investigate the factors affecting the strength of a wire," is to enable students to undertake practical work, with the intention they discover something already known. This approach has been described as "intellectually dishonest" by Rosalind Driver in his important essay, the fallacy of induction. Is pedagogically naive and wrong to think that all we need to do as teachers of science is to give children the opportunity to discover the laws of science themselves. As a pilot, he wrote, "explain clearly and do not arise solely from the data." However, this approach to practical work continues, according to Professor Robin Millar, due to "the prevalence of 'empiricist / inductive science ... the belief that ideas "emerge" automatically from the event itself if students work with sufficient care. "As Millar, who has conducted extensive research on what students learn the practical work, he says, "in practice this rarely happens."
I have a suggestion- It is reasonable to assume that doing science can be a great way to learn science. But as my former professor of physics PGCE, Professor Jonathan Osborne, he says, is a "dangerous assumption". According to Osborne, the role of science is to "build on the young student a thorough understanding of a body of knowledge existing in this way, you have to show why this knowledge is evaluated. It was hard earned, and science -. is a creative process that gives you the opportunity to free themselves from the shackles of conventional wisdom by creating their own knowledge, however, this is not the same as doing science and there is a clear line in the sand must be established between the two activities. "
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