DEPARTMENTAL SYLLABUS: TE 443 Lake Superior State University Education Department TE 443 Course No. Secondary Science Methods Course Title (3 lecture, 0 lab) 3 credits Credit Catalog Course Description: TE 443 Content Area Methods for Secondary Teachers -- Science (3,0) = 3 Curriculum, objectives, content, materials, organization, methods and assessment of teaching natural science subject matter to diverse learners. Students use national and state standards and benchmarks in planning instruction and assessment. Integrated technology component. Fieldwork required. Prerequisite: TE 301 and admission to teacher education program Instructor Information: Dr. David Myton, Chair School of Education, Assoc Prof Chemistry & Education dmyton@lssu.edu Office: STH 324 Phone: 635-2349 website at http://education.lssu.edu/myton Required Texts: Science Instruction in Middle and Secondary Schools. 5th (2002) Chiapetta, Koballa & Collette, Prentice Hall/Merrill: Englewood Cliffs, NJ. Recommended Resources: State Council of State Science Supervisors: http://www.csss-science.org/safety.shtml http://www.csss-science.org/downloads/scisafe.pdf (added July 2006) The First Days of School: How to be an effective teacher Harry K. Wong & Rosemary T. Wong 1998. Harry Wong Publications, Mountain View, CA www.effectiveteaching.com Michigan K-12 Curriculum and Standards Michigan Teacher Network http://mtn.merit.edu MEAP http://www.meritaward.state.mi.us/mma/meap.htm MI CLiMB Science, Michigan Science Benchmark Clarification http://www.miclimbscience.org/ http://www.eup.k12.mi.us/eupisd/mathscience/math/mathgenII.html http://www.eup.k12.mi.us/eupisd/mathscience/science/Maser.html Michigan Department of Education www.michigan.gov/mde Follow the links at the Left for “Educators” then “Professional Preparation” then “Preparation Programs – Standards/Approval Process” There you will find “Standards for Teacher Preparation” and “Standards for Specialty Programs” – links to documents defining content standards for the preparation of pre-service teachers. Grading: All course work should be consistent with normal expectations for pre-service professional educators. Submissions should be correct in grammar and spelling as well as correct in science content, concepts and relationships. All written assignments completed outside of class must be typed, using normal font and spacing (<13 pt, double spacing, one inch margins. Evaluation and grading will be based on your performance on assigned tasks. Each performance may have several traits evaluated according to a specific evaluation standard or rubric. A generalized rubric is provided below (the following rubric, and many of the assignment specific rubrics are by Ted Singletary, Boise State University). TE443 Secondary Science Methods Spring Semester 2005 Lake Superior State University Dr. David Myton Work which transcends class presentations; highly creative, novel, skillful with clear communication and reasoning based on solid evidence. Highly High levels of understanding and thoroughness are evident with rare lapses, Competent unclear reasoning or insufficient evidence. Adequate performance with acceptable thoroughness; minor flaws that do not Competent seriously detract from overall quality or unclear communication Developing Some understanding evident but work is not thorough or has frequent lapses, especially in communication, reasoning and evidence or resources. Skills Beginning Disorganized attempts with serious errors or misrepresentations based on limited information or reasoning. Skills Not Evident No attempt or merely re-copying information. 5 Exemplary 4 3 2 1 0 STAGE 1: DESIRED RESULTS Understandings: Pre-service teachers will understand the importance of scientific literacy for the development of an informed public, and be effective in facilitating student-centered and structured learning environments to communicate science concepts. Essential Concepts: How do I plan for science literacy in my classroom? How can I help all students learn science? Knowledge and Skills: By the successful completion of this course course, pre-service teachers will: a. explain the important of teaching science to all students (Entry Level Standards – ELS 1) b. plan instruction to create learning environments supportive of all students and conducive to a safe and orderly learning environment (ELS 2) c. write lesson plans and develop units for secondary students using direct, cooperative, and inquiry modes of instruction (ELS 4) d. explain and use the national and state standards from content areas (ELS 3) e. explain and demonstrate the interrelationships among lesson objectives, standards, and assessment (ELS 5) f. be familiar with current journals for teaching science (ELS 5) g. demonstrate knowledge of various communities in which you are a member (ELS 6) h. demonstrate technological literacy through use of appropriate