inquiry
DESCRIPTION
Some basics and ideas around teaching Inquiry science for middle years teachersTRANSCRIPT
David GeelanDavid Geelan
Griffith UniversityGriffith University
Inquiry is not constructivism, although it is a teaching-learning approach that is consistent with constructivist theories about knowing and learning
Constructivist-referenced
Inquiry can be open-entry (starts with a broad question but ends up with the development of a pre-planned scientific concept, for example) or open-ended (inquiry into a social or technological question where each student ends up with a different answer).
Open-ended vs Open-entry
Inquiry is about asking questions in class. It’s about what kinds of questions are asked (just factual recall, or synthesis and application, or life-application, or open-entry/ended inquiry questions). It’s also about who asks the questions – the teacher or the students? And even if the teacher asks the question, do the students come to ‘own’ it during the inquiry?
Questioning
Students can develop new concepts (for them) in the process of inquiry, but they are unlikely to arrive at the same vocabulary and conventions of communication that scientists use, so the teacher has an important role in ‘translating’ student concepts into scientific language, and in teaching scientific language.
Language
Inquiry can include library and web searches, but should not be limited to these. Considering that scientific concepts are tested (in experiments) against the real world, inquiry lessons that include real experiments are likely to be very powerful.
Empirical
Inquiry does not mean that the teacher’s role disappears or is minimised… the teacher is actively involved in planning for inquiry and in facilitating and supporting the students’ activities at every stage.
Teacher Role
Teachers have a key role in facilitating
inquiry Scaffolding inquiry means supporting the
students as they develop the necessary skills
These include designing inquiries, and collecting, analysing and interpreting data
Scaffolding Inquiry
An important part of the teacher’s role is managing
students’ engagement and attention. A small amount of frustration can be helpful if it is
encouraging students to explore and find ways to satisfy their curiosity, but too much frustration can lead students to give up.
In that situation it’s important for the teacher to come in with a hint or suggestion to allow some progress to be made and students to feel successful.
Arousal