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Beyond Science Standards

Play, Art, Coherence, Community
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Beyond Science Standards capture a vision of science education both whimsical and serious. Ranging across examples from elementary to university level classrooms and grounded in philosophy and history, the stories address dimensions beyond the realm of bureaucratic standards. Its thesis brings into question the premise of scientific unity and its representation in school as notions of method, process, nature, and practice. Schools, no less than the sciences, profit from playful exploration-of musical instruments in fourth grade physical science, for example, and hotel lobby decorative rock in a college geology course. Aesthetic expression permeates geologic interpretation and evolutionary insight-in depicting dentition, for instance, in the history of the horse family and linking this history to changing landscapes. Participating in collecting local, high altitude weather data enhances trust in climate science, especially when the observations benefit the local farming community. Allied with historical examples of the conduct of science, Beyond Science Standards offers the reader inspiring stories of science teaching, varying from place to place, time to time, discipline to discipline, and purpose to purpose.
Charles R. Ault, Jr. ("Kip"), professor emeritus, Lewis & Clark Graduate School of Education and Counseling, coordinated the school's Master of Arts in Teaching program for science teachers for more than two decades. Kip began his career teaching primary grades and middle school science in Connecticut and Colorado. Author of Do Elephants Have Knees? and Challenging Science Standards, his writing reflects an interest in paleontology and the value of subject diversity in the reform of school science.
Dedication Acknowledgments Foreword by Jack Hassard Introduction: The Cheshire Cat's Grin Part I: Paradigm Lost Chapter One: Descartes' Dream Chapter Two: Complicated Truths Chapter Three: Discipline Diversity Chapter Four: Menacing Mudflats Part II: Playful Exploration Chapter Five: Wavy Elephants Chapter Six: Binary Banjos Chapter Seven: Harmful Haste Chapter Eight: Serious Whimsy Chapter Nine: Salted Alcohol Chapter Ten: Squirrel Tales Part III: Aesthetic Expression Chapter Eleven: Skull sockets Chapter Twelve: Crowned Molars Chapter Thirteen: Hell's Pig Chapter Fourteen: Vivid Canyons Chapter Fifteen: Fossil Imagery Chapter Sixteen: Inspiring Invertebrates Chapter Seventeen: Clawed Wings Chapter Eighteen: Pesky Pillbugs Chapter Nineteen: Flashy Plumage Part IV: Conceptual Coherence Chapter Twenty: Poetic Rocks Chapter Twenty-one: Vast Moments Chapter Twenty-two: Storied Geology Part V: Community Purpose Chapter Twenty-three: Simple Automata Chapter Twenty-four: Egg Balloons Chapter Twenty-five: Competing Forecasts Chapter Twenty-six: Wicked Extinctions Chapter Twenty-seven: Harvesting Oysters Chapter Twenty-eight: Caring Communities Conclusion: Paradigm's Progress Index
A lifetime of science teaching culminates in this author's rich collection of stories-filled with intrigue and insight. Reading this book will forever elevate one's appreciation for science and to fully recognize its presence in every dimension of human experience. -- John Settlage, Professor, Neag School of Education, University of Connecticut, Co-editor, Science Education Science Standards have their place, but the search for common "practices, core ideas, and crosscutting concepts" carries the liability of homogenizing scientific disciplines and losing their rich diversity. As a geophysical researcher, I studied the tectonic development of the Andes with practices and techniques that had little in common with those of a geneticist searching for mutations responsible for Parkinson's disease. Through stories of scientific discoveries basic and profound in Beyond Science Standards, Kip Ault embraces the diversity of scientific disciplines and celebrates how science educators can guide their learners to sample that diversity while using the touchstones of "play, art, coherence, and community. -- Robert Butler, geophysicist, Professor Emeritus, University of Portland Beyond Science Standards gives you the feeling you are talking with the author in his class. In concise and clear language, Kip Ault explains how to "think like a geologist" even when the rocks you study are in a hotel lobby. Using stories, experiments, and observations, he makes explanations vivid and understandable. -- Chen Lijuan, doctoral student, Beijing Normal University As I read Beyond Science Standards, I found myself smiling, remembering my days as a middle school science teacher, trying to navigate the dual complexities of science and teaching, while trying to foster a classroom in which kids felt safe to explore, tinker, and feel joy at asking and answering questions. I realized that my enjoyment of the book came from, the stories of actual classrooms and real kids and their teachers' genuine efforts to do good work. The stories nicely illustrate the joy, messiness, and wonderful reality of science classrooms. As a reader, you feel transported into these spaces, eagerly awaiting updates about the students and the science. Rarely are people, including researchers, given such a whole picture of daily classroom life. Rather than the atomized examinations of a single feature of classroom life, this book takes a panoramic perspective, inviting readers to experience the sights, sounds, and smells of classrooms. This book illustrates how classrooms can become special as the teachers and students enjoy working and learning together. If nothing else, know that I am now drifting off into nostalgic memories of John J. Pershing middle school in Houston, where I taught students who are now doctors, musicians, dancers, lawyers, and realtors. What we share-our classroom experiences-are nicely captured in this book. -- David Stroupe, PhD, Associate Director for STEM Teacher Education in the CREATE for STEM Institute and Associate Professor of Teacher Education, Michigan State University
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