technologies in the teaching and learning of science. (ELS 7) i. Demonstrate a professional attitude consistent with a successful collegial practicing science educator with a commitment to the development of scientific literacy in your students. (ELS 7) STAGE 2: ASSESSMENT EVIDENCE Demonstrating Professionalism (10%): You will be expected to demonstrate a professional commitment to the course by attendance at each class session, fulfilling class assignments on time, participating fully on in-class activities as both a leader and participant. You are expected to make contributions based on past experiences and their daily reading assignments, class activities and reflection on classroom field experiences. You will participate during class sessions through leading activities and discussions, participating in activities and demonstrations, and peerbased literature reviews, presentations, and practice teaching experiences. (ELS 7 and professional dispositions) Traits Attendance & Timeliness TE443 Secondary Science Methods Spring Semester 2005 Participation Responsibility Cooperation & Leadership Lake Superior State University Dr. David Myton Takes responsibility Solves problems for own learning and collaboratively seeks perspectives sometimes as a and knowledge leader; solicits beyond involvement by all in requirements; group work follows directions. Misses classes Takes some steps to Occasionally Participates in infrequently, further own learning; volunteers comments cooperative efforts in 4 infrequently tardy, shows interest in or questions often a variety of roles; Highly no more than one subject beyond based solely on text respects others' Competent late assignment requirements; most material contributions directions followed Performs course Consistently Works cooperatively Misses no more than requirements attentive during class when directed; rarely 3 1 class and has few competently without with occasional leads or initiates Competent late assignments evident interest or positive comments solutions disinterest Misses classes with Occasionally Not always attentive Works only with the no prior notice, disinterested; during class, rarely same colleagues; 2 several late requires convincing volunteers answers adds little to Developing assignments or or coaxing before or asks course cooperative efforts Skills frequently tardy or any activity or related questions and never leads leaves early assignment Frequently Attends every class volunteers positive, on –time or makes 5 well-informed Exemplary prior arrangements; comments and no late assignments questions Often inattentive or Misses no more than disruptive; questions 2 classes and is and comments frequently tardy or unrelated to course leaves early 1 requirements or Beginning discussion Skills Consistently Misses more than 2 inattentive or classes or has 0 disruptive; rude or Not Evident numerous late unnecessary assignments comments Consistently disinterested; frequently voices negative comments about subject without suggestions Is openly antagonistic toward group work or group members; rarely makes positive contributions Complains about course assignments or subject in nonproductive manner Does not participate in group activities or consistently dominates group situations Daily Lesson Planning (10%) (ELS 3,4,5,7) You will compile two (2) one-day science lesson plans in one of your endorsement areas using the Understanding by Design (UBD) lesson template (http://education.lssu.edu). At least one should include an 8-slide powerpoint or equivalent teacher resource to support the lesson (PTfT Module 8). These instructional plans should cover an instructional period and contain sufficient detail for use without further preparation or research, and incorporate appropriate technology. Attach the lecture notes, exercises, readings, handouts etc needed for the lesson. The lessons may be used as a part of your unit plans, use technology to develop assessments for each lesson (PTfT Module 5). Each student will semi-formally deliver two lessons to the class (~20 minutes of direct instruction elements). Provide an assessment rubric for the activity using RUBISTAR, described in Preparing Teachers for Tomorrow (PTFT http://ptft.merit.edu Module 4) Unit Plan (25%) (ELS 3,4,5,7) You will create a 1-2 week Unit plan for a complete unit of instruction in a secondary science course appropriate to your area of certification. The unit plan will incorporate the UBD unit template (http://education.lssu.edu). Overall, the unit must include at least two hands-on investigations or activities, TE443 Secondary Science Methods Spring Semester 2005 Lake Superior State University Dr. David Myton two appropriate applications of technology, one audiovisual resource selected from the REMC catalog, and identify the key standards addressed by each of the instructional objectives. Specific suggestions for