Me Miss! I know the answer!

We got a great response to our request for suggestions on who to approach for funding โ€“ thanks everyone! Suggestions included Learned Societies and Institutes, companies, charities and public bodies like NESTA, SETpoints and the SLC.

Some of these people I did contact when we were originally looking for funding for the pilot, but didnโ€™t get very far. Pretty much everyone said they didnโ€™t have any money, but suggested we tried the Wellcome Trust People Awards (who came up trumps). However, now we have a tried and tested event it should be a different proposition. Hopefully.

I keep reading about how thereโ€™s going to be a skills gap, young people are being turned off science and technology and everyone wants to invest in projects to combat this, and all I can think is, โ€œWe can do it! Give us some money!โ€.

The latest thing Iโ€™ve been reading is part of the evaluation of the 21st Century Science pilot (sort of the fore-runner to the new GCSE). The paper* was published in the School Science Review from the ASE but unfortunately you canโ€™t read the article online. There is a summary of the whole evaluation online here. One of the key things they found was that discussion is a very effective tool for engaging students, getting them to really think, and deepening their understanding, but many teachers arenโ€™t sure how to get that going.

โ€œI think [the course] has made me think about โ€“ more about having discussion group based classroom activities. But I do think I need retraining or a bit of help in knowing good techniques really โ€“ in understanding what techniques work.โ€

C21 Study participant (teacher)

We found that the activities in Iโ€™m a Scientist** โ€“ and the way they were combined with talking to real scientists, and students having a say โ€“ were great training for students in debate and discussion skills. And great training for teachers in running those kinds of activity.

โ€œThe IVF debate went on for two lessons and they started defending their viewpoints which they wouldnโ€™t have done before. They also began to see all sides of the argument rather than have a blinkered approach.โ€

Rachel Cockburn, teacher, IAS pilot

โ€œThe confidence to tackle more controversial topics in a debating lesson. I would not have opted to do that previously.โ€

Janet Harland, teacher, IAS pilot

The conclusions of the SSR paper were that there were lots of positives about 21st Century Science, but the changeover hadnโ€™t been easy and it involved some hard work for teachers. They suggested four ways of helping teachers to teach the course:-

  • Providing more resources which focus on โ€˜ideas-about-scienceโ€™ [similar content to How Science Works] and promote collaborative working.
  • Developing more interactive techniques which encourage student contributions.
  • Teaching students more explicitly about understanding and interpreting texts.
  • Providing opportunities for professional development on specific approaches (e.g. effective peer-group discussion).

*Hand shoots up* Me Miss! I know the answer! Iโ€™m a Scientist does all of those things!

I mean, am I just too obsessed or does that sound exactly like a brief describing Iโ€™m a Scientist?

Anyway, thatโ€™s probably enough self-congratulation for one day. On a lighter note, my favourite quirky science story of the week is the Dance Your PhD YouTube competition. I really loved โ€œA Molecular Dance in the Blood, Observedโ€ (about how haemoglobin binds oxygen). It made the molecular biology (and the science used to investigate it) so clear, while still being graceful and a pleasure to watch.

*Hanley, Pam, Osborne, Jonathan and Ratcliffe, Mary (2008) Teaching twenty first century science. School Science Review, 90, (330), 105-112

**If you want to download copies of the teaching materials then they are freely available under a Creative Commons licence.

Posted on December 10, 2008 by in How Science Works, Science Education. Tagged , , , , , , , . Comments Off on Me Miss! I know the answer!