Eizenga Inquiry presentation CEA Oct 24, 2013

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

This presentation is about using inquiry methods in a high school science classroom and was presented at the Christian Educators Conference Oct 24, 2013 in S. Bend IN

Citation preview

Where are the Instructions?Using Inquiry in the Classroom

Dale EizengaHolland Christian HSCEA Oct 24, 2013

Wednesday, October 16, 13

SB - CEU code:

Slides are at:slideshare.net

Let’s sit by similar disciplines

Wednesday, October 16, 13

About me:

Taught Chemistry at HCHS for 20yrs

2008-2010 - GVSU Target Inquiry

2008 - started using movies to teach skills (Flipped Classroom)

2012 - started using Standards-based Grading

Wednesday, October 16, 13

What is Inquiry ?As with any hot topic: Lots of ideas

Common characteristics

“Need to Know” information- flipped learning helps w/this

More than one solution- SBG helps with this

Student-directed

Wednesday, October 16, 13

What isn’t Inquiry?Verification Labs - one correct answer

Students:

know the answer beforehand

focus is “doing it right” & an expected result

expect data to support the expected answer

don’t see a need for multiple trials

do the same procedure looking for the same result (earn a grade like worksheet)

Wednesday, October 16, 13

What isn’t Inquiry?Verification Labs

Teacher: Focus on Efficiency:

very clear directions - “student-proof”

all materials set up carefully - lots of students accessing them at the same time

“Fill-in-the-Blank” data tables

short answers to questions (same for all)

quick “did you do it” grades

Wednesday, October 16, 13

What isn’t Inquiry?Teacher - directed

No/little student choice

document/product created by teacher

procedure created by teacher

materials chosen by teacher

How does this fit w/ your discipline?

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Common MisconceptionsI don’t have TIME: I have too much to cover

Breadth vs. Depth tension

How effective is your current methods?(Caught vs. Taught)

I can’t take the CHAOS:

Students discover anything: totally open-ended

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Practical InformationTeachers who haven’t learned through inquiry will struggle to teach with it.

Levels of Inquiry (Fay & Bretz, Science Teacher 2008)

Level Question Method Solution

0 Teacher Teacher Teacher

1 Teacher Teacher

2 Teacher

3

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Practical InformationSeveral styles of going “inquiry-based”

Style 1:Start low & gradually progress to higher levels

Pro: time to develop skills needed at higher levels

Con: students resist, little time at higher levels

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Practical InformationSeveral styles of going “inquiry-based”

Style 2:Start low & quickly progress to higher levels

Pro: more time at higher levels

Con: too much too fast, can be difficult for students sustain the independence required for highest levels

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Practical InformationSeveral styles of going “inquiry-based”

Style 3:Use various levels within broad units

Pro: experiences at all inquiry levels in varied topics, don’t have to redesign everything at once

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Practical InformationTell students WHY you are doing this style

esp. important for students who have been successful in the traditional school setting.

Get feedback from students & adapt

Use “flipped classroom” methods to gain time - use for skills needed at diff. times by diff. students

Everything in moderation!

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Examples:Acid & Base Intro Activity: Low Level

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Examples:Titration Lab - old style

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Examples:Titration Lab - today

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Examples:Reaction Rates experiment: high level

Wednesday, October 16, 13

Thanks! & Questions?SB-CEU code:

Starting:

Ending:

Slides are at - slideshare.net

Contact me:

Dale Eizenga - Holland Christian H.S.deizenga@hollandchristian.org

Wednesday, October 16, 13