Free In-Class Resource For Science Teachers
modernphysics writes "Canada's non-profit and independent Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics is now providing a free in-class, educational resource for high-school science teachers to help guide students through interesting topics in modern physics. The first module on 'The Mystery of Dark Matter' can be viewed online and features a 25-minute video, teacher's guide with hands-on demonstrations, and student activity sheets in Word format that can be edited to suit individual classes. This resource helps fulfill the number one request from the hundreds of high-school teachers who attend the popular EinsteinPlus Workshops on Modern Physics at PI each summer — to have access to enrichment materials for students in grades 11 and 12 in a flexible, comprehensive, and easy-to-use format that makes abstract ideas visual and shares the joys of research and discovery."
The Wright Center for Innovative Science Education at Tufts University offers fellowship opportunities for teachers of elementary and high school science, workshops for teachers and free posters and curriculum materials on request by teachers. Some materials are available on-line for free download. Materials range from Space Science and Cosmic Evolution to the Physics of Music and Ben Franklin and Electrostatics. Visit http://www.tufts.edu/as/wright_center to learn more.
free? education? communists!!!
I'd like to see how they do the chapter on anti-matter. 'Now John, don't drop that containment unit of' BOOM! There goes Toronto.
This has been around for longer than you might think. See I learned how to do this in chemistry class and made an educational video and ummmm...well the grass never grew back :-P That's an added lesson. I say put this baby on during science class.
Oh and on a more serious note, this rocks cuz I was in high school just 3 year ago and most of the vids we watched were seriously still VHS. The teacher would often update us on corrections due to recent breakthroughs after some videos were done. And we were a pretty rich school! But have you ever seen the pricing on educations vids? They have horrible production values cuz of restricted budgets and since their customer is only non-profit and educational, they charge around $180 per copy for most of them. We even just watched episodes of 20/20 in some classes cuz that was cheaper and had WAY better production. So anything to get us away from that would be fantastic.
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coupling teacher pay to a test is just as bad as they will just teach the test like how it is with No Child Left Behind.
The bible.
Thanks I'll be here all night,
500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
Why would you want teachers to waste time (their time, student's time, money, etc.) on stuff that is not of use?
Perhaps you believe that the test doesn't cover things? If so, then place your blame on the test **content** rather than on the **usage** of tests. The tests **must** cover all the stuff we expect students to learn, no more and no less. (of course, on test day one may get some random sample of the total test questions, such as 200 out of a million possible questions)
No Child Left Behind is good. Even if you have a cold-hearted disdain for the stupid kids, you must admit that providing them with some minimal education will help to keep them from being criminals. This is good for them, good for the economy, and good for our personal safety.
Hands on demonstration on dark matter? That's it, I'm moving to Canada.
Knowledge is power; knowledge shared is power lost.
I am an American, and I think our public education is great. So there.
I think most (all?) countries do 'a poor job of coupling teacher pay to teacher performance', because measuring teacher performance is really hard. Many teachers suck at some things and are great at others. Most teachers will improve over time, but the cycle is yearly, which means it will take a few years before they have worked out their bugs and have encountered enough variety of kids so they know what works for each.
:). It's really hard, I would say impossible, to control for all those variables with the data we have and in the time frames we work with.
:). Finding the right balance is hard.
Well, how do you measure teacher performance ? You can do class visits, but they won't tell you all the story, unless you visit a lot; you can test the students, but that involves student performance (how much did they know?), you can use growth models (test before, then after the year, and see how much they improved), but still the speed at which the kids learn will vary greatly (not exactly IQ, but combination of IQ, motivation, family support etc).
Basically, if you give me a classroom with 10 'smart', 'well adjusted' kids, with family support and enough money to send them to Kumon if I suck, and I will appear as the greatest teacher ever. Give me 20 'problem' kids, with zero family support, and a bad environment, and I will appear to suck
Also, the tenure system was created to avoid politicians firing teachers for politics. If we didn't have it, you'd hear about teachers in Kansas or Georgia being fired for teaching Evolution. Teaching would suck even more and you'd get less qualified teachers (the smart ones would go do something else