promoting learning and success for all possible learners must also be included. Include appropriate precautions to ensure a safe and effective educational environment, following the Council of State Science Supervisor guidelines for equipment and chemicals. Odds and Ends: Grading, Classroom policies, Alignment of standards (10%) Prepare a handout detailing your classroom rules, discipline policies and consequences, safety rules, and grading policies (late work, make-up, absences, etc), bring enough copies to distribute to the class for a discussion. Create a table that lists the content standards for your major and minor in abbreviated form and the course or courses at LSSU that prepared you to teach that content. Create a model of a student-authored webpage for topic in your area (PTfT Module 7). Optional: Participate as a science fair judge for the EUPISD regional competition, participate in the LEGO robotics competition with the EUPISD teachers, and/or participate in family science nights. Technology (5%) Prepare and demonstrate a technology-based open-ended activity in the subject areas of your science endorsement. Locate resources, design or modify a design which has the student interpret findings, communicate results and make judgments based on evidence. Identify the K-12 standard the activity addresses, the required safety and equipment requirements. Journal Presentations (5%): You will complete and present three (3) reviews of journal articles related to science instruction in your areas of certification. You should select the readings from the full articles in professional journals (not the short notes or letters to the editor) with an emphasis on instructional theory and applications. Real journals on actual paper are available in the Shouldice Library, please attach a copy of the original with your summary. Articles selected should generally stress educational theory, curriculum development, case studies, and innovation in instruction rather than simple descriptions of activities, examples of demonstrations, or sample lessons. Prepare a 1-2 page summary and be prepared to lead a short class presentation on the article. When appropriate you should lead the class in the activity described or demonstrate the concept in a mock-lesson. Biographical Poster (5%) Prepare a lesson plan for an activity where you assign your students to prepare a poster display of a biographical nature on a scientist (from your areas of endorsement). Create a series of overhead transparencies, or use other appropriate instructional technology, to use in your classroom to define the assignment, its grading rubric. Prepare a poster to model the assignment for the class. The focus should be to emphsize the wide diversity of cultural and ethnic backgrounds of scientists (scientists other than white men of European descent). Outline their background, scientific contributions, and information on their life to help understand them as a whole person, and to demonstrate the interconnectedness of all science. In-class presentations will allow each person to present their poster before they are placed on display in the school offices. Turn In: lesson plan, poster and webpage evaluation rubric (PTfT Module 7) Historical Timeline (5%) Prepare a lesson plan for an activity where you assign your students to prepare an historical timeline showing the development of a key scientific concept or principle in your area of endorsement to contemporary, historical, technological, and societal issues. Create a series of overhead transparencies, or use other appropriate instructional technology, to use in your class to define the assignment, and its grading rubric using RUBISTAR (http://rubistar.4teachers.org described in Module 4). Develop a representative historical timelines to model the assignment for the class. Turn in: a typed lesson plan (remember to identify the standards), the instructional materials, and the sample timeline. Field Observations (required) (ELS 1,2,3,4,5,6,7) TE443 Secondary Science Methods Spring Semester 2005 Lake Superior State University Dr. David Myton Each student must complete a minimum of 15 hours of field observations in a classroom setting appropriate to your endorsement area(s). Use Form F-325 to log your classroom visitation time, and have your supervising teacher complete the evaluation on page 2. Complete the “Reflective Summary” on an experience that follows the guidelines for TE301 and higher. Forms and guidelines are available at the education website. Field activities will be necessarily constrained by the access granted by the cooperating teacher, but the value of the observation experience increases exponentially with your direct participation and involvement with students. Appropriate activities include, but are not limited to, observation and reflection, assisting with tutoring and small group function, facilitation