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Five Strategies to Support all Teachers: Suggestions to Get Off the Slippery Slope of "Cookbook" Science Teaching

Paula A. Magee, Ryan Flessner

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Many teachers shudder at the thought of implementing an inquiry curriculum. Perhaps they envision a rowdy classroom with little learning. Maybe they wonder, "How will this connect to all the standards?" Fortunately, these legitimate concerns can be addressed, and all students can engage in thoughtfully constructed inquiry science experiences. In this article, we outline five strategies that we have used with elementary school teachers as they moved from a "cookbook" approach in science to an approach that is inquiry-based. Having presented these five strategies in a linear format, we know that on the surface this may seem close to the slippery slope of cookbook science teaching, but we also know that thoughtful practitioners working in classrooms across the country will see these strategies as interactive, overlapping, and nonsequential.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalScholarship and Professional Work – Education
    Volume48
    Issue number7
    StatePublished - Jan 1 2011

    Keywords

    • educational strategies
    • inquiry curriculum
    • inquiry-based teaching

    Disciplines

    • Education
    • Educational Assessment, Evaluation, and Research
    • Educational Methods
    • Elementary Education and Teaching
    • Science and Mathematics Education
    • Teacher Education and Professional Development

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