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Primary Science Education: A Teacher's Toolkit is an accessible and comprehensive guide to primary school science education and its effective practice in the classroom. Primary Science Education is structured in two parts: Planning for Science and Primary Science in the Classroom. Each chapter covers fundamental topics, such as: curriculum requirements (including the Australian Curriculum and Australian Professional Standards for Teachers); preparing effective learning sequences with embedded authentic assessment; combining science learning with other learning areas, such as technologies and STEM; and critically analysing the teacher's role in the classroom. The text features short-answer and 'Bringing it Together' questions to encourage readers to consolidate their understanding of key themes. Case studies throughout provide guidance on the classroom experience and Teacher Background Information boxes explore topics where more in-depth knowledge is required. The book is supported by a suite of online resources, including interviews with Australian primary teachers and students, and downloadable activities.
This chapter explains the role of national and state/territory education authorities in providing guidance for teachers when assessing students’ knowledge, understanding and skills in primary science education. It also presents a range of strategies which allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and understandings at various time points (before, during and after) in science learning sequences. While the notion of assessment often relates to teacher judgements of what students do or do not know and how well they know it, a key goal in education is to develop students’ metacognitive abilities so that they can judge their own learning themselves. The focus needs to be on inclusive strategies and resources that improve not prove learning (Skamp & Preston, 2021), while positioning students as knowledge constructors and sharers rather than knowledge consumers. Strategies for identifying students’ learning in the Australian Curriculum: Science will be explored.
Having addressed how the Technologies learning area can support the learning of primary science in Chapter 7, this chapter presents a range of additional examples from English, Mathematics, Humanities and Social Sciences, the Arts, and Health and Physical Education. As discussed in the Introduction to this book, curriculum integration (CI), which is also referred to as interdisciplinary or cross-curricular teaching, should only be used where there is a complementary, and preferably a synergistic fit between targeted science concepts and concepts in other learning areas, so student understanding is enhanced, not diluted or confused. This specification is at the core of the examples presented in this chapter, where the relationship between science and other learning area concepts has been meticulously considered. Another key consideration is the contexts in which the various concepts are presented to students so that real-world connections can be linked to local examples within their life experiences.
In this chapter you are asked to consider how your behaviour and activities as a teacher and role model in primary science classrooms may influence students’ perceptions of themselves as learners of science and therefore their science identities. Research-informed strategies are discussed and analysed for ways to address low levels of science efficacy in both yourself and your students. A range of teaching strategies for engaging students with science concepts and twenty-first century skills are presented, such as using scaffolds to ‘predict, observe, explain’ (POE) and to undertake ‘claim, evidence, reasoning’ (CER) activities; using models; and using the outdoors.
This chapter explores the notion of ‘technologies’ in the Australian Primary Curriculum in the Learning Areas of Design and Technologies, and Digital Technologies, and in the General Capability area of Digital Literacy, and the ways in which they can be used to enhance the learning of science. You will be introduced to contexts that provide opportunities to harness the synergistic relationship between the processes of thinking and working scientifically, and design and production skills, to solve authentic problems or issues. Examples of effective Design Challenges will be presented as ‘hooks’ to gain student interest and to purposefully address required concepts in Science, and Design and Technologies in the Australian Curriculum. Opportunities for including links to Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Histories and Cultures through a Design and Technologies approach will be included, with links to a range of useful resources.
This chapter presents foundational ideas and discussion around the notion of worldviews, including how they develop, how they are influenced by education and how they impact learning. There is a focus on identifying the features of worldviews that incorporate science perspectives with an emphasis on strategies for nurturing and developing students’ scientific dispositions, such as their ‘science identity’ and ‘science capital’. The contributing role of primary science education through the Australian Curriculum will be examined. As we work through these ideas, you will examine your own worldviews about science and use evidence from the science education research literature to explore current views about the purposes of science education in primary schools.
This chapter presents illustrated examples of successful units of work designed and implemented by experienced teachers for a range of topics and ties together ideas from Chapters 2 (curriculum requirements), 3 (assessment), 4 (lesson sequencing) and 5 (teacher role). These units are considered to be successful because they address required, relevant aspects of the science curriculum; each has been implemented in primary school classrooms with students; those students have been engaged and interested in the related scientific concepts; and all students have demonstrated evidence of learning resulting from the designed experiences.
This chapter presents a range of inquiry-based approaches for scaffolding learning experiences in science education using a constructivist theoretical framework. Discussion will focus on understanding the underpinning constructs of inquiry-based approaches using the 5E approach and project-based learning as contemporary examples. The components of how single and sequenced science lessons/learning experiences can be designed to optimise students’ learning of targeted concepts will also be discussed.
This chapter presents authentic ways through which one or more of the cross-curriculum priorities (CCP) may be integrated into science-focused units of work to optimise student learning in both science and the CCP. The three Australian Curriculum areas are Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and cultures, Asia and Australia’s engagement with Asia, and Sustainability. They were first detailed in the Melbourne Declaration and are seen as key for supporting ‘the Australian Curriculum to be a relevant, contemporary and engaging curriculum that reflects national, regional and global contexts’. Examples in the chapter for each CCP are drawn from historical and current contexts and aim to provide a rich tapestry of ways to enhance student learning in science. In each of the following sections, where relevant, science conceptual understandings are linked with relevant CCP information, research findings and resources, with the goal of enhancing your confidence and competence in teaching primary science while including CCP perspectives.
This chapter explores how science education concepts may be integrated within STEM education contexts to enable student understanding of those concepts. We outline why STEM education is a strategic priority in many educational jurisdictions and note that a continuum of entry points into STEM education translates into a range of definitions and classroom implementation strategies. Aspects of science education (pedagogical practices, topic areas and skills) that lend themselves to STEM inquiry units are discussed with examples provided of how science concepts may be embedded and assessed.
This final chapter is future-focused and designed to encourage you to think deeply about classroom teaching. The types of low-tech resources needed for effective science learning are identified, with examples of where they may be used in learning experiences associated with foundational science concepts. We review what is covered in this text, how it aligns with the Australian Professional Standards for Teachers at Graduate and Proficient levels and recommend a range of resources and organisations that provide ongoing professional learning opportunities. Finally, we consider the role of primary science education in preparing current students for an unknown future where they will need to be digitally confident, global in their outlook, and great problem-solvers with the ability to critically question claims and evidence when making important decisions.
This chapter explores a number of researchers’ ideas about the ‘big ideas’ in primary science education. The most recent iteration (version 9.0) of the Australian Curriculum: Science, released in May 2022, is deconstructed to identify what is recommended, and how implementation in schools is enacted by states and territories. Key concepts linked to the three curriculum strands of Science Inquiry, Science Understandings and Science as a Human Endeavour are identified and mapped to conceptual learning progressions so developmental sequences can be clarified to enable planning. Many alternative science conceptions are held by students so you are invited to reflect on your own understandings of a range of key science concepts, to compare them with students’ alternative conceptions as found in the literature, and to consider where and how your own personal conceptions may have come about.