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E-grāmata: Designs for Science Literacy

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Mar-2001
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780199840151
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Mar-2001
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780199840151
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The call for science curriculum reform has been made over and over again for much of the twentieth century. Arguments have been made that the content of the curriculum is not appropriate for meeting the individual and social needs of people living in the modern world; that the curriculum has become overstuffed with topics and does not serve students especially well; and above all, that the curriculum does not generate the student learning it is expected to produce.
The latest volume in a continuing series of publications from the AAAS designed to reform science education, Designs for Science Literacy presupposes that curriculum reform must be considerably more extensive and fundamental than the tinkering with individual courses and subjects that has been going on for decades. Designs deals with the critical issues involved in assembling sound instructional materials into a new, coherent K-12 whole. The book pays special attention to the need to link science-oriented studies to the arts and humanities, and also proposes how to align the curriculum with an established set of learning goals while preserving the American tradition of local responsibility for the curriculum itself.
If fundamental curriculum reform is ever to occur, a new process for creating alternatives will have to be developed. Designs for Science Literacy provides the groundwork for such a process.
Preface ix
Science Literacy, Curriculum Reform, and This Book 1(14)
Prologue: Design in General 15(1)
An Introductory Example
15(2)
Attributes of Design
17(3)
Establishing Design Specifications
20(4)
Conceptualizing a Design
24(2)
Developing a Design
26(8)
Refining the Designed Product
34(3)
Looking Ahead
37(1)
PART I DESIGN AND THE CURRICULUM 38(56)
Curriculum Design
41(32)
An Introductory Example
41(2)
Attributes of Curriculum Design
43(1)
Establishing Curriculum-Design Specifications
44(12)
Conceptualizing a Curriculum Design
56(7)
Developing a Curriculum Design
63(5)
Refining a Designed Curriculum
68(3)
Looking Ahead
71(2)
Curriculum Specifications
73(21)
What is a Curriculum?
73(1)
Curriculum Structure
74(10)
Curriculum Content
84(6)
Curriculum Operation
90(2)
Summing Up
92(2)
PART II DESIGNING TOMORROW'S CURRICULUM 94(78)
Design by Assembly
97(26)
The Idea in Brief
98(4)
The Idea in More Detail
102(3)
Setting the Stage
105(3)
Assembly Strategies
108(10)
Curriculum-Resource Management
118(3)
Continuing Professional Development
121(2)
Curriculum Blocks
123(26)
What Are Curriculum Blocks?
124(3)
Properties of Curriculum Blocks
127(1)
A Template for Describing Curriculum Blocks
128(13)
Where Will Curriculum Blocks Come From?
141(6)
Looking Ahead
147(2)
How it Could Be: Three Stories
149(23)
Foreword
150(2)
Palladio Unified School District
152(7)
Edmond Halley School District
159(6)
Lewis & Clark Regional School District
165(6)
Afterword
171(1)
PART III IMPROVING TODAY'S CURRICULUM 172(93)
Building Professional Capability
179(32)
Increasing Faculty Science Literacy
180(5)
Understanding Student Learning Goals
185(5)
Becoming Familiar with Research on Learning
190(2)
Learning to Analyze Curriculum Materials
192(4)
Acquiring Curriculum Versatility
196(5)
Improving Assessment
201(7)
Becoming Informed on Reform Movements
208(3)
Unburdening the Curriculum
211(26)
Cutting Major Topics
212(8)
Pruning Subtopics from Major Topics
220(7)
Trimming Technical Vocabulary
227(6)
Reducing Wasteful Repetition
233(2)
The Challenge
235(2)
Increasing Curriculum Coherence
237(28)
Types of Curriculum Coherence
237(6)
Improving Coherence across Grade Levels
243(8)
Improving Coherence across Subjects
251(14)
Epilogue: Another Look at Designs 265(8)
Bibliography 273(8)
Acknowledgements 281(2)
Index 283(6)
Credits 289(6)
Installing Designs on Disk 295
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is the largest international federation of scientists and scientific societies in the world, with more than 141,000 individual members and nearly 300 affiliated scientific organizations and academies of science. AAAS is a non-profit organization dedicated to the public's understanding of science and technology, and to responsible scientific advancement across all disciplines. Project 2061 is AAAS's long-term nationwide initiative to improve science, mathematics, and technology education for all students.