and leadership of collaborative and group activities, coplanning/co-teaching, plan/teach, direct instruction of lecture and/or laboratory. Each class session will include time to review your field observations from the prior week. Field experiences are evaluated using the Entry-Level Standards for Michigan Teachers (ELSMT), which define both the standard and the required level of proficiency in each competency. Textbook Attests (10%) You will provide written evidence, through either a summary or response, to your careful reading and reflection on any ten (10) weekly reading assignments of your choosing from Science Instruction in Middle and Secondary Schools. The chapter reviews are due in-class the week of the class discussion for that chapter. Summaries are evaluated using the General Scoring Rubric, and are expected to be 1-2 pages in length. 12-Jan 19-Jan 26-Jan 2-Feb 9-Feb 16-Feb 23-Feb 2-Mar 9-Mar 16-Mar 23-Mar 30-Mar 6-Apr 13-Apr 20-Apr 27-Apr Odds & Ends Technology Journal Biographical Historical 10 25 10 5 5 5 5 12 13 14 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1&2 3&4 15 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x Final Unit Plan 10 Textbook Daily Plan 100 Field Obs Professionalism Week of: Chapter Final Examination (15%): Finals Week The examination will be incorporate analysis and application of learned concepts. The exam will not rely on regurgitation of memorized facts, however a broad recollection of the reading assignments will be helpful. You will evaluate and discuss the meaning of and development of scientific literacy in secondary level students in the context of the Michigan Standards and Benchmarks for science education, methods for safe and effective science instruction at the secondary level. 10 15 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x The Fine Print: TE443 Secondary Science Methods Spring Semester 2005 Lake Superior State University Dr. David Myton The instructor reserves the right to adjustment the syllabus to accommodate unforeseen scheduling difficulties or to provide a specific benefit to the students in the course The LSSU Catalog/Calendar contains a more complete description of your rights and responsibilities as a member of the University community. In the Catalog/Calendar you will find a complete statement of our institutional purpose, definitions of university terminology, our Equal Opportunity policy, and especially the ACADEMIC POLICIES. NOTICE: A failing grade (F) can be assigned to students who commit acts of academic dishonesty. At the instructor’s discretion this grade may be for the assignment or the entire course depending on the nature and severity of the offense. Academic dishonesty includes but is not limited to cheating (the intentional use or attempted use of unauthorized materials, information or study aids in any academic exercise) , fabricating (intentional or unauthorized falsification or invention of any information or citation in an academic exercise), facilitating academic dishonesty (Intentionally or knowingly helping or attempting to help another violate any provisions of this code), or plagiarism (intentionally or knowingly representing the words or ideas of another as one’s own in any academic exercise). Definitions from the Code of Academic Integrity, University of Maryland at College Park. This syllabus is not intended to be a comprehensive statement, please be aware that other academic policies and procedures are outlined in the catalog and they apply to you as well. The course syllabus represents the best estimate and projection of course content, scope and sequence. In the case of extenuating circumstances, changes in enrollment, blizzard, flood, fire tornado, or other Acts of God, by mutual consent, or at the discretion of the instructor, the course and lab syllabi are subject to change. Americans with Disabilities Act: Qualified students with physical or documented learning disabilities have the right to free accommodations to ensure equal access to educational opportunities at Lake Superior State University. Contact the counseling center for information or to request accommodation. Teacher Education Department Policies: You are responsible for understanding and abiding by the policies set forth in LSSU’s current edition of The Teacher Education Program: A Handbook for Students Interested in Teacher Certification. The handbook is given out at all TE Student Orientation Sessions and is also available at the department office. In order to receive a passing grade for the course all required assignments must be completed at a satisfactory level demonstrating competence in the required standards and benchmarks. Syllabus prepared by: David M. Myton, Ph.D., Spring 2004 Distribution: Department Office, Department Chair, Students TE443 Secondary Science Methods Spring Semester 2005 Lake Superior State University Dr. David Myton