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Thinking and Talking about Science

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Discussion must be an integral part of science teaching and learning. ... Talk deepens' students' science understanding and supports development of academic language. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Thinking and Talking about Science


1
Thinking and Talking about Science
2
Chapter 2- Science and Oral Discourse
3
Key Points
  • Discussion must be an integral part of science
    teaching and learning.
  • Discussion norms and skills must be taught
    explicitly and practiced.
  • Talk deepens students science understanding and
    supports development of academic language.
  • Student to student talk is different from but
    just as important as student to teacher talk.

4
Non-Science Discussion Question
  • Which candidate currently running for President
    of the United States do you think would make the
    best President?

5
Student Discussion Skills
  • Listening
  • Adding on
  • Asking clarifying questions of others
  • Disagreeing respectfully
  • Staying on topic
  • Accountable Talk

6
Student Thinking Skills
  • Making claims
  • Providing evidence
  • Defending reasoning
  • Debating/argumentation
  • Generalizing, identifying patterns and
    relationships

7
3 Purposes of Science Talk Within an Inquiry
Framework
  • To gather and take stock of ideas,
  • To plan an investigation, and
  • To develop conceptual understanding

8
What the Teacher Does
  • Sets the stage
  • Listens carefully and moves the conversation
    further when necessary
  • Encourages student to student discourse
  • Brings collective closure

9
Science Talk- Considerations for Facilitating
Discourse
  • Volley Ball- Not Ping Pong!
  • Wait Time
  • Two or Three Before Me
  • Answer a Question- Ask a Question
  • Thick (not thin) Questions
  • Extroverts vs Introverts
  • Seating- can everyone make eye contact?
  • Encourage argumentation

10
Difference Between Discussing and Sharing
  • Avoid the sharing out trap! (When students just
    take turns sharing out, continuity and
    engagement suffer.)
  • Encourage building on others ideas, making
    connections, and respectful debate

11
Gather and Take Stock of Ideas- Purpose
  • Elicit individuals and groups preconceptions
    and experiences about the science topic to
    understand their thinking at a given point in
    time.

12
Characteristics of Group Talk at this Stage
  • Focus on the topic or idea
  • Initiated with a statement or question
  • Naïve or beginning explanations
  • All ideas are accepted
  • Dialogue around details
  • Questioning own ideas- precursor to conceptual
    change

13
(No Transcript)
14
Science Talk- Which Objects Reflect Light?
  • Water Gray Rock Leaf
  • Mirror Glass Sand
  • Potato Skin Wax Paper Tomato Soup
  • Shiny Metal Dull Metal Crumpled Paper
  • Red Apple the Moon Rough Cardboard
  • Rusty Nail Clouds Soil
  • Wood Milk White Bed Sheet
  • New Penny Old Tarnished Penny
  • Sheet of aluminum foil

15
Object Sort
  • Things That Reflect Light
  • Things That Do Not Reflect Light
  • Things We Are Unsure About
  • Make a list of the objects you think reflect
    light.

16
Group Science Talk
  • Compare and contrast your lists with the other
    groups at your table
  • Explain your thinking
  • Engage in scientific argumentation to come up
    with a consensus about which objects reflect
    light.

17
Question?
  • Do objects have to be smooth to reflect light?

18
Planning an Investigation- Purpose
  • To develop and/or evaluate the particulars of a
    plan for an investigation.
  • To decide on next steps.
  • Understand why these next steps will help answer
    the question or understand the problem.

19
Students Do This Through
  • Focusing on a question
  • Planning steps of an investigation (materials,
    procedures, etc.)
  • Determining data to be collected (measurable when
    appropriate)
  • Determining recording method

20
Characteristics of the Group Science Talk at This
Stage
  • Focused on the investigation
  • Initiated with a challenging question
  • Ideas backed by explanation
  • Debate about effectiveness of plan/step

21
Developing Conceptual Understanding- Purpose
  • Develop and articulate understandings the group
    holds at a moment in time related to a central
    concept
  • Encourage use of evidence
  • Connect students emerging ideas to scientific
    ideas
  • Attach meaning to terminology

22
Characteristics of Group Science Talk at this
Stage
  • Focused on evidence from the investigation
  • Initiated with a productive question
  • Making meaning from class data, notebooks, etc
  • Debate and argument about interpretation, ideas,
    patterns, relationships.
  • Introducing formal terminology

23
Importance of Talk for Learning Science- Take
Home Messages
  • Talk is important for sharing, clarifying, and
    distributing knowledge among peers.
  • Asking questions, predicting or hypothesizing,
    explaining, formulating ideas together, and
    engaging in scientific argumentation are all
    important attributes of peer discussions.
  • Science Talk provides an opportunity for
    sense-making.
  • Talk combined with writing appears to enhance the
    retention of science learning over time. (Rivard
    and Straw, 2000)

(Rivard and Straw, 2000